[Pages S38-S40]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                             119TH CONGRESS

  Mr. CORNYN. Mr. President, as you know, last Friday, the Senate swore 
in new leaders for the 119th Congress, and in 2 weeks, the new 
Commander in Chief will be sworn in for a second time.
  We are 6 days into a new year, and people around the country are 
making resolutions for the new year--everything from health to fitness, 
books to read, financial goals to meet--and as Republicans, now is a 
good time for us to do the exact same thing. We have our work cut out 
for us to help clean up the mess that President Biden and Senate 
Democrats have left us from the last 4 years.
  I believe our first and most urgent task is to confirm President 
Trump's nominees for his Cabinet. The President won the election, and 
he is entitled to his team, absent extraordinary circumstances. It is 
simply impossible for the new administration to tackle the mountain of 
work waiting for them without their team of advisers who will lead 
critical government Agencies.
  Without the President's Cabinet in place, he cannot get the job done 
that he was elected to do on November 5. With his Cabinet in place, we 
can get to work to implement the agenda that Texans and Americans 
across the country elected a trifecta of Republican leaders to 
accomplish.
  The top of our list of priorities is, of course, to secure the 
southern border. I represent a State with 1,200 miles of common border 
with Mexico, and, sadly and tragically, under the previous 
administration's open border policies, it has been an unmitigated 
disaster.
  The crisis at the southern border is one that President Biden quite 
literally invited with his campaign rhetoric and with his 
administration's policies. He invited this crisis. This was perhaps the 
one campaign promise that he delivered on. The Biden administration set 
out to reverse many, if not all, of President Trump's policies from his 
first term, including the ``Remain in Mexico'' policy and title 42.
  Under President Biden's watch, the Border Patrol was overwhelmed with 
record numbers of illegal migrants crossing the border. Border Patrol 
encountered more than 370 people on the Terror Watchlist crossing 
between ports of entry during the Biden administration. We know there 
were roughly a dozen people who were part of the conspiracy that 
resulted in the death of 3,000 Americans on September 11, 2001, and now 
here we have 370 people on the Terror Watchlist that crossed between 
ports of entry during the Biden administration. Well, that compares 
with well under 10 per year under the Trump administration. But I think 
the point is pretty obvious: This is dangerous.
  Those are only the aliens who the Border Patrol encountered or 
apprehended. Remember that President Biden also set records for ``got-
aways.'' That is what the Border Patrol calls the people who simply 
evaded law enforcement--aliens who fled because, frankly, they were up 
to no good.

  As of May, more than 1.7 million ``got-aways'' had made their way 
into the United States under their watch. These are just people who 
triggered various cameras and sensors and were able to evade law 
enforcement. Surely there were more that were able to make their way 
into the interior of the United States. Again, under President Biden's 
border policies, all you have to do is turn yourself in and you would 
be released into the interior, but these are people that could not even 
risk that because of either their criminal records or their intention 
to do harm, including carry drugs into the United States.
  Since the Biden administration established the word ``asylum'' as a 
magic word that resulted in their release into the interior, we can be 
pretty sure that many of those evading Border Patrol have something 
else to hide.
  Human trafficking and drug trafficking by the cartels have caused 
enormous and often untold suffering for the people of my home State of 
Texas and Americans as a whole. Fentanyl, which is now the leading 
cause of death of young people in America 18 to 45, is manufactured--or 
the precursors are manufactured in China and trafficked through the 
U.S.-Mexico border.
  Countless migrants released into the interior of our country have 
failed to show up for their day in court, showing others looking to 
make the dangerous journey to the United States that they might also be 
able to make it and suffer zero consequences.
  All of these actions--or lack of actions--from the Biden 
administration have sent a clear signal that the laws of the United 
States will not be enforced.
  You know, law enforcement depends on our great men and women in blue 
to investigate crimes and to deter other people from committing crimes, 
but deterrence is a very important element that has simply been lost by 
the Biden administration's open border policies.
  Given the fact that most people who come to the United States know, 
under the Biden administration, that they will simply be released, 
there is no reason for them to believe that they will not be released 
as well, and so there is zero deterrence. That is getting ready to 
change under President Trump.

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  Now, speaking of breaking the law without consequence, violent crime 
is another problem plaguing Texans and American cities across the 
country. Leftwing mayors and city governments have advanced soft-on-
crime policies in major cities from Chicago to Los Angeles and from New 
York to San Francisco. What has been the result? Well, criminals have 
noticed that there are no consequences to them committing crimes in 
these cities. The lack of consequences is an incentive, an 
encouragement for them to continue stealing, breaking, and murdering.
  That is all beginning to change under a new administration. 
Republicans are prepared to take steps necessary to prevent and ensure 
that ramifications for these crimes exist. We have done so before, and 
we are going to do so again.
  During President Trump's first administration, I was proud to partner 
with him on legislation to lock up violent criminals and ensure justice 
for victims. One of my top priorities for the new year is to do 
everything I can to build on the great work we accomplished under 
President Trump's first term to make sure that our communities, our 
cities, and our streets are once again safe.
  Another way that we will keep our citizens safe is by ensuring that 
Second Amendment rights are safeguarded. The Trump administration will 
end President Biden's assault on the Second Amendment--the right to 
keep and bear arms--as well as the Biden administration's bad-faith 
interpretations of Second Amendment-related legislation.
  I look forward to leading my Senate colleagues in reintroducing my 
Concealed Carry Reciprocity Act and working with the Trump 
administration and our cosponsors here in the Senate to get this 
legislation across the finish line.
  Now, I know some folks from places like New York or maybe San 
Francisco might say: You are actually going to make it easier for 
people to carry a firearm legally?
  Well, the answer is, already the vast majority of States have 
licensing regimes where responsible, law-abiding citizens can exercise 
their Second Amendment rights by getting a license to carry a firearm, 
including Texas and including the District of Columbia. I happen to 
have a license in both jurisdictions. Many States have gone simply to a 
nonlicensed status so that people can exercise their Second Amendment 
rights.
  I would reiterate, America and Americans have nothing to fear from 
law-abiding citizens exercising their Second Amendment rights. Those 
are not the people we should be concerned about. We should be most 
concerned about people who are criminals who cannot legally carry a 
firearm or people with mental health incapacities who are currently 
prohibited under existing law from carrying or owning or possessing a 
firearm. Those are existing laws that are enforced, given the National 
Instant Criminal Background Check System.
  Now, while our safety and security start at home, in our communities, 
and at our borders, it also extends around the world. As I have said 
before from this floor, we now have the most dangerous geopolitical 
environment that we have had since World War II.
  Texans voted resoundingly for President Trump in this last election 
in part because of his pledge to hold China accountable. China 
threatens the peace in the Indo-Pacific by threatening to invade its 
neighbor Taiwan and interrupt freedom of commerce and freedom of 
navigation in the Indo-Pacific.
  One of the ways that we can hold China accountable is to pass my 
legislation to address outbound investment in China. I just had a 
chance to visit with the new Treasury Secretary nominee, and I told him 
it was really strange to me when you look historically at how we dealt 
with the Soviet Union and how we dealt with China, both of which are 
ruled by communist governments.

  Many years ago, at the beginning of the Cold War, George Kennan, a 
famous diplomat, wrote something called the ``Long Telegram,'' where he 
said you are not going to change communist Russia. It is an ideological 
obsession they have. You are not going to change their minds. So what 
you need to do--what the free world needs to do--is to contain them. 
And that is what the Cold War was all about, leading ultimately to the 
fall of the Soviet Union.
  Strangely enough, the U.S. position toward China was just the 
opposite. Under President Clinton, he invited them into the World Trade 
Organization, believing that somehow by engaging in more trade with the 
rest of the world, that somehow China and the Communist Party would 
change. Well, as Xiaoping, one of the former leaders of communist 
China, said: Hide your motives and bide your time. And that is exactly 
what China has done.
  China has now become the manufacturing center for the world. When you 
are buying inexpensive consumer products, that is one thing, but when 
you consider the vulnerability of our supply chains and things that 
China makes and does--like processes critical minerals, which it does 
90 percent of the critical minerals of the world that we need for a 
variety of products, including military weapons--that represents a huge 
vulnerability. Well, we need to know who is investing in what 
industries in China because, right now, the rough estimate of the 
market value of American-based investment in China in 2020 was $2.3 
trillion.
  China has built its economy--which, by itself, should not be a big 
concern--but they now have become a rival to the United States. If they 
played by the rules, that would be one thing. But China is famous for 
not honoring intellectual property laws and stealing all the technology 
they can. And they are using their economic power, which is synonymous 
with their military power because they have something called civilian-
military fusion laws, which said if the private sector creates a new 
innovative product, they have to share it with the People's Liberation 
Army and the Communist Party in China.
  My point is, my outbound investment piece of legislation says we need 
to know who is investing money in China and what that is being used 
for. I could care less if people want to build more Burger Kings or 
Starbucks in China. I am not worried about that. But when you start 
talking about advanced semiconductors, when you start talking about 
serial intellectual property theft, when you look at some of the 
weapons systems and the airframes China has been creating, they bear a 
remarkable resemblance to those we built here in the United States 
because they have engaged in massive theft through cyber attacks and 
through intellectual property theft.
  But it is simply foolish for the United States to continue to blindly 
invest billions of dollars in the very defense systems and technologies 
that the Chinese Communist Party could use to our detriment in the 
Indo-Pacific.
  Our colleague Senator Sullivan from Alaska just retired as colonel 
from the Marines. He puts it very poignantly. He says: American 
investors are going to fund the very military buildup that will result 
in the death of my marines if China were to invade Taiwan.
  To me--and I am sure to all of us--that is simply unacceptable. Right 
now, we are flying blind, and that needs to change.
  While some might be concerned about lost investment potential in 
China, there are plenty of opportunities here at home and in other 
parts around the world, as we see more friendshoring and nearshoring, 
to create dependable supply chains to Asia, India, and elsewhere.
  Well, there is another area where I expect President Trump to make a 
big difference, and that is in the energy sector and primarily to do 
this through regulatory reform. For the past 4 years, the Biden 
administration has put the wistful dreams of climate activists ahead of 
the interests of ordinary Americans, particularly those in my home 
State of Texas.
  And he is certainly not letting the door hit him on the way out. 
Today--I think that was actually yesterday--President Biden announced 
one last nail in the coffin by issuing a permanent ban on oil and gas 
leasing in certain Federal waters preventing new drilling.
  But nevertheless, Republicans will not be dissuaded from our task to 
reverse the damage of the Biden administration and unleash this huge 
asset, which is American energy. By removing burdensome regulations 
from our energy sector, by improving the permitting process so we can 
actually build things like the capacity to

[[Page S40]]

produce electricity that would drive data centers and artificial 
intelligence, and by increasing our exports of things like natural gas 
so our friends and allies don't have to depend on Russia to keep the 
lights on or to heat their homes, we can create both growth for our 
economy here at home and we can improve our natural security posturing, 
including shoring up our vulnerable supply chains. Rather than forcing 
Europe to rely on Russia for its energy sources, we can increase their 
reliance--and they are eager to have it--on American energy, 
particularly liquefied natural gas.
  This would be a big win for America and a big win for my State as 
well and a big loss for the ``axis of evil''--Russia, China, Iran, and 
North Korea that are working together to undermine the United States 
and the West.
  We have a lot to do and very little time to do it. We have an 
opportunity to pass huge wins for President Trump and, more 
specifically, for the American people. And that comes first through the 
budget reconciliation process. This is a once-in-a-generation 
opportunity, and it is not an opportunity we can afford to squander. We 
can't let this go to waste by not taking this occasion to finally 
address our skyrocketing debt. And the only way we can do that is not 
only be responsible in the way we handle things like discretionary 
spending but to dig deeper into the areas that the Federal Government 
spends like mandatory spending.
  I know Medicare and Social Security are particularly fraught. And 
without bipartisan support, it is really hard to save Social Security 
and Medicare, particularly if the Democrats aren't going to be willing 
to help. But there is about $700 billion a year that the Federal 
Government spends that has mandatory spending. That means it is on 
autopilot, and we never go back to revisit it to see if it is still a 
priority, which continues to grow at 5, 6, 7, 8 percent a year. And 
until and unless we deal with this mandatory spending, we are never 
going to deal with this mountain of debt now approaching $36 trillion.
  We have now finally gotten to the point where we are paying more 
money for interest on the national debt than we are on our own defense, 
which is 2.7 percent of our GPD. We finally kicked the can down the 
road to the point we have run out of road. That is true both in terms 
of our fiscal condition and in terms of our national security.
  We can't let this opportunity go to waste. As I said, we need to take 
a hard look at both our mandatory discretionary spending, and we also 
need to take a look at how the Tax Code has been transformed into a 
welfare system. About $200 billion a year go to pay for the child tax 
credit and the earned income tax credit.
  Democrats have been successful in decoupling any sort of work 
requirement for able-bodied adults. That needs to be reinstated because 
when it comes to assessing the people who deserve help and need our 
help, able-bodied individuals should not be able to ride the backs of 
the American taxpayers. They need to do like everybody else does who is 
able-bodied, and that is to be a producer, not somebody who lives off 
the beneficence of the American taxpayer.
  We have a lot of work to do, but this is an incredible opportunity 
that I trust we will not squander. The time to address these problems 
is now. We put it off long enough. I know it is easy to say let's do 
the easy things now, and we will do the hard stuff later. But later 
never seems to come so we have to deal with these now.
  I yield the floor.

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