Washington,
D.C.
– U
.S. Senator Chuck Schumer today spoke on the
Senate floor regarding Leader McConnell’s legislative graveyard and the
need for a bipartisan appropriations process, called for the Senate to take up
and pass the bipartisan House-passed resolution condemning the president’s
decision to abandon the U.S.’s Kurdish allies in Syria, and that Senate
Democrats will force a vote to repeal the IRS’ harmful SALT tax deduction rule.
Below are his remarks, which can also be viewed
here:
The
Republican Leader, in recent days, has charged that because the House of
Representatives is now engaged in its constitutional duty to examine
presidential wrongdoing, that somehow Democrats are not interested in
legislating.
It’s
a curious criticism coming from Leader McConnell. Democrats not interested in
legislating? From the man who proudly calls himself the “Grim Reaper”. Since
the midterms, the Democratic House majority has passed hundreds of bills with
bipartisan support while Leader McConnell has deliberately focused the Senate
on anything but legislation. He has turned this chamber into a legislative
graveyard. Democrats want to vote on things. Gun safety, how about it?
Healthcare, how about it? Infrastructure, how about it? Democracy, improving
our democracy. On none of these things will Leader McConnell even dare put a
bill on the floor, let alone the House bills, which would have a chance of
getting something done.
This
very week, we have an example of how Democrats plan to work with our Republican
colleagues to advance legislation. The Republican Leader has indicated,
finally, at last, that he may bring several appropriations bills to the floor
this week. Democrats want to move forward and debate those bills in an open and
vigorous fashion.
Now,
there are several appropriations bills that don’t have any bipartisan support.
The Republican Leader knows why. We need to have bipartisan support on the
302(b)s, the allocations to the various agencies, to move forward on bills like
Homeland Security and Health and Human Services, military construction, and
defense. That negotiation, to succeed, must be bipartisan, that’s what the
history of this chamber shows, that’s what common sense and logic shows. House
leaders have suggested a conference—Democrats and Republicans, House and
Senate—on these 302(b)s, that’s a good idea.
If
Republicans are willing to engage with us on 302(b)s, we get negotiations back
on track to fund the government. In the meantime, Democrats want to move
forward on the noncontroversial appropriations bills, the bills that have had
bipartisan agreement, and we hope that Leader McConnell will allow a fair and
robust amendment process. It would be nice to consider something on the floor
besides an endless parade of right-wing judges, who side with special powerful
interest time and time again, not working Americans and executive appointments.
Now
on Syria, today, the five-day “pause” on hostilities in Northern Syria is set
to come to an end. What happens next is completely unknown. Will Erdogan
continue his military incursion into Syria? Will the Kurds – facing another
Turkish offensive – leave their posts guarding ISIS prisoners to once again
defend themselves, allowing ISIS prisoners, dangerous to America, to escape?
Will Presidents Erdogan and Putin cut a new deal that’s bad for America and our
allies? Nobody knows the answers to any of these.
What
we do know is that the situation has rapidly deteriorated compared to just a
few weeks ago, and what caused this deterioration? One thing. The president’s
abrupt decision to withdraw U.S. troops from the region after a phone call with
President Erdogan. When ISIS had been degraded and more than 10,000 detainees –
many of them hardened ISIS fighters -- were under lock and key, to undo that?
That’s putting America’s security at risk. That’s what President Trump has
done. This so-called tough warrior backed off, in a call with a much lesser
power, Erdogan. He’s done this before.
We
don’t know how many of those 10,000 detainees and their families have escaped.
We don’t know where they’ve gone, nor is there any plan to get them back into
detention facilities. These are dangerous people. Dangerous to our homeland.
Dangerous to New York, and Chicago, and Miami, and Dallas, and Denver, and Los
Angeles. And we don’t know where they are or what they’re doing. All because of
the president’s precipitous action. I get excited about this, angrily excited,
negatively excited, because my city has suffered. Terrorists seven thousand
miles away, small group, who did such damage.
As
the New York Times reported, after ISIS had been on the run, “Now, analysts say
that Mr. Trump’s pullout [of U.S. troops from Northern Syria] has handed the
Islamic State its biggest win in… four years...” President Trump has handed
ISIS its biggest victory in four years. How can any American support that? How
can so many of our Republican colleagues and republican supporters of President
Trump shrug their shoulders. Let me repeat, “[President] Trump’s pullout
has handed the Islamic State its biggest win in more than four years and
greatly improved its prospects.”
The
president’s incompetence with Erdogan and Syria has handed ISIS a
get-out-of-jail-free card and simply put American lives in danger. For the sake
of our national security, President Trump and his administration need to get a
handle on this situation.
Senators,
I believe from both parties, have been trying to get the administration’s top
officials, including Secretary of State Pompeo, Secretary of Defense Esper, and
General Milley to give the Senate a briefing on its Syria policy and a plan to
contain and further degrade ISIS. They canceled a scheduled briefing last week,
pulled the plug on a briefing that was supposed to be this afternoon, and have
so far refused to commit to a new date. We need that briefing to happen.
Secretary Pompeo, Secretary Esper, General Milley, CIA Director Haspel, have a
responsibility to report to Congress on what’s happening in this dangerous
situation. And, once again, this administration is withholding vital
information. It’s a disgrace. It’s probably because they don’t have a plan, so
they don’t know what to do. But bringing them here may help formulate that plan
or push them to get a plan.
But
in the meantime, Democrats are set to meet with Brett McGurk, the former
presidential envoy in charge of countering ISIS, at a special caucus meeting
Wednesday. So we can try to come up with some answers even though it should be
the administration doing that.
The
American people should be very concerned that the Trump administration does not
seem to have any plan to secure the enduring defeat of ISIS in Syria. Senate
Democrats will try to learn as much as possible from the experts available to
us, folks like Mr. McGurk, but ultimately the president alone has the authority
to correct our nation’s course. So it is still very important for the Senate to
pass the House resolution condemning the president’s decision to precipitously
withdraw from northern Syria.
So
it is still very important for the Senate to pass the House resolution
condemning the president’s decision to precipitously withdraw from Northern Syria.
The president tends to listen when the Republicans here in Congress express
their disapproval. That’s what happened in the House, where over 120
Republicans voted with Democrats on a bipartisan resolution including Leaders
McCarthy, Scalise, and Cheney, hard was Republicans, but at least they know how
bad this was for America. Where are our Senate colleagues showing the same bit
of courage that McCarthy, Scalise, and Cheney showed? If the House resolution
is tough enough for House Republican leadership, surely it’s good enough for
the majority of Senate Republicans. So we will keep trying to pass the House
resolution here in the Senate because it means we could send a bill to the
president’s desk that shows him a bipartisan majority of Congress is against
his reckless decision in Syria. This is extremely, extremely troubling and I’m
very angry. Very angry.
Later
this week, Senate Democrats are going to use their authority under the
Congressional Review Act to force a vote to repeal the IRS’s harmful rule that
effectively eliminates state charitable tax credits all across the country. I
know Republican colleagues want to frame this CRA vote as a vote on the State
and Local Tax Credit cap they put in place in tax reform. And I do disagree— I
vehemently disagree—with that policy and will look to change it as soon as
possible. It’s hurt so many people in New York who are middle class, not
wealthy, and in suburbs throughout the country. And by the way, it’s probably
one of the major reasons the House flipped from Republican to Democrat. So many
of those districts in New Jersey and California and New York and Pennsylvania
were affected by this SALT cap and people rebel, threw out their Republican
congressmen and put new people in. But, it affects other things as well. The
regulation we will be voting on impacts state charitable credits in virtually
every state—ranging in areas from education to conservation to childcare, and
more.
Do
not take my word for it. In Kentucky, the Community Foundation of Louisville, a
major philanthropic organization, has warned that IRS’s rule “will effectively
extinguish the Endow Kentucky Program,” which has generated more than $31
million in charitable donations. Look at South Carolina, where my friend
Senator Graham has made clear this rule will have devastating consequences for
the South Carolina Research Authority, which helps startup companies in his
state to create new jobs. Let’s go to Colorado, where the Boys and Girls Club
of Chafee County warned that “these proposed federal regulations will severely
limit the effectiveness of our Colorado Child Care Contribution Tax Credit,”
which they say will limit “our ability to address an issue fundamental to the
economic health of the community.”
The
list goes on and on. I’d ask my Republican colleagues before we vote on the CRA
tomorrow to look how it affects their state, not just in terms of state and
local taxes, but charitable contributions, education, home school, and many
other areas.
This
vote is about getting rid of an IRS rule that hinders state programs like the
ones I’ve mentioned. My Republican colleagues have always proclaimed that they
are defenders of states’ rights and the 10th Amendment. Here is an opportunity
for them to walk the walk, stop the IRS from making life harder on both
taxpayers and local economies. I urge them to vote with us to repeal this rule
and I yield the floor.
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