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[Page S629]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIAL OF PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP
Mrs. BLACKBURN. Mr. President, the impeachment trial of President
Trump has devolved into a parade of last-minute red herrings meant to
distract this body from the issue at hand. The near-hysteria over
books, boredom, and beef jerky has provided a convenient vehicle for
the House managers, who are trying their best to peddle outrage as
evidence.
We learned nothing new from the House managers' presentations, but
outside the Senate Chamber, they have been doing their best to convince
us that we are one ``bombshell'' away from, at last, having all the
elements needed for a speedy conviction. These efforts to keep
unfounded allegations in the limelight have not gone unnoticed by those
who should be commanding our attention: the American people.
Outside the beltway, Americans have grown weary of trials and talking
points. They have heard enough, and they have had enough.
Taking that feedback into consideration, I thought it might be
helpful to offer an update on what we could be focusing on instead of
this farcical partisan grudge match.
Behind the scenes, we are limping along as best we can, but our focus
is necessarily distracted from regular business. Before our time was
monopolized by impeachment, the Senate was making wonderful progress on
filling the Federal bench with well-qualified, constitutionalist
judges.
When we weren't interviewing those nominees, members of the Judiciary
Committee spent time hearing testimony on privacy, competition, and the
crisis on our southern border.
Before impeachment, Senators serving on the Veterans' Affairs
Committee were hard at work considering a comprehensive mental health
bill that would strengthen veteran mental health and suicide prevention
programs. My own IMPROVE Act is part of this effort. We were also
working on the IT Reform Act, which would improve information
technology projects at the VA, and the Network of Support Act, which
would help VA officials guide veterans through the emotional upheaval
of transitioning between Active Duty and civilian life. We were doing
all of this in addition to our continued oversight of the VA MISSION
Act, and check-ins on struggling clinics such as the one in
Murfreesboro, TN, which just reduced bed space for veterans struggling
with opiate addiction and thoughts of suicide.
This Thursday, we have an Armed Services Committee hearing on the
U.S.' role in AFRICOM. When I visited with our troops in Djibouti and
Somalia at the end of last year, I saw firsthand the importance of our
advisory support on the African continent. Drawing down resources or
personnel in AFRICOM would harm our position as we compete with Russia
and China--but we won't have much time to discuss this potentially
disastrous change. Every day, work grinds to a halt at 1:00 p.m., so
that we can sit in our seats in the Senate Chamber and focus on the
impeachment trial.
We could be paying attention to the full-blown health crisis plaguing
our rural communities. Since 2010, 118 rural hospitals have shut their
doors. Fourteen of those facilities were in my home State of Tennessee.
Between these hospital closures, and high drug prices, there is enough
work to be done in the health care sector alone to keep us busy through
Christmas.
Mister President, if Tennessee is a good test group for the rest of
the Nation--and it usually is--I can tell you that when asked to choose
between discussing impeachment politics and real world problems, the
American people are much more worried about trade, transportation, and
manufacturing, and how evolving policy initiatives will affect prices
at the grocery store.
I would encourage my colleagues to remember the cost of indulging
these proceedings and to listen to their constituents back home and not
the breathless coverage that dominates the 24 hour news cycle.
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