[Pages S6957-S6967]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                           EXECUTIVE SESSION

                                 ______
                                 

                           EXECUTIVE CALENDAR

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Under the previous order, the 
Senate will proceed to executive session to resume consideration of the 
following nomination, which the clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read the nomination of Lawrence VanDyke, of 
Nevada, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit.


                   recognition of the majority leader

  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The majority leader is recognized.


                           order of procedure

  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that 
following the disposition of H.R. 2333, the Senate proceed to executive 
session and resume consideration of the VanDyke nomination; further, 
that the postcloture time on the VanDyke nomination expire at 4:15 p.m. 
today and the Senate vote on the confirmation of the nomination; 
further, if confirmed, that the motion to reconsider be considered made 
and laid upon the table and the President be immediately notified of 
the Senate's action; further, that following the disposition of the 
VanDyke nomination and notwithstanding the provisions of rule XXII, the 
Senate vote on the motions to invoke cloture on the Sullivan, Hahn, and 
Skipwith nominations in the order listed; finally, that if cloture is 
invoked on the Sullivan, Hahn, and Skipwith nominations, the 
confirmation votes occur at a time to be determined by the majority 
leader, in consultation with the Democratic leader, on Thursday, 
December 12.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                       Senate Legislative Agenda

  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, it is no secret that Washington 
Democrats have been itching to impeach President Trump since the moment 
he took the oath of office. Remember the Washington Post's headline on 
Inauguration Day in 2017: ``The campaign to impeach President Trump has 
begun.'' That was the Washington Post's headline on Inauguration Day in 
2017.
  Just a few months later, in April of 2017, one leading House Democrat 
had already made up her mind. She declared she would ``fight every day 
until he's impeached.'' As an aside, this same senior Democrat is one 
of the committee chairwomen whom Speaker Pelosi asked to help lead the 
impeachment process. She was literally standing at the Speaker's 
shoulder as she announced yesterday that she will bring two articles of 
impeachment up for a vote. Yet she had had her mind made up more than 2 
years ago, long before this supposedly fair inquiry. This is sort of 
emblematic of their whole process.
  House Democrats announced yesterday that they will rush ahead and 
prepare to send the Senate articles of impeachment based on the least 
thorough and most unfair impeachment inquiry

[[Page S6958]]

in modern history. Well, the House Democrats' denigration of their 
solemn duty will not cause the Senate to denigrate ours. If the House 
continues down this destructive road and sends us articles of 
impeachment, the Senate will take them up in the new year and proceed 
to a fair trial.
  Now, in the meantime, our colleagues' obsession with impeachment has 
left us with a host of important, bipartisan legislation that is still 
unfinished at this late date.
  For months, Senate Republicans have been calling on our Democratic 
colleagues to go beyond picking fights with the White House and 
actually legislate for the American people. Yet, for practically the 
entire autumn, our Democratic friends' political calculation seemed to 
be that these vital pieces of business could wait until the eleventh 
hour because impeachment was the higher priority--and wait they have.
  Finally, after weeks of pressure from the Republicans and from hard-
working Americans across the country, Speaker Pelosi backed down 
yesterday and announced that she will let the House vote on President 
Trump's USMCA. The Democrats have stalled this agreement for so long 
that it is now impossible for the USMCA to become law in 2019, 
especially given all of the other urgent things they have stalled right 
alongside it. The Democrats have simply run out the clock. Assuming the 
House Democrats send us articles of impeachment next week, a Senate 
trial will have to be our first item of business in January. So the 
USMCA will continue to be a casualty of the Democrats' impeachment 
obsession for several more weeks before we can actually turn to it. Yet 
I am glad the Speaker is finally beginning to bring her USMCA 
obstruction to a close.
  As we triage in the coming days, the Republicans hope we will be able 
to pass not only the NDAA conference report but also government funding 
legislation that allocates taxpayers' hard-earned money to urgent 
Federal priorities. The NDAA has consistently brought Members together 
from across the political spectrum--and with good reason--in that it 
gives Congress the opportunity to set priorities for the U.S. military 
of the future. The NDAA helps to guide the Pentagon's investments in 
modernization and readiness, cutting-edge weapons and capabilities, and 
in servicemembers and military families.
  I am grateful for the efforts by Chairman Inhofe and Ranking Member 
Reed, who made compromises from the beginning and worked hard to ensure 
the conference report remained true to the 58-year tradition of a 
bipartisan bill that prioritizes our military and sets aside unrelated 
partisan priorities.
  I cannot say the same thing about the Democrats in the House, 
unfortunately, but I hope they will learn from this year's difficult 
path to a conference report. Next year, I hope they will produce a 
bipartisan bill from the beginning that will put our national security 
interests first. Now, obviously, that authorizing legislation should be 
paired with the appropriations measure that will actually fund our 
servicemembers' tools and training and enable our commanders to 
actually plan ahead.
  I am grateful for the hard work by Chairman Shelby, his counterpart 
in the House, and our subcommittee chairs to reboot a stalled 
appropriations process and try to get bills over the finish line in the 
short time that remains.
  To be frank, only a laser focus from both parties in both Chambers on 
getting results will create a path to pass appropriations bills this 
year. There is simply not the time left for my Democratic friends to 
continue haggling over the exact kinds of poison pills, partisan policy 
riders, and Presidential transfer authorities that the Speaker and the 
Democratic leader had explicitly agreed months ago would be off the 
table. Under the agreement months ago, these were supposed to be off 
the table.
  The White House, Republican leaders in both Chambers, and the 
Democratic leaders in both Chambers all agreed to these parameters--
literally pledged in writing that these kinds of partisan roadblocks 
would be kept out of the process. So if all parties honor what they 
agreed to, we should have an opportunity to agree on government funding 
in time to make this a law this month, which means next week.
  Now that our Democratic colleagues are back at the table, Senate 
Republicans stand ready to do all we can in the time we still have. 
Let's end this legislative year on the right foot. Let's deliver for 
our All-Volunteer Armed Forces and for families all across our country.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. THUNE. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                        Prescription Drug Costs

  Mr. THUNE. Madam President, over in the House this week, Democrats 
are taking up the latest installment in their campaign to have the 
government take over Americans' healthcare: the Pelosi prescription 
drug bill.
  There is no question that high prescription drug costs are a problem. 
One in four seniors reports difficulty affording medications, and there 
are too many stories of patients being forced to ration pills or to 
abandon their prescription at the pharmacy counter. But the Pelosi drug 
bill is the wrong prescription for the problem of high drug prices. 
Why? Because it would reduce Americans' access to lifesaving treatments 
and discourage investment in prescription drug research.
  Between 2011 and 2018, more than 250 new medications were introduced 
worldwide. American patients have access to nearly all of them, but 
that is not the situation for patients in a lot of other countries. The 
chamber of commerce reports that patients in France have access to just 
50 percent of those new drugs. French patients, in other words, are 
missing out on fully half of the new drugs that have been introduced in 
the past 8 years.
  Why do Americans have such tremendous access to new drugs while other 
countries trail behind? Because the U.S. Government doesn't dictate 
drug prices or drug coverage. As statistic after statistic 
demonstrates, when governments start imposing price controls, patients' 
access to new drugs and treatments diminishes.
  Government price controls also discourage the medical research and 
innovation that produce the prescription drug breakthroughs of the 
future. The United States leads the world in prescription drug 
innovation, and a big reason for that is because the U.S. Government 
doesn't dictate drug prices.
  It wasn't always this way. European investment in drug research used 
to exceed U.S. investment, but that changed when European governments 
stepped in and started imposing price controls. Today, European 
investment in drug research and development is almost 40 percent lower 
than U.S. investment, in large part because of European governments' 
price controls.
  No other country comes close to achieving the number of prescription 
drug breakthroughs that companies in the United States achieve. That 
situation, however, is not going to last if the Democratic Party has 
its way.
  The Pelosi drug bill would impose a system of government price 
controls on up to 250 medications, and reduced access to drugs and 
fewer medical breakthroughs would soon follow.
  The California Life Sciences Association released a statement noting 
that the Pelosi drug bill could result in ``an 88-percent reduction in 
the number of drugs that are brought to market by small/emerging 
companies in California.'' It goes on to say that ``such a dramatic 
decline would be felt most in the higher risk/smaller population 
therapeutic areas of R&D, including new drugs for endocrine, metabolic, 
genetic and rare diseases, and pediatric cancers.'' Again, that is from 
the California Life Sciences Association. In other words, there would 
be fewer medical breakthroughs for those who need them the most.
  As I said earlier, the high cost of some prescription drugs can be a 
real problem for many families, but the answer--the answer--is not to 
introduce a government-run pricing system that would mean that 
important prescription drugs would not be there when you or your child 
needs them.
  There are a lot of things we can do to lower the cost of prescription 
drugs

[[Page S6959]]

without resorting to government price controls. Multiple Senate 
committees have been actively engaged on this topic. There are options 
for how to improve transparency in a complicated and often opaque drug-
pricing process. There are ideas to examine competition and 
consolidation in the pharmaceutical supply chain; to ensure that 
generic companies can access the samples they need to develop a new 
generic or biosimilar; to prevent companies from engaging in patent 
thicketing to block competition; to promote real-time benefit tools to 
help inform consumers of cheaper drug options; to advance value-based 
insurance design to support coverage of high-value items and services, 
like medicines, that people with chronic conditions need to manage 
their health; and to modernize the Medicare Part D plan design and cap 
seniors' out-of-pocket costs.
  Republicans in the House recently introduced legislation on 
prescription drug costs that both promotes innovation and contains 
bipartisan ideas for reform, including increased transparency in drug 
pricing and provisions to prevent drug companies from gaming the 
system. This bill provides several ideas passed by the Senate Finance 
Committee, while focusing on policies that can be passed through both 
Chambers of Congress. Importantly, it eliminates those policies that 
have divided us.
  There are bipartisan solutions on the table. It is unfortunate that 
House Democrats have abandoned bipartisan efforts on drug pricing and 
have decided to pursue their government-run alternative.
  It boils down, really, simply to this: Government price controls mean 
access to fewer drugs, and access to fewer drugs means that when you or 
your child or your mom or your dad needs a lifesaving medication, that 
drug may be out there, but it may not be out there for you, and that is 
not acceptable.
  The Pelosi drug bill is a bad prescription for the American people.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Cramer). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.


                   Recognition of the Minority Leader

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Democratic leader is recognized.


                          Jersey City Shooting

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, before I begin, I want to express deep 
sympathy for the families and the victims of the shooting yesterday in 
Jersey City, which left one fallen police officer, Detective Seals, and 
several bystanders as victims. My heart goes out to their friends and 
family today. Local and Federal law enforcement must investigate 
quickly and professionally so we can implement the best responses. We 
are not sure yet if this was motivated by hate or if it was criminal in 
nature, but whatever the answers, rest assured the response must be 
swift, sure, and strong.


                              Impeachment

  Mr. President, now on impeachment, yesterday, the House Judiciary 
Committee announced two Articles of Impeachment against the President 
of the United States. The articles allege that President Trump abused 
the office of the Presidency by soliciting the interference of a 
foreign power in our elections to benefit himself personally. They also 
allege the President obstructed Congress in the investigation of these 
matters.
  The President has had every chance to defend himself against these 
allegations. He has had every chance to rebut the specific evidence 
that was presented in the House. If there is information or a witness 
who the White House believes can provide exculpatory evidence in 
defense of the President, nothing is stopping them from testifying 
under oath. But if the President is so innocent, if this is a mere 
witch hunt, then why isn't he answering the specific charges? Why is he 
blocking witnesses from testifying who would have direct knowledge of 
these facts?
  The House has made an extremely strong case. The burden now lies on 
the President to rebut it, if he can. And what the majority of 
Americans are saying is that the fact that he refuses to produce 
rebutting evidence, the fact that he blocks witnesses from testifying, 
the fact that he won't let documents come forward may well indicate 
that he did everything alleged in the House proceedings.
  To talk about things that are unrelated to the charges against the 
President have nothing to do with what happened here. The President 
merely needs to claim his innocence. If he has nothing to hide, he 
should have nothing to fear from handing over documents or allowing 
witnesses to testify. So their silence, the silence imposed by the 
White House on top officials with knowledge of these dealings, speaks 
volumes.
  What has the President, the White House, and their congressional 
allies here in the Senate and the House tried to do? Instead of 
defending the President with facts, the White House, the President 
himself, and congressional Republicans employ one fringe conspiracy 
theory after the next to explain away the President's conduct, even 
though they have nothing to do with the specific charges against the 
President.
  Here in the Senate, unfortunately, we have several Members on the 
other side of the aisle who are forming their own conspiracy caucus. 
Any conspiracy theory pulled out of the air by known pranks, then 
broadcast on FOX News, which shows an all-too willingness to broadcast 
this stuff, is then picked up here as a diversion. Why do they want to 
divert? Is it because they know the facts can be answered?
  For the past few weeks, certain Republican Senators have repeated the 
fiction invented by Putin's intelligence services that Ukraine, not 
Putin, interfered in the 2016 election. They are mouthing Putin's 
propaganda. The Republican Party is to be anti-Russian, anti-Putin, 
anti-Communist, but now all of a sudden, because President Trump has 
created so many different diversions because he seems to go along with 
what Putin wants, these Republicans have become Putin mouthpieces when 
it comes to these conspiracy theories.
  Today, an example, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee is 
holding a hearing on the report issued this week by the Department of 
Justice Inspector General, which found no evidence of a political 
motive for the FBI investigation into the Trump campaign. The deputy 
counsel of the FBI said there was an obligation to investigate--not by 
anyone's design--once they heard these allegations that came from a 
credible source.
  What will the Judiciary chairman do? Will he focus on the central 
finding of the IG report? I suspect not. I suspect Republicans on that 
committee, instead, will take every opportunity to contort the facts to 
further the President's baseless claim that the FBI was out to get him. 
So many people accused of crimes and wrongdoing, instead of addressing 
the issue when they know they are guilty, blame the prosecutor. That is 
not what our system of justice is about.
  But, astonishingly, that is what the chief law enforcement officer of 
the land, the Attorney General of the United States, did yesterday in 
interviews. Contradicting the findings of his own inspector general--
someone who would study the case for months, someone who the Attorney 
General himself had recently praised as fiercely independent and a 
superb investigator--what Attorney General Barr did was push the false 
narrative that the FBI acted in bad faith when it investigated the 
Trump campaign. Attorney General Barr has signed himself up to be a 
charter member of the conspiracy caucus.
  The real bad faith is the relationship between the Attorney General 
and his oath of office. He did not swear to ``support and defend 
President Trump,'' but that is what he has done as Attorney General. It 
is deeply, dangerously corrosive to the primary rule of law in our 
constitutional system.
  At the same time, the Attorney General's handpicked prosecutor John 
Durham put out a ridiculous statement on Monday, criticizing the 
findings of the IG report. Durham used to have some credibility as a 
no-nonsense prosecutor, but when Barr chose him, I said, Uh-oh, because 
Barr is not a down-the-middle guy. By putting out a

[[Page S6960]]

hugely partisan, political statement on a pending investigation he is 
doing, Mr. Durham has signaled to the world he is not capable of 
producing a report that anyone can take seriously.
  Unfortunately, Mr. Durham, like too many others, has aligned himself 
with Attorney General Barr and consigned himself to the world of 
alternative truth facts, many of them on the fringe. Whatever 
reputation Durham had for fairness is now in tatters.
  Now, Mr. President, there is a possibility that the Senate will be 
served with the Articles of Impeachment for the President from the 
House. We may soon, in all likelihood, confront the demands of hosting 
a trial for the Chief Executive and serving as judges and jurors in 
determining the fate of that trial. With such a weighty constitutional 
responsibility on the horizon, I implore my colleagues to stop dipping 
their toes in the murky waters of conspiracy. Hew to the facts. Don't 
prejudge the outcome. Remember our oaths to the Constitution, our 
responsibility to do impartial justice in the Senate trial. That is our 
responsibility. History will judge whether we live up to it or not.


                            Border Security

  Mr. President, now, on the recent decision about the wall by the 
Federal court in Texas. Yesterday, the Federal court in Texas issued a 
nationwide injunction, blocking the Trump administration from using 
military construction funding to build his wall. The decision confirms 
what many Democrats and a few Republicans in the past have said. The 
President's emergency declaration, which allowed the administration to 
steal the profits from military families to pay for a wall President 
Trump promised Mexico would pay for, is an outrageous legal power grab.
  The injunction is a win for the rule of law. It should serve as a 
warning to Republicans in Congress and the Trump administration that 
the power of the purse, given exclusively to Congress by the 
constitution, cannot be usurped. At his rally last night, President 
Trump said, The courts are siding with me on the wall. He had not read 
the decision. He has already built so much of the wall. Well, thank 
you, Mr. Trump. You have just buttressed a portion of the wall that 
President Obama built--nothing new.
  As we look ahead to concluding negotiations on appropriations before 
the end of the year, my Republican colleagues should remember that a 
Federal court ruled the Trump administration was beyond its legal right 
when it took funding from other sources to build a wall.


                     Nomination of Lawrence VanDyke

  Mr. President, the VanDyke nomination, today, the Senate will vote on 
the confirmation of Lawrence VanDyke to serve on the Ninth Circuit 
Court of Appeals. After seeing so many radical and unfit judicial 
appointments over the past few years, I am almost surprised President 
Trump is still able to find nominees like Mr. VanDyke who is 
unqualified, even in comparison to some of the worst nominees we have 
seen under this administration.
  VanDyke has a history of bigoted writing about LGBTQ Americans, 
radical views on even the most commonsense gun safety legislation, and 
a proven hostility to reproductive rights. On top of his radical views, 
Mr. VanDyke has received stunningly negative reviews on his 
qualifications and temperament. The American Bar Association doesn't do 
this much, but it rated him ``Not Qualified.'' In over 60 interviews 
with Mr. VanDyke's colleagues, he was described as ``arrogant, lazy, an 
ideologue, and lacking in knowledge of the day-to-day practice, 
including procedural rules.''
  It went on to say, ``The nominee lacks humility, has an `entitlement' 
temperament, does not have an open mind, and does not always have a 
commitment to being candid and truthful.''
  This is whom we are voting on today, my Republican friends. What is 
going on? Because someone is hard right and radical, we excuse all of 
their personality defects found by the ABA? And, amazingly, this is 
someone not even for a district court but the circuit court. This is 
getting to the point of utter absurdity.
  For obvious reasons, both home State Senators objected to VanDyke's 
nomination. In the past, the Senate would respect those objections. It 
would be a check on someone so unqualified on getting to the bench, but 
Leader McConnell and Senate Republicans are in such a rush to fill the 
bench with these hard-right nominees that they have blown through 
Senate traditions and most standards of reason and good judgment.
  Please reject this nominee. He is so unqualified. He is a low human 
being--at least according to all of this--and he will have a lifetime 
appointment on the circuit bench? That would indicate the decline of 
America, one more indication, unfortunately, propagated by this 
administration.


                               Tax Reform

  Mr. President, finally, in a week or so, it will be 2 years since 
Republicans jammed through a massive tax cut for corporations and the 
megawealthy on a party-line vote.
  Two years later, it is worth looking back on the promises Republicans 
made when selling this to the American people. At the time, the 
President said the bill would be ``a middle-class miracle.'' The 
administration promised Americans would get a $4,000 raise. 
Congressional Republicans said giving a corporate tax cut would boost 
jobs and investment.
  Two years later, it is clear the tax bill has failed to live up to 
any of those sunny predictions. Middle-class wages still aren't growing 
fast enough to keep up with the cost of living. Businesses aren't 
investing in newfound profits in jobs or wages. In fact, since the 
passage of the Trump-Republican tax bill, while capital expenditures by 
businesses remain low--that is investing in jobs and equipment and 
things that employ people and give them better wages--corporate stock 
buybacks, which, by and large, benefit wealthy shareholders, explodes, 
setting annual records. Last year alone, over $1 trillion was spent on 
stock buybacks, while millions of middle-class Americans didn't see 
enough improvement in their quality of life.
  As many Democrats, including myself, predicted 2 years after its 
passage, the Republican tax bill has overwhelmingly benefited 
shareholders and corporate executives, not workers and their families. 
America will remember that as we head into an election year.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from West Virginia.


                 Bipartisan American Miners Act of 2019

  Mr. MANCHIN. Mr. President, I rise today, and I want to make it very 
clear--it is going to be very short and succinct--that time is running 
out on our coal miners. We need to fix this now--not in 2020 but now. I 
will explain why.
  We have over 13,000 coal miners who will lose their healthcare and 
82,000 coal miners who will lose their pensions next year if we do not 
do something now. That is why I am standing here before you. That is 
why I am putting a hold on all legislative business coming through the 
Senate until we get assurances.
  This is not who I am. Anybody who knows me, knows I don't do this, 
but I am so committed to the people who built this country and to a 
commitment we had in a 1946 agreement with the Federal Government that 
they would be able to have a pension and retirement for the very 
difficult and very dangerous hard work that they do. They weren't 
asking taxpayers or anyone else to bail them out. It was coming from 
the sale of the product, the coal that they mine for the energy for 
this country.
  Only my bill, which is the Bipartisan American Miners Act, has 
bipartisan support on both sides in the Senate and over in the House. I 
know if Congress passed it, President Trump would sign it. I know that.
  Can you imagine being one of the coal miners trying to enjoy your 
holidays this year knowing that you might wake up January 1 with no 
healthcare coverage and a reduction in your pension?
  Let me explain to you the pensions. The average pension of a coal 
miner--most of these are widows now because the miners might have 
passed away--is $600 or less, so we are not talking about thousands of 
dollars. We are not talking about that whatsoever. This is all the 
means of sustaining a quality of life or helping them through a quality 
of life.
  These coal miners and their families deserve the peace of mind of 
knowing

[[Page S6961]]

that the healthcare they have earned and the pensions they have paid--
these are things they have paid into and earned. They didn't take home 
this money. It stayed right there in their investments. We can give 
them that peace of mind today, and no legislative business will pass 
without coal miners first.
  I reluctantly say that we might be here through Christmas or we might 
be here through New Year's, but I will do and make whatever sacrifice I 
can for the people who made the sacrifice for us, and that is the coal 
miners who provide the energy for us to be the greatest Nation on 
Earth, for us basically to be the superpower of the world and the 
leader of the free world. It is because of the energy they have 
produced. If we can't honor that, then what do we honor, whom do we 
honor, and what is our purpose for being here?
  I ask each one of my colleagues to please talk to all of our leaders. 
Let's come together sensibly. Let's make sure this is in the package we 
put together, and we will continue business and be able to go home and 
enjoy the holidays the same as they should be able to enjoy the 
holidays. Our going home and their not being able to enjoy it is not 
who we are; it is not the American dream; and it is not who we are as 
Americans.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arkansas.


                         Honoring Stephen Carr

  Mr. BOOZMAN. Mr. President, I rise today to honor the life of 
Fayetteville, AR, Police Officer Stephen Carr, who made the ultimate 
sacrifice in the line of duty on Saturday, December 7.
  Officer Carr was sitting in his patrol car in the parking lot behind 
the police station when he was shot and killed. The 27-year-old had 
been a member of the Fayetteville Police Department for 2\1/2\ years 
and was assigned as a patrol officer in the Dickson Street 
entertainment area.
  In that short time with the police department, he demonstrated his 
professionalism and duty to upholding the rule of law. The Fayetteville 
police chief described Carr as an exemplary officer who was an all-
American boy. The chief said at a press conference over the weekend: 
``If I had 131 Stephen Carr's, I wouldn't be more ecstatic.''
  Carr grew up in a law enforcement family. He witnessed the 
dedication, service, and commitment to protecting the community by 
people he loved. His friends described him as a strong and kind person, 
whose lifelong dream was to serve as a police officer.
  He loved spending time outdoors hunting and fishing. A graduate from 
The Woodlands High School in The Woodlands, TX, Carr played football 
and earned recognition as an all-district offensive lineman. He went on 
to play football at Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, MO, and 
his former coach described him as a young man who made a big impact on 
campus.
  We rely on law enforcement officers to keep us safe. Each day they 
put on their uniform, knowing the risks that come with public duty to 
serve and to protect. Officer Carr's death is a reminder of the dangers 
these first responders face daily and how quickly a situation can go 
from ordinary to deadly, which is why those willing to take on this 
role deserve both our gratitude and our respect.
  The outpouring of support from the Fayetteville community has been a 
tremendous strength to the police department as they mourn the loss of 
a brother in blue. I pray they we will find comfort from this 
encouragement during this very, very difficult time.
  My thoughts and prayers go out to Officer Carr's family and friends. 
I also stand with all Arkansans in expressing our gratitude for Officer 
Carr's service and commitment to honoring the sacrifice that he and 
others have made to protect us. We will forever remember him as a true 
American hero.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.


                               Tax Reform

  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, over the next 45 minutes or so, finance 
Democrats will come to the floor, and we will be discussing the second 
anniversary of the Trump tax bill. As the ranking Democrat, I am going 
to begin it. I know my colleagues will be joining me.
  The Trump tax law is now 2 years old, and for millions of middle-
class Americans, it is not a very happy anniversary. My own view is 
that the economic legacy of the Trump administration will be that they 
spent $1.5 trillion to widen the economic gap in America. If I were to 
sum up what the law--the Trump tax law--was all about, it was about 
making wealthy people wealthier and the middle class being an 
afterthought. I am going to walk through some of the reasons I reached 
that judgment, and then my colleagues will be getting into some of 
these issues as well.
  Donald Trump and Republicans in the Congress promised--promised--they 
would write a bill that was focused on helping workers and the middle 
class. The President told me personally that he thought he and people 
like him should not get a tax break. He said that to me personally, but 
that simply wasn't the case.
  We were told that the Trump tax legislation would pay for itself. 
That was wrong by a couple of trillion dollars. We were told that it 
would kick off a towering wave of job-creating investments in so many 
hard-hit American communities. That has not been the case. We were told 
that workers would get, on average, a $4,000 raise. That was wrong once 
more. It was wrong on all counts with respect to the promises made to 
the American people.
  What, in fact, did happen is rates were slashed for folks at the top 
and multinational corporations. The corporations then turned around and 
shoveled that money back to the shareholders who, by and large, are 
wealthy themselves, and you saw a historic boom in stock buybacks.
  Now the sugar high has worn off, and I have been going home for town 
meetings open to all. I am going to be in a county this weekend that 
President Trump won. I will be listening to people. I won't give any 
speeches. I will be just listening to people. What I hear at these 
meetings in counties in Oregon that Donald Trump won is that folks see 
very little evidence that their lives have changed or that somehow this 
tax bill ended up trickling down to them. My sense is, it is amazing 
that a bill can cost so much and can borrow so much and fail the middle 
class so thoroughly.
  There are two issues that are important to focus on going forward, 
and we are going to talk about those. There is a lot of talk about how 
congressional Republicans and the Trump administration are talking 
about another--another--scam tax proposal, basically going to the same 
playbook that made the middle class an afterthought 2 years ago. I 
think it is important that people understand that all the evidence 
indicates this second bill isn't going to focus on the middle class 
either.
  According to the reports in the press that have been discussing this 
new Republican proposal--which is, in effect, an admission that the 
first proposal failed the middle class while helping the most 
fortunate--what we hear about this new proposal is that Republicans are 
considering what would amount to yet another massive handout for folks 
at the top of the economic pyramid.
  One Trump adviser is reportedly discussing a proposal that would 
effectively wipe out the taxation of capital gains, and we all know 
that a fraction--a tiny fraction--of the American people get most of 
those capital gains, and they happen to be the most fortunate.
  The U.S. Tax Code is already a tale of two systems. We have one for 
cops and teachers. Their taxes are taken out of every single paycheck. 
We have another one for high flyers who can make most of their money, 
for example, off investments. To a great extent, because of the laws 
that allow them to defer paying their taxes, those high flyers can pay 
what they want when they want to. I don't know of any cops or teachers 
in North Dakota or Oregon who have that. Their taxes are taken out of 
every paycheck once or twice a month. Their system is mandatory.
  If you are a high flyer and you make most of your money off 
investments, your taxes aren't mandatory, and if you use the doctrine 
of tax deferral, you can just defer and defer and defer. And after you 
pass, you can hand everything off to your kids, Johnny and Mary, and 
they get the stepped-up basis, and then they get to do the same thing.

[[Page S6962]]

  You have to have one set of rules that applies to everybody. That is 
what we, on our side of the aisle, have been working for. We think you 
ought to have one set of tax rules that applies to everybody. That, by 
the way, gives everybody in America the chance to be successful. That 
is what Bill Bradley--somebody I look to for advice, a member of the 
Finance Committee, and another tall Democrat with a lot better jump 
shot than mine--but he and Ronald Reagan got together, and they 
produced a proposal that gave everybody in America a chance to get 
ahead.
  That is not what this new Trump tax discussion is all about, this new 
proposal. I am not talking about the top paying a fair share. I will 
just mention what it could mean for folks at the very top. Wealthy 
people whose income is based on capital gains could be off the hook 
completely--completely.
  The first Trump tax law took what is already broken about our tax 
system, and they embedded unfairness to the middle class and made the 
problem even worse. They are not going to fix it by doubling down on 
the same failed policies.
  The second issue that the Trump folks are apparently going to be 
focusing on, going forward, is handouts to billionaires and 
corporations. That is the big accomplishment to date. It is inseparable 
from the Trump agenda, which is all about helping those at the top at 
the expense of everyone else.
  Donald Trump has sought to kick more than 20 million Americans off 
their healthcare since day one. He has tried to gut Medicaid, which is 
a lifeline for so many seniors who depend on long-term care and nursing 
homes, and it is a centerpiece of our fight against opioid addiction.
  The President proposed slashing education funding for students and 
teachers and slashing housing funds at a time when millions of 
Americans are struggling to afford rent or to cover the mortgage. I can 
go on--home heating assistance, Meals on Wheels, same pattern again and 
again.
  Tax handouts for the most fortunate multinational corporations and 
billionaires--the ones we were told would pay for themselves--sent the 
deficit into the stratosphere, and then working people and the middle 
class, in addition to being an afterthought in terms of benefits, are 
expected to endure the pain of the Trump budget cuts.
  Middle-class folks know they got a raw deal in the Trump tax law in 
2017. That is why it has been so unpopular. I was struck in the 
campaign of 2018 by Republicans who thought they had done something 
that would be so valuable to the American people. They couldn't even go 
out and talk about it with middle-class folks because middle-class 
folks would say: We didn't really see much of anything. We might have 
gotten a little bit to take the family to dinner, but we don't remember 
getting much of anything.
  So, on the anniversary of the Trump tax law, the people who are 
celebrating are the high flyers and corporate executives who are 
tallying up stock buyback benefits and the handouts they got, but if 
you work for a living, you really are saying: This sure looks like a 
con job.
  In the months and years ahead, my Democratic colleagues and I on the 
Finance Committee and in our caucus are going to be working with 
anybody who is interested in fixing our broken tax system for good. We 
have shown that is our interest. Personally, I wrote the only two 
comprehensive bipartisan proposals to reform our taxes since Bill 
Bradley and Ronald Reagan got together, first with Judd Gregg, then the 
chairman of the Budget Committee and, most recently, with our colleague 
who is director of National Intelligence, Dan Coats.
  So I and others--and I see Tom Carper, a valued member of the Finance 
Committee from Delaware here--are committed to working with our 
colleagues in a bipartisan way to have a tax system that gives 
everybody a chance to get ahead. That is not what we got 2 years ago, 
but we want it understood that we are going to continue, and I say 
personally, as ranking Democrat on the Finance Committee, that we are 
going to continue to reach out a hand of welcome to Republicans who 
want to work for something different than what passed 2 years ago and a 
tax code that would create one set of rules in America, built on 
fairness, that applies to all Americans.
  I note my colleague from Delaware is here to make remarks on this 
subject.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Delaware.
  Mr. CARPER. Mr. President, I thank my colleague and my friend for his 
leadership, and I thank him for yielding the floor to me.
  I have been here 19 years. It is pretty hard to believe. Some of my 
detractors say it seems longer. It has gone by pretty fast. In the 
past, I have been privileged to have been a naval flight officer for 
many years and retired as a Navy captain. I am the last Vietnam veteran 
to serve in the U.S. Senate today.
  I have been privileged to serve as treasurer, Congressman, Governor, 
and Senator for my State. I loved being Governor. I love being a 
Senator. I am really lucky. There are 1,900 people in the history of 
our country who have had the privilege of serving here, and we get to 
be among them.
  Before I came here, I was Governor for 8 years and got to be chairman 
of the National Governors Association as well. It was a huge honor to 
work with Governors. There are a bunch of former Governors here whom I 
get to work with today. I like that a lot.
  During the 8 years I was Governor, we had 8 years of balanced 
budgets. In 7 out of those 8 years, we actually cut taxes, but we 
always balanced our budget. We paid down some debt, and we earned an 
AAA credit rating for the first time in State history. More jobs were 
created in those 8 years--in the 8-year period in the history of the 
State of Delaware. I don't say that to be boastful. I didn't create one 
of them. As Governor, I tried to provide some leadership and to work 
with stakeholders in our State and in our government and outside of 
government--people from all walks of life and businesses large and 
small. I tried to create a nurturing environment for job creation and 
job preservation. That is what we tried to do, and we were pretty good 
at it. We were pretty good at it. We are still pretty good at it in 
Delaware.
  That nurturing environment is made up of a lot of different things. 
Among the elements are our workforce, people who are educated, trained, 
and have the experience to work to contribute in the workplace, whether 
it is agriculture, tourism, financial services, manufacturing, 
technology, you name it.
  Right now, we have a big challenge in filling all of these holes in 
jobs around the country. We just got a jobs report last Friday that 
shows how the job market was going in the country in the month of 
November. One of the things we learned in the jobs report was that 
maybe about 156 million or 157 million people went to work in November 
every day, but there are 5 million or 6 million jobs where nobody 
showed up. Nobody showed up because they didn't have the skills, the 
education, or the training, or they didn't live in the right part of 
the country, they didn't want to do that kind of job, or maybe they 
couldn't pass a drug test.
  A lot of jobs are going wanting in this country. That has to be a 
concern as we try to provide a nurturing environment, work on the 
workforce side of preparing them for success, and help to bolster the 
growth of our economy going forward.
  Among the other pieces of that nurturing environment, besides the 
workforce, are access to foreign markets and the investment by the 
Federal Government and State governments, too, in the private sector to 
put investment into research and development that can be commercialized 
in order to create the successful businesses going forward in the 
future.
  Transportation is important, not just roads, highways, and bridges, 
but rail transportation, shipping, air. All of that is important. 
Access to the internet--there are a lot of places in the country that 
don't have access to the internet. We think they are just in rural 
areas, but a lot of them are in cities--in cities that have tough 
neighborhoods and are struggling.
  Last night I was privileged to have dinner with the cabinet secretary 
for the State of Delaware, who has been working in a great partnership 
in our State, where the State provides money and we work with private 
sector partners to help bring broadband to virtually every rural part 
of our State.

[[Page S6963]]

That is a great goal, and I think we are closing in on achieving that. 
That is another important element in the environment for successful 
businesses and for business growth.
  Other ingredients include public safety, and they include the 
protection of our intellectual property, cyber security, and the 
ability to make sure that for our products--whether they are goods and 
services, or goods or services, or both--we have the ability to sell 
those into markets around the world without impediment.
  Another one that is important is the Tax Code--a tax code that is 
fair, a tax code that fosters economic growth, a tax code that is not 
incredibly difficult for people to understand and comply with, and a 
tax code that doesn't leave us with a huge hole in our budget deficit.
  The folks at CBO tell us these days, if we look at spending as a 
percentage of GDP--Federal spending as a percentage of GDP--today, it 
is a little over 20 percent, maybe 20.5 percent. The percentage of 
revenues of GDP is about 16 percent. When you spend 20 percent of GDP 
and you raise about 60 percent of GDP revenue, that delta there is our 
deficit.
  The deficit for the last fiscal year was $850 billion. I haven't sat 
down and added this up. That is probably more than the first 200 years 
of our country, combined, and it is $850 billion in 1 year.
  The deficit for the current year is expected to be $1 trillion. It is 
an unimaginable number, except maybe in the case of a war, like World 
War II or maybe World War I.
  I serve on the Finance Committee with Senator Wyden, Senator Brown, 
who is on the floor now, and Senator Stabenow. We were faced with the 
opportunity to do smart things with respect to our Tax Code, to try to 
make it more fair, better able to foster economic growth, less complex, 
and, actually, to reduce deficits.
  As it turned out, without a single Democratic vote--in fact, we 
didn't have the opportunity to offer amendments as the measure moved 
through committee and on to the floor through the Senate, and we had no 
opportunity to offer amendments.
  I just sat in a hearing in the Finance Committee a few minutes ago, 
and they quoted Rob Wallace, from Wyoming, a senior official now in the 
Interior Department. Rob Wallace likes to say that the best solutions 
are the most lasting solutions, and they are bipartisan solutions. They 
are bipartisan solutions. We had the tax changes. They were massive 
changes in the Tax Code that were run through here without any 
bipartisan support.
  We were told at the time the tax bill was signed into law by 
President Trump that it would pay for itself, that it would not 
increase deficits--that it would actually pay for itself, it would 
lower taxes. It would pay for itself, and we would have more revenues.
  As it turns out, that is not true. It wasn't true this time, and, 
frankly, it has been asserted many times that if we can continue to cut 
taxes, revenues will just flow, and everything will be just hunky-dory. 
That is not true, unfortunately.
  Almost 2 years, to the day, have passed since the Republican tax bill 
was enacted. I think it is time to take a good look at some questions 
that my Democratic colleagues and I posed when we were debating this 
bill, to see how this law has fared.
  First of all, is it fair?
  A fair tax law would have ensured that working families in Delaware 
and across the country share in the benefits of tax reform. 
Unfortunately, the 2017 Republicans tax law fails the fairness test in 
spectacular fashion.
  According to the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, by 2027, the top 1 
percent of earners will receive 83 percent of this tax law's relief. 
Eighty-three percent is for the top 1 percent. By the same time, 
Americans earning less than $75,000 will actually see their taxes go 
up. How about that?
  When it became clear that the wealthiest Americans would get the 
lion's share of the benefits, this administration tried to play a game 
of smoke and mirrors with the American people by promising that their 
massive corporate tax giveaway would trickle down to working families.

  President Trump told us that the average household would see their 
income increase by $4,000 to $9,000 per year. Sadly, it is clear that 
has not happened. In fact, according to a report by the nonpartisan 
Congressional Research Service, ordinary workers saw very little wage 
growth in 2018.
  What about the bonuses that workers were promised? That same 
Congressional Research Service report shows that the bonuses attributed 
by companies to the tax law--when divided among all American workers--
comes out to $28 per person. It is not exactly the rewards that were 
promised.
  The second question is, how does this tax law encourage economic 
growth? It was passed at a time when we were about 8 years into the 
longest running economic expansion in the history of the country when 
this was enacted. It came as the economy was growing consistently for 
almost a decade.
  Two years ago, a survey of top economists from across the political 
spectrum found that only 1 out of the 43 experts surveyed believed this 
type of tax reform would boost economic growth. It turns out that the 
other 42 were right. Don't take my word for it. Let's look at some 
facts.
  The CRS report I mentioned earlier found that in 2018, GDP grew at 
2.9 percent, the same as what the nonpartisan Congressional Budget 
Office predicted before the tax law was factored in. Business 
investment did increase in 2019, but CRS found that the investment 
patterns did not align with the incentives of the 2017 tax law, raising 
questions about how much longer term, sustainable growth will result 
from the law. For example, CRS found that the tax law made investing in 
R&D comparably more expensive than investing in other areas, such as 
equipment and structures. But R&D investment actually increased faster 
than investment in equipment and structures in 2018.
  In fact, now that the sugar high of the corporate tax cuts has 
passed, business investment has started to slow in 2019 to the point 
where the Federal Reserve has cited what they call continued softness 
in business and investment as a key reason for the Fed's most recent 
interest rate cut. Instead of sustained investments, corporations have 
used their savings from the tax law for record-setting stock buybacks 
that have an outsized benefit for wealthy shareholders and senior 
executives.
  Job growth follows the same pattern. Despite President Trump's 
constant self-congratulations over jobs numbers, job growth has 
averaged about 180,000 per month so far in 2019, down from the sugar-
high average of 223,000 per month in 2018. In fact, average job growth 
in 2019 is more comparable to job growth in 2016, where it was about 
193,000 a month. In 2017, it was about 179,000 per month, in the 2 
years leading up to the tax law's enactment.
  The third question: Did it simplify the Tax Code?
  One goal of tax reform was supposed to be simplifying the Tax Code, 
to reduce the unpredictability and uncertainty, but the 2017 Republican 
tax law fails on this question too.
  In 2017, Republicans said that after tax reform, Americans would be 
able to file their taxes on a postcard. What we ended up with last year 
is a mighty big postcard--one that included six new schedules, and, as 
then-National Taxpayer Advocate Nina Olson predicted, caused additional 
complexity and hassle for taxpayers, increased the risk of errors, and 
resulted in higher tax preparation bills for most American families. In 
fact, the word ``postcard'' got to be so unwieldy that the IRS has now 
redesigned the form to look more like the one Americans filled out pre-
tax law.
  We also failed to get greater certainty from the 2017 tax law. I have 
heard from Delaware families and businesses alike that they are 
concerned about the impact of the tax law's mistakes and unintended 
consequences--an unsurprising development since our colleagues rushed 
to pass the law in the dead of night without any public hearings and 
with changes scribbled in the margins.
  What is more, the law created a new fiscal cliff at the end of 2025, 
which makes tax policy unpredictable for families and businesses.
  That brings me to my fourth and final question: Has it been fiscally 
responsible?
  Even though the law's individual provisions--including the increase 
in child

[[Page S6964]]

tax credit increase in the standard deduction--expire at the end 2025, 
this law blows a $1.5 trillion hole in our national debt. And it will 
be far costlier than that as the deficits grow in the years and decades 
ahead.
  Two years ago, our Republican friends in Congress and the 
administration repeatedly claimed their tax law would pay for itself. 
As I said earlier, it just hasn't happened.
  According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, U.S. tax 
revenue in 2018 was $275 billion lower than if the tax law had not been 
enacted and lower than otherwise would have happened. This sharp drop 
in corporate income tax revenue has been particularly dramatic.
  CBO data shows that corporations paid $135 billion less in 2018 than 
they would have if the law had not gone into effect--a decline of 
nearly 40 percent. As a result, U.S. revenue as a percentage of GDP in 
2018 was 16.4 percent, a lot lower than the 19 percent during the 4 
years of balanced budgets in the Clinton administration, when we had a 
Republican majority in the House and Senate.
  The other side of this equation is, again, that the spending was 20.5 
percent. That delta between those two numbers explains the deficit.
  Let me close with this. I would like to quote a fellow from Wyoming, 
who was recently before the Energy and Public Works Committee. He has 
been nominated to be the head of the part of the Interior Department 
that includes national parks and fisheries and wildlife. He used to 
work for Malcolm Wallop here. He is a longtime friend of John Barrasso 
and I think others from Wyoming, Mike Enzi. He is a very impressive 
guy. I like him a lot. This is one of the things he said: Bipartisan 
solutions are lasting solutions. That is what he said. He said: 
Bipartisan solutions are lasting solutions.
  The tax law that was enacted 2 years ago was not a bipartisan 
solution. As it turns out, in retrospect, it has not been fair, it has 
not fostered the kind of economic growth long term that we expected or 
hoped or told it would bring, and it has not made the Tax Code all that 
much simpler. And, finally, it has just dramatically inflated the 
budget deficit. That is not sustainable. Other than that, it turned out 
just great.
  I yield the floor to some others who have been waiting, including 
Senator Brown and Senator Stabenow.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Perdue). The Senator from Ohio.
  Mr. BROWN. Mr. President, I appreciate the comments of Senator Carper 
and Senator Wyden and all the members of the tax-writing committee with 
Senator Stabenow. I believe a couple more Senators will join us--I 
believe Senators Cardin and Cantwell.
  Thanks for the work you do, Senator Stabenow, on this issue and so 
many others.
  We all know now what the Trump tax scam did. We know it was a 
giveaway to the richest people in the country. It was a $1.5 trillion 
tax cut. Seventy percent of it went to the wealthiest people in the 
country. We know that. We pretty much knew that in the beginning. We 
know the President said all kinds of things--one lie after another--
about it.
  I want to tell two stories. One of them is from when I was at the 
White House with the President and half a dozen other Senators sitting 
in the President's Cabinet Room when he was talking about the tax bill. 
He said to me and to other Senators that every American will get at 
least $4,000 more in their paycheck--at least. I guess he meant people 
in Gallipolis and Ironton, OH, and Portsmouth and Cleveland and 
Lansing, MI, and Kalamazoo and everywhere else. He said everybody was 
going to get $4,000. That is what he said when the bill was being 
written. When he signed it, he said everybody was going to start seeing 
a lot more money in their paychecks. Well, he lied. No surprise there--
he always does that. He lies about a lot of things. But I particularly 
take it personally when he lies about something like that; when voters 
in Lima and Piqua, OH, don't get what he promised them; when citizens 
and workers just don't get the help.
  At the same time, when I was at that meeting, I went up to the 
President. I had in my hand a bill I was working on called the Patriot 
Corporation Act. I went up to the President after the meeting. I had 
mentioned it during the meeting, and then I walked up to him and said: 
Mr. President, this is the Patriot Corporation Act. I want you to 
consider this.
  Unlike the bill we were looking at, which gave tax cuts to all kinds 
of corporations and all kinds of the wealthiest people in this country, 
the Patriot Corporation Act was simple. The Patriot Corporation Act 
said: If you pay your workers a decent wage; if you provide adequate 
benefits--health and retirement--to your workers; and if you are in 
manufacturing and you do your production in the United States, then you 
will get a break on your taxes. So if you do things right as an 
employer--decent wages, decent benefits, do your production in the 
United States--you get a lower tax rate. But if you don't, if you pay 
low wages or outsource jobs, you pay something called the corporate 
freeloader fee.
  This is because so many companies in this country--they might be 
retail outlets, whatever these companies are--pay $8 or $10 or $12 an 
hour, and their workers are eligible for Medicaid, food stamps, Section 
8 housing, and, basically, those companies are subsidized by taxpayers. 
So why not have a tax system where corporations that do the right thing 
get a lower tax rate, and corporations that rely on the government to 
fund them--food stamps, the earned income tax credit, Medicaid, and all 
of that--those corporations ought to pay a corporate freeloader fee to 
the government.
  That is the first story. The second story I wanted to tell you 
about--the three of us right here in this room right now, Senator 
Cardin and Senator Stabenow and I, were in the midst of this--when this 
tax bill was written, it was written in the Senate Finance Committee. 
You know, when we do things in the Senate, we do these things out in 
public--in the Senate Finance Committee--but we know that much of the 
work is done in Senator McConnell's office down the hall. That is where 
the corporate lobbyists who want these big tax cuts line up.
  We were doing our public meeting in the Senate Finance Committee, and 
they were in such a hurry to pass this bill. We worked way into the 
night, which we are all fine with doing, but the next day we worked, 
they were moving so fast that we would get an amendment that would be 
handwritten in not very good writing, and it would be added to the 
bill, and we really didn't know exactly what we were voting on. They 
didn't want to give us time to do it.
  The people who run this place--Senator McConnell and the special 
interest lobbyists who line up down the hall--know that if they can 
operate and people can't understand what they are doing--they will work 
all night sometimes. They will do things by hand instead of actual 
legible writing so that we end up with the kind of confusion that came 
out of that. Well, you know what happened, Mr. President. There were 
all kinds of mistakes in this bill, and the President signed it. We 
didn't know what the mistakes were, but then we found out.
  Now Republicans are coming back and they want us to clean up this 
mess. Well, cleaning up the mess means more corporate tax breaks, more 
giveaways to corporate America, and more help for the richest 1 percent 
in this country.
  We are saying: We want to fix the technical mistakes you made when 
you hurried through this bill. We want to do that. We all voted against 
the bill because it was a corporate giveaway and a giveaway to the 
rich. We want to fix this so the Tax Code actually reads right and 
there won't be all these court cases regarding it. But if we are going 
to do that, you are going to give some tax breaks to middle-class 
families, and you are going to pass legislation expanding the earned 
income tax credit and the child tax credit.
  We have simply said to the President and to the Republican majority 
that writes these bills that we will work with you. We want to do that, 
but you are not going to hurt middle-class and working-class taxpayers 
again. You are going to expand the earned income tax credit, take care 
of electric vehicles and the kinds of issues we want to do there, but 
fundamentally you are going to help low-income and moderate-income 
children whose parents work just as hard as any Senators work but don't 
have much to say for it.
  Again, it comes down to, whose side are you on? Are you going to 
stand

[[Page S6965]]

with workers, or are you going to stand with corporations? Do you fight 
for Wall Street, or do you fight for the dignity of work? If you love 
this country, you fight for the people who make it work. The President 
promised to fight for American workers. He betrayed American workers, 
as he has betrayed American workers on minimum wage and overtime and 
trade deals. He has betrayed workers over and over again. He broke that 
promise he made.
  It is important that we fix it and we fix it for the broad middle 
class in this country.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan.
  Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I want to join with my colleagues today 
in expressing great dismay as we are approaching the 2-year anniversary 
of the massive Republican tax giveaway. Middle-class families and 
workers have not gotten even remotely close to what they were promised. 
Instead, President Trump and Republicans gave the big drug companies, 
the wealthiest Americans, and other special interests an enormous tax 
cut just in time for the holidays. Merry Christmas to them. But what 
did he give the majority of families in Michigan? He gave them the 
equivalent of a beautifully wrapped gift box with nothing in it. There 
is a word for that, when you make a bunch of promises and fail to keep 
them. In Michigan, we call that a betrayal.
  President Trump made some really big promises about the Republican 
tax giveaway. In his words, it would be ``one of the great Christmas 
gifts to middle-income people.'' Unfortunately, President Trump turned 
out to be less like Santa Claus and more like Ebenezer Scrooge. The 
wealthiest 1 percent of taxpayers received an average tax cut 64 times 
the size of the one given to the middle class.
  He said--as my other colleagues have referred to--people would get an 
average of $4,000 more in their income. We in Michigan are still 
waiting for that $4,000 per person who is working to show up. What 
happened is, the real number is about $514. And what is even worse is 
that bonuses for working people have actually gone down 22 percent 
since the tax giveaway passed. Bonuses are down, not up. You don't have 
to have the math skills of Bob Cratchit to know that is far from what 
was promised.
  He also promised that businesses would use their tax windfall to 
invest in workers and create jobs. Unfortunately, that has not 
happened. We know that in the third quarter of this year, business 
investment was a negative 2.7 percent. That is the second straight 
negative quarter for business investments despite the promise of 
``tremendous'' business investment. I am deeply worried because we have 
had two straight quarters now of contraction on manufacturing, which is 
actually the technical definition of a recession. Coming from Michigan, 
where we proudly make things and grow things, that is deeply concerning 
to me.
  Meanwhile, in the first year of the Republican tax betrayal, 
businesses rewarded CEOs and wealthy shareholders with more than $1.1 
trillion in stock buybacks. What does that mean? That means you do a 
buyback of your stock. It drives up the price of the company stock. It 
enriches the CEOs and major shareholders but does nothing for the 
workers. In fact, corporations spent 140 times as much money on stock 
buybacks as they did on increasing wages and benefits for workers. In 
2018 alone, the 10 biggest drug companies spent $115 billion--with a 
``b''--on stock buybacks and dividends, but I don't recall seeing the 
cost of medicine go down. Instead, they keep raising the prices, which 
is outrageous.
  Perhaps the most ridiculous promise that President Trump made was on 
the national debt. He said: ``We have $21 trillion in debt.'' That is 
what he said back in July 2018. ``When [the Republican tax law] really 
kicks in, we'll start paying off that debt like water.'' I am not 
exactly sure what that meant, but it didn't happen. Instead, the 
Federal budget deficit has risen by $319 billion so far, and counting, 
since the passage of the Republican tax law.
  To add insult to injury, our friends across the aisle doing the 
budget used the fact that there was a deficit to one more time say that 
we need $1.5 trillion in cuts to Medicaid and $800 billion in cuts to 
Medicare to reduce the deficit because, oh my gosh, we have a deficit, 
so we should take healthcare away from seniors and families across 
America.
  On top of all of that, the Trump administration now is implementing 
rules that could take food assistance away from up to a million people 
who work part time or seasonal work. They get a job at the mall during 
Christmas, but then they lose it. They are in and out of the market. By 
the way, the average amount of help to these men and women who are 
working hard, trying to hold it together, is $127 a month--just barely 
making sure they are not starving. As another Republican President once 
said, ``There you go again.''
  Let me say in conclusion that 2 years ago, President Trump promised 
middle-class families, working families across Michigan and the 
country, a whole lot of things. He said that the deficit would 
disappear, that corporations would pass along their tax savings in the 
form of jobs and better wages, and that people would get $4,000 more in 
their paychecks, in their income. He said that this giveaway would be 
one of the great Christmas gifts to middle-class people. Instead, the 
majority of Americans got a lump of coal.
  Promises have not been kept. We believe in keeping promises in 
Michigan. This is about more than the numbers; it is about making sure 
everybody who is working hard is treated fairly and has a fair shot to 
care for their families and have the American dream. That is not what 
happened with this tax giveaway.
  I yield the floor to the Senator from Maryland.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
  Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I join my colleagues on the floor today to 
point out that 2 years ago, we had an opportunity in the Congress to 
reform the Tax Code. The Tax Code, basically, was the one enacted in 
1986. In 2017, we had an opportunity to reform that Tax Code, and that 
opportunity was missed.
  What the Republicans did, instead of engaging in a truly bipartisan 
process that would have used the expertise of all Members of Congress, 
they went on a partisan mission in order to help big corporations and 
wealthy taxpayers at the expense of middle-income taxpayers and fiscal 
responsibility. As a result, our children and grandchildren will pick 
up the tab for this bill, and those who are going to benefit will not 
be middle-income families. They are the losers. The ones who are going 
to benefit will be big corporations and wealthy taxpayers.
  Let me just talk about some things that should be the basic 
ingredients for tax reform.
  First, it should be fair to the taxpayers of this country. The tax 
bill that was enacted 2 years ago was certainly not fair. It failed in 
that test. As I pointed out, who benefited? Large corporations 
benefited dramatically by this bill, but they said: Look, we will pass 
it on to the workers. Yet did they pass it on to the workers? In 2018, 
$1.1 trillion was used to repurchase stock to make the wealthiest even 
wealthier, and it did not go to the benefit of the workers. The benefit 
was the greatest on the personal income tax side as it went to the 
highest income taxpayers. They are the ones who benefited the most, and 
it was not fair to middle-income taxpayers.
  Secondly, a tax reform bill should be fiscally responsible. After 
all, we have taxes in order to raise revenue, in order to pay for 
services so we don't borrow from the future--from our children and 
grandchildren--to pay for what we are doing today. The administration 
said this would be a fiscally responsible bill. The verdict is back, 
and $2 trillion has been added to the national deficit--$2 trillion. It 
has certainly failed on fiscal responsibility. Corporate taxes have 
gone down 40 percent. So we have given a break to corporations at the 
expense of our deficit. Who is picking up the bill? Middle-income 
taxpayers are picking up the bill.
  Thirdly, the Tax Code should be efficient, and we should try to make 
it as simple as possible. No one can argue that the 2017 tax bill has 
simplified the Tax Code or has made it more efficient. To the contrary, 
we are now told we are going to need technical corrections because of 
the mistakes that were included in it. I can say, in my talking to many 
individuals who had the plan based upon the Tax Code, that there is

[[Page S6966]]

so much more uncertainty in the Tax Code now than there was prior to 
the passage of the 2017 tax bill.
  Who is going to pick up the tab? Middle-income taxpayers are going to 
pick up the tab, and let me just give you some examples.
  The 2017 bill included a limitation on State and local tax 
deductions, and let me just talk a little bit about the taxpayers of 
Maryland. Almost 50 percent of Maryland's taxpayers used the itemized 
deduction and took the advantage of taking off of their Federal taxes 
what they paid in State and local taxes so they didn't have a tax on a 
tax. As a result of the limitations that were imposed in 2017, these 
taxpayers are now no longer able to take the full amount of the State 
and local tax deductions. In fact, because of the full changes, 
Maryland's number is down to about 25 percent when we did have almost 
50 percent taking advantage of itemized deductions. We have lost about 
half of those filers who today can't take any of those tax deductions.
  This is an affront to federalism, and it also hurts middle-income 
taxpayers. It is philosophically wrong to have a tax on a tax. So the 
verdict is in with Maryland taxpayers, and the average refunds are down 
6 percent. The refunds are what middle-income taxpayers depend on, and 
they are down in our State.
  It has also affected the ability of State and local governments to 
provide essential services that are important for all citizens. Yet 
whether it is their support for public education, public safety, et 
cetera, these essential services are very much dependent on middle-
income families. All of those are now being stressed because of the 
restrictions on State and local tax deductions.
  Let me also talk about middle-income taxpayers. They don't benefit 
from the corporate tax cuts, which I already pointed out, but these tax 
cuts were made permanent. The individual tax changes were temporary in 
nature. Again, this hurts middle-income families.
  Lastly, let me point out that it was advertised by this 
administration that it would strengthen our economy. When you take a 
look at the first six quarters since the passage of the 2017 tax 
giveaway to the wealthy families and corporations, the gross domestic 
product has grown about 2.5 percent, which is far less than what the 
administration predicted. If you take the six quarters before the 
passage of the bill, it had gone up by 2.6 percent. So there has 
actually been a slight decline, and we haven't seen a boost to the 
economy.
  There is a better way to do this as this bill ignores small business. 
I have the opportunity of being the ranking Democrat on the Committee 
on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, and we have had many 
discussions with small business leaders who tell us this tax bill 
actually hurts them--it doesn't help them--because they don't pay the C 
rate but, rather, the individual rate, and the pass-throughs that were 
put in here don't benefit small companies. So, when we are talking 
about helping the driver of our economy--small business--the tax 
giveaway 2 years ago has made it even more difficult.
  The better way is to work in a true bipartisan fashion and engage all 
Members of Congress on both sides of the aisle. Let us truly change our 
Tax Code so that middle-income families benefit and so that we don't 
burden future taxpayers by our making irresponsible changes that are 
not fully funded. Let's do it in a way in which it will help the growth 
of our economy. That is what we should be doing. There was a missed 
opportunity 2 years ago, and it is moving the Nation in the wrong 
direction.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                  Suicide Prevention Coordinators Act

  Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, I rise today because far too many of our 
veterans feel like they have run out of options when it comes to 
dealing with the physical and mental scars of war. These are folks who 
have served in defense of our freedoms and who often suffer tremendous 
invisible wounds of war.
  I can't tell you the number of times I have heard from men and women 
in uniform, in Montana and across this country, who feel helpless, and 
they feel as though they have been abandoned by their own country. The 
facts tell us that we are not doing enough here in this body to help. 
The reality is that our country loses as many as 20 Active-Duty or 
veteran servicemembers each and every day due to suicide. Regardless of 
political party, we can all agree that one life lost to a suicide is 
too many.
  That is why, as ranking member of the Senate Veterans' Affairs 
Committee, I have been working with my colleagues across the aisle--
colleagues like Senator Sullivan--to make sure that our vets have the 
access to the help and the care they need.
  The bill that we are going to consider here shortly--our Support for 
Suicide Prevention Coordinators Act--is a bipartisan effort to help 
tackle the suicide epidemic by ensuring that we take a comprehensive 
approach to connecting veterans with urgent, lifesaving care. This bill 
starts by identifying and addressing staffing needs for VA employees 
and suicide prevention professionals who are our Nation's first line of 
defense when it comes to combating veteran suicide.
  It is clear that we have much more to do to prevent this national 
health epidemic, and it starts with understanding the scope of the 
problem. If we don't have the tools in place to take care of these 
folks when they return home, then, we should think twice before we send 
them in the first place.
  I urge the Senate to vote for this bill when it comes up and to get 
it passed out of this body quickly so the President can quickly sign it 
into law.
  It is not something that can solve our suicide problems among our 
veterans by itself, but it is certainly one of the tools in the toolbox 
that can help folks when they need help and to ensure that no veteran 
slips through the cracks.
  I want to thank the Senator from Alaska for everything he has done to 
make sure that this bill becomes a reality.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alaska.
  Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, I want to thank my friend from the great 
State of Montana, Senator Tester. This is actually a bill that he and I 
have cosponsored out of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, and it is a 
companion bill that we are going to be bringing over from the House to 
vote on here in a couple of minutes to hopefully get this on the 
President's desk very soon to get him to sign it.
  There is a lot of legislation that focuses on these kinds of issues: 
How do we address this growing problem of suicide in our country?
  The real tragedy is that all suicides are tragic, but there are very 
high numbers of suicides that impact our veterans.
  My State, the great State of Alaska, has more vets per capita than 
any State in the country. We are proud of that patriotic fact. Sadly, 
we also have some of the highest suicide rates in America.
  So since I have come to this body, I have had the privilege to serve 
my fellow Alaskans, and focusing on suicide has been a very, very 
important issue for me. It is a very important issue for my 
constituents, and it is a very important issue for America. As a matter 
of fact, the first bill I cosponsored as a U.S. Senator was called the 
Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention Act, which was named after a young marine 
who had a number of deployments, and, unfortunately, when he was 
seeking help, he couldn't really get it, and this young, brave hero 
took his own life.
  This should be a priority for the Senate. We have been prioritizing 
the veterans and the members of the military who are in crisis when we 
draft legislation that tries to address these challenges, but what we 
are doing today is also important.
  This bill actually focuses on the people who help our veterans. These 
are suicide prevention coordinators. They are specially trained 
employees at the VA medical centers who identify and connect high-risk 
veterans with the care they need.
  Across the Nation, these VA professionals conduct outreach, promote

[[Page S6967]]

awareness, and disseminate suicide prevention best practices. They are, 
literally, on the frontlines.
  But, as you can imagine, this isn't an easy job. This is a hard job, 
and there are reports that many of these prevention coordinators 
throughout the VA system are overworked and unable to keep up with 
their many responsibilities. What we are focused on here is that we 
want to make sure that the people who are helping our veterans are also 
taken care of and adequately resourced so that they can do the best job 
in terms of helping our veterans.
  The VA must have a skilled and resourced workforce available, trained 
to recognize the warning signs of a veteran in crisis, and then be able 
to work with that veteran, hopefully successfully, to connect them with 
lifesaving resources before it is too late.
  That is what the Support for Suicide Prevention Coordinators Act 
requires. That is what Senator Tester and I worked on together to bring 
this out of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, and, hopefully, if we get 
that right, then, it has a positive impact on lessening this high rate 
of suicide among our veterans.
  Senator Tester mentioned what is in this, but it is not just 
additional resources. It is also a comprehensive study by the GAO to 
make sure that our coordinators are resourced and have a strategy to 
make sure they can do their jobs most effectively to impact our 
veterans.
  It is an overall look at the VA system of preventing veteran suicide 
with a focus on these frontline coordinators who do really, really 
important work. They are not always recognized.
  For those who are doing that work, I commend you, the Senate commends 
you, and I think we are going to have an overwhelming vote here in a 
couple minutes that will make sure of your ability to do this really, 
really important job for our veterans and for our Nation and that you 
are going to be able to do it better.
  I applaud the leadership on both sides of the aisle for bringing this 
bill to the floor, and I encourage my colleagues to vote in favor of 
this legislation. Let's get it on the President's desk for his 
signature soon, and we can take another step--another step--to make 
sure that we are taking care of our veterans and are trying to address 
this horribly tragic situation where far too many veterans in America 
are taking their own lives.

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