[Pages S160-S161]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                          CABINET NOMINATIONS

  Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, now, on the Hegseth hearing, the takeaway 
from yesterday's hearing on Pete Hegseth is very clear: Pete Hegseth is 
woefully unfit for the job of Secretary of Defense.
  For Mr. Hegseth, yesterday's hearing was an exercise in obfuscation. 
When confronted about the serious accusations against his character, 
Mr. Hegseth repeatedly dismissed them as ``smear tactics'' but refused 
to respond to how these character issues impact his qualifications for 
the job.
  When asked if being guilty of sexual assault is disqualifying for the 
job of Secretary of Defense, Mr. Hegseth refused to answer. Imagine if 
any other American interviewing for any other job refused to answer 
that question.
  Clearly, more information is needed about Hegseth's background. But 
when Democrats asked to make Mr. Hegseth's full FBI background 
documents available to all members of the committee, the Republican 
chair said no.
  Why? Why is the Republican chair insistent on keeping relevant 
information about Mr. Hegseth locked away from committee members?
  Perhaps the reason for Republican stonewalling is that the more 
evidence that is revealed about Mr. Hegseth, the more obvious it will 
become that he is woefully unfit for the job.
  For Mr. Hegseth, when there are serious allegations, to not answer 
them directly and instead just call them ``smear tactics''--especially 
in such an important job like Secretary of Defense, where people's 
lives are on the line--is just totally unacceptable, totally 
inadequate, and, basically, a nominee for a very important position 
just ducking the most important questions he faced.
  Now, let me say a few things about why these hearings are so 
important for our country and to our side.
  By all indications, our Republican colleagues seem perfectly 
comfortable with advancing Mr. Hegseth through the Senate, despite his 
lack of qualifications. Many of our colleagues have private doubts 
about the nominees, but, publicly, they are still willing to embrace 
them.
  Donald Trump's hold on Senate Republicans has become very powerful. 
Nevertheless, we Democrats will continue to push and pressure and 
scrutinize each nominee in committee because it is so important to get 
them on record. Americans need to see that many of Donald Trump's 
nominees are simply unfit for the jobs they have been chosen for. 
Americans need to hear these nominees answer for Donald Trump's harmful 
policies.
  And if some of these nominees are severely unqualified--and many of 
them are--these hearings are essential for exposing that. Even if they 
get confirmed in the end, the information must come out. Even if they 
get confirmed, it is so important to have all these questions asked and 
to see what the answers, or lack of answers, are.
  If the time comes, months from now, that some of Donald Trump's 
Cabinet members fail on the job, these hearings will have served as an 
important warning for the American people to see. That is why Democrats 
are committed to ensuring each nominee is vetted thoroughly and 
scrutinized during the testimony.
  One other point, by the way, on why we think the hearings are 
important: The hearings are also an opportunity to show whose side each 
party is on. Are these nominees in favor of tax cuts for very wealthy 
people? Are they in favor of keeping programs that help working-class 
people, keep prices down, such as making sure that Medicare can 
negotiate drug prices, which brings down the price for everybody? Where 
do they stand?
  Where do they stand? The hearings glaringly show that Donald Trump 
and his nominees are on the side of the very powerful and that we 
Democrats who are asking the questions are on the side of working 
people.
  And as the hearings wind through and we go through more and more 
witnesses, it will become clearer and clearer to the American people 
who is on whose side.
  So it is important to have a record of these nominees even if they 
get confirmed in the end to see who they are and to guard against the 
dangers that might occur with them in office and to show who is on 
whose side.
  Now, a couple more of today's nominees are very troubling. One is Mr. 
Vought. Few nominees illustrate what is at stake for working-class 
families better than Donald Trump's pick for OMB director, Mr. Russell 
Vought. This is one of the most influential positions in the entire 
White House, responsible for not only producing the President's budget 
but also executing the President's agenda across the executive branch.
  I will be candid, Mr. Vought's appointment to OMB director would be a 
nightmare scenario for working Americans. It is difficult to imagine a 
worse choice to implement White House policy than the chief architect 
of Project 2025. Let me repeat that, because our Republican friends 
don't want to talk about 2025, but at the same time, they are likely to 
vote for someone who was the chief architect of the project in a 
powerful position to implement it: head of OMB.
  You cannot, you simply cannot be proworker and support the nomination

[[Page S161]]

of Russell Vought. The last time he worked at the White House, Mr. 
Vought pushed radical budget proposals that gutted Social Security, 
Medicare, Medicaid, and funding for public health.
  During the last default crisis, Mr. Vought was a key advisor to hard-
right Republicans who pushed America to the brink of disaster by using 
the debt ceiling as blackmail to cut trillions in funding for 
healthcare, for seniors, for hungry kids.
  When Congress did not appropriate Donald Trump's border wall, Vought 
raided the accounts of the Pentagon and the Treasury Department to pay 
for it. And on top of it all, Mr. Vought put America's national 
security at risk by illegally withholding foreign aid to Ukraine in an 
attempt to help Donald Trump on the campaign trail.
  To call Mr. Vought an extremist would, frankly, give extremists a bad 
name. The only people in America who can be happy about Mr. Vought are 
the richest of the rich, who would make a killing if Donald Trump and 
Republicans hand them another trillion-dollar tax cut. And, again, just 
let me repeat, this man is the chief architect of Project 2025. 
Republicans are running away from that project now, but at the same 
time, they are putting its chief architect in one of the most powerful 
positions in the Federal Government, which had a broad range across 
just about every policy.
  So today's hearing with Mr. Vought is a reminder to the American 
people that Donald Trump does not intend to keep his promises to 
working people. If Donald Trump were serious about being proworker, he 
would not have turned to the godfather of the ultraright to oversee 
White House policy.
  And on Chris Wright, the tragic fires in California are another 
warning that the climate crisis continues to grow in strength. The 
scientific community across the world from the U.N. to NASA to even 
national security experts agree that ignoring climate change is 
dangerous.
  So Donald Trump's nominee for Energy Secretary is truly alarming: oil 
executive Chris Wright. Everything you need to know about who Mr. 
Wright is and what he will fight for can be found in the following 
quote he once gave in an interview. Mr. Wright said:

       Oil and Gas make the world go round.

  Mr. Wright amassed his wealth in fracking and is an oil executive, 
so, of course, he thinks oil and gas are the only things that count in 
the world. An article from the New York Times this morning called him 
an evangelist for fossil fuels.
  What makes Mr. Wright so troubling, however, is that he is perfectly 
willing to admit climate change is happening while rejecting that we 
should do anything about it.
  He says calling climate change a crisis is pure fearmongering. He 
says the real crisis is that not enough people are using hydrocarbons. 
Imagine, that is what he said, not enough people are using 
hydrocarbons. That is the crisis in the world. Can you believe it?
  He even says that roadblocks to unrestrained fossil fuel development 
are outright ``immoral.'' This man is an extremist when it comes to 
energy issues. He is not even among the conservative mainstream he is 
so far over.
  What a shock this is, a wealthy oil executive thinks that the 
solutions to the world's problems are to produce more oil. This is who 
Donald Trump wants leading America's energy policy.
  Mr. Wright's nomination should be an alarm bell for every single 
American who has gotten a job recently at battery plants, EV factories, 
and other good-paying clean jobs. Many of these Americans are in red 
States that trusted Donald Trump to look after them. But as far as 
Donald Trump's pick for Energy Secretary is concerned, he thinks 
``we're not in the midst of an energy transition.'' That is his words.
  Tell that to the workers in rural America rebuilding EV batteries and 
wind and solar. I hope our Republican colleagues will repeat those 
words to the employees in their districts who have gotten good-paying 
jobs in these new clean energy industries.
  Everyone knows we still have a lot of work to do before we reach our 
clean energy goals, and everybody knows it is not going to be easy. The 
question is whether or not Donald Trump's administration is going to 
protect the clean energy jobs we have created or kill them and put 
people out of work for the sake of Big Oil.
  Mr. Wright's nomination suggests that Donald Trump is willing to let 
all those good-paying clean energy jobs we have created disappear.
  And to my Republican colleagues, when Donald Trump and Mr. Wright 
start cutting the jobs that have come from clean energy that are in 
your States, don't say we didn't tell you so. And remember, the voters 
are going to know who you voted for, for the head of Energy.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.

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