Prepared Statement of Senator Chuck Grassley
Ranking Member, Senate Judiciary Committee
On Nominations and the State of the Senate
Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Mr. President,
Several weeks ago, on February 12th, as Washington D.C. braced for a snowstorm and the Senate rushed to finish its business before the President's Day recess, the senior Senator from Arkansas came to the floor to offer a Unanimous Consent request to confirm a district court judge from his state. 

Before he made the request, I spoke with that Senator - who to his credit, was one of only three Democrats to vote against the so-called Nuclear Option last November. 

Although I was sympathetic to his desire to see his home state judge confirmed, I objected to his request to bypass the procedure the Majority adopted in November, including recorded cloture and confirmation votes. 

I did so based on principle.  I did so because, after 52 Democrats voted to strip the Minority of its rights, the very least we could do is ask the Majority to utilize the procedure they voted to adopt. 
After all - the simple fact of the matter is that the Minority can no longer stop nominees.  That was the whole point of what they did in November.

So the Senator from Arkansas offered his Unanimous Consent request, and I withheld my consent.  We had our exchange on the floor. 

But we did so courteously.  As senators should.

Later that evening, the Majority Leader came to the floor and made another Unanimous Consent request.  Senator Cornyn objected, for the same reasons as I had.  Thereafter, the Majority Leader exercised the power that he alone possesses to move these judges, and filed cloture on four district court nominees. 

That set up several votes for last Monday evening.

That evening, during our side's hour of debate time - and that's all we have anymore on district court judges, one hour of debate time for each side - I spoke on the current state of the Senate with respect to the legislative process. 

I spoke about how the Founding Fathers intended the Senate to operate.  I spoke about how the Senate used to operate. How it should operate.  And sadly, how it does operate.

I spoke about how the Majority Leader routinely files cloture on bills before debate has even begun.  I spoke about how in today's Senate - in what is supposed to be the world's greatest deliberative body - United States senators from great states all over this nation are shut out of the process. 

As our side's hour of debate time neared its end, the distinguished Chairman of our committee asked if I would yield him a few minutes of our time. 

I of course agreed to extend him the courtesy. 

I extended him the courtesy even though I knew he'd use that time to argue against everything I'd just said. 

I extended him the courtesy because I know he'd do the same for me.  And, as a matter of fact, he has done the same for me. 

That's the United States Senate.  We're courteous to each other.  Even when we disagree.

As I said, that was Monday night. 

On Tuesday morning, we had a series of stacked votes related to those district court nominees.  We had several cloture votes, as well as confirmation votes. I voted against cloture - along with many of my colleagues.  I don't presume to speak for my colleagues, but I voted against cloture to register my objection to a process arrived at via brute force.

We also had roll call votes on each nominee. 

But the Majority Leader wasn't content to simply use the procedures he led his caucus to adopt last November. 

He wanted voice votes rather than recorded roll call votes on those lifetime appointments.

I objected.  And I exercised the right of a United States Senator to ask for a roll call vote of yeas and nays.  I supported each of the nominees on final confirmation.  Some of my colleagues opposed them.  But even if the votes had been unanimous, the right to demand a recorded voted is one the most basic and fundamental rights of a United States Senator. 

There is absolutely nothing wrong with exercising that right --  especially on a lifetime appointment.

Before we had that recorded vote, I took the opportunity to remind my colleagues of how well this President is doing with respect to getting his judges that he nominates confirmed by the United States Senate.  Specifically, I informed everyone that thus far this Congress, we've confirmed 50 of President Obama's judicial nominees.  By way of comparison, at this point in President Bush's second term, we had confirmed only 21 judicial nominees. 

Those numbers compare district and circuit nominations.  That's the benchmark both sides typically use.

Those are basic, unassailable facts.

In response, the Majority Leader described our request for recorded votes as "a waste of taxpayer time." 

And then he concluded his brief remarks by saying this: "I would suggest to my friend the senior Senator from Iowa that he not believe his own words because they are simply not true."

That was on Tuesday. 

Two days later on Thursday evening the Majority Leader came to the floor and proffered a Unanimous Consent request for several district court judges.  Senator Moran was on the floor at the time and objected for our side. 

Thereafter, the Majority Leader filed cloture on 4 district court judges and the nominee to lead the Justice Department's Civil Rights division.

A few minutes later, the Majority Leader returned to the floor so he could, as he described it, "say a few words about the man who does all the objecting around here - or a lot of the objecting." 

He then proceeded to quote extensively from a speech I delivered in 2005. 

He then accused me of violating senatorial courtesy during floor consideration of the immigration bill because I objected to consideration of amendments approved by Democrats, without assurances that we would vote on amendments that members on my side wanted to offer. 

Even if some of the amendments the Democrats wanted had bipartisan support, I was the Senator standing up and defending the right of our members to offer amendments.  Even controversial amendments.  

To be clear.  I was prepared to vote on any Democrat amendment, provided that Republican amendments were not restricted.

The Majority Leader then concluded his highly discourteous remarks by saying this: "the Senior Senator from Iowa, he's talking out of both sides of his mouth and the people of Iowa should check this out.  [They should] see what he says and what he does."

Given how inappropriate these remarks were, and that they roughly coincided with several other inappropriate comments the Majority Leader made last week, I feel compelled to respond.

Let me start by reviewing briefly how we arrived where we are today.  As I said, the Majority Leader quoted from a speech I delivered in 2005.  

For the benefit of my colleagues who weren't here at the time, that was back when the Democrats were indiscriminately filibustering a host of President Bush's highly qualified nominees for the circuit courts. 

And make no mistake, the Democrats were utilizing the filibuster on judges to an extent never witnessed before in our nation's history. 

During this time period, they were filibustering 10 different circuit court nominees.
So like I said, the Majority Leader quoted from a speech I delivered during that debate, on May 23, 2005. 

What he failed to mention is that 6 days earlier, on May 17, 2005, he said this on the Senate floor regarding the nuclear option:

"It appears that the Majority Leader [referring to Senator Frist] cannot accept any solution which does not guarantee all current and future judicial nominees an up-down vote.  That result is unacceptable to me because it is inconsistent with the Constitutional checks and balances.  It would essentially eliminate the role of the Senate minority in confirming judicial nominations and turn the Senate into a rubberstamp for the President's choices."

I'm not going to re-litigate that fight today, except to say this.  At the time, Republicans, myself among them, were arguing those nominees should be afforded up and down votes. 

But as the quotation I just read demonstrates, the Democrats refused. 

At the end of the day, our side lost that debate. 

We didn't believe judicial nominees should be subjected to a 60 vote threshold.  But nor did we believe that we should play by two sets of rules. 

So when the roles were reversed and there was a Democrat in the White House, Republicans utilized the tool as well.  The only difference was that we used it much, much more sparingly.  

But the Democrats, of course, didn't like being treated to the tactic that they pioneered.  So, they began to threaten to utilize the so-called Nuclear Option. 

A lot of negotiations ensued between our side, and the Majority Leader.  And again, I'm not going to review every detail.  But as any member of this body can tell you, the result of those negotiations was this: We relinquished certain rights regarding nominations. 

For instance, District Court nominations used to be subject to 30 hours of debate time.  They are now subject to only 2 hours. 

In exchange for relinquishing those rights, the Majority Leader of the United States Senate gave his word that he would oppose ANY EFFORT to use the Nuclear Option. 

On January 27, 2011, the Majority Leader said this on the Senate floor: "I will oppose any effort in this Congress or the next to change the Senate's rules other than through the regular order."

Notwithstanding that promise, at the beginning of the next Congress, we were once again on the receiving end of threats regarding the Nuclear Option.  And once again, on January 24, 2013, after a lot of negotiations, the Majority Leader again gave his commitment. 

Here is what the Majority Leader said on the floor of this chamber:
"Any other resolutions related to Senate procedure would be subject to a regular order process, including consideration by the Rules Committee."

That commitment mattered.  It mattered to me.  It mattered to my colleagues.  We relinquished certain rights.  In exchange for extinguishing those rights, we received a commitment from the Majority Leader of the United States Senate.

And remember, colleagues.  This is the United States Senate.  Not only are we courteous to one another.  We keep our word.

10 months after making that commitment, on November 21, 2013, the Majority Leader and 51 other Democrats voted to invoke the Nuclear Option. They chose to adopt a new set of procedures for confirming judges.

So that is how we got where we are today. 

And yet, three months later, when the Minority has the audacity to insist that the Majority utilize the procedures they voted to adopt, the Majority Leader comes to the floor to level an ad-hominem attack. 

Amazingly, given the commitments he made at the beginning of the last two congresses, he accused me of speaking out of both sides of my mouth. 

The fact of the matter is there is absolutely nothing wrong with demanding debate time and roll call votes - especially on lifetime appointments to the Judiciary.  And especially after the Majority chose to adopt these very procedures just last November. 

That's not "a waste of taxpayer time," as the Majority Leader called it.  It's representative government.

And while I'm on the subject of the floor procedure, let me say this about the legislative process we've been following on the floor.  

I spoke at length on this subject last Monday - just as I have on several other occasions.  I've been highly critical of the process we follow these days on the floor. 

But I've always tried to avoid making my criticisms personal. I've always tried to be courteous. 
But there is no getting around this fact:  it's nothing short of a travesty that great senators from all over this nation must go to the Majority Leader to ask permission to offer amendments.

Proud senators from proud states. 

Republican senators and Democrat senators. 

Conservative senators.  Liberal senators. 

Northerners and Southerners. 

Appropriators and Authorizers. 

Hawks and Doves. 

All of these senators have been reduced to this:  They are forced to come before one individual, on bended knee, to ask permission - PERMISSION - to offer amendments. 

That is NOT as it should be in the world's greatest deliberative body.

So am I highly critical of the legislative process we undergo on the floor?  Absolutely I am.
But I didn't criticize the Majority Leader in a personal or discourteous way.  I didn't accuse him of "talking out of both sides of his mouth," as he did me. 

I wasn't attacking him personally: I was defending the rights of 99 other senators.

And what, exactly, is the Majority afraid of, anyway?  Taking a few hard votes? 

We're paid to take hard votes.  We're sent here to exercise our best judgment on behalf of our constituents. 

That's how our Republic is designed.

It does not have to be this way. 

Consider how amendments are handled in the Judiciary Committee, for example. 

Our Chairman DOES NOT tell us what amendments we're allowed to offer.  Nor does he tell us how many amendments we're allowed to offer. 

He controls the agenda.  But WE get to offer amendments.

As a result, every single member of our committee - whether they like it or not -- contributes to the process. 

The Chairman controls the agenda.  The Minority offers amendments.  And the Majority has to vote on those amendments.  That's the process. 

That's what happens when you have a Chairman who respects the rights of United States senators.

There is absolutely no reason we couldn't take the same approach on the floor.

Now, let me mention one other thing about what the Majority Leader said the other night, because I found it particularly offensive. 

Immediately after accusing me of "talking out of both sides of my mouth," the Majority Leader suggested that the people of Iowa should pay attention to what I say and what I do.

Let me tell you something. 

The people of Iowa know who they've elected to the Senate.  They know that ever since I was first sworn-in to this body in January of 1981, I have fought all day, every day, to represent them. 

I know my constituents, and they know me. 

I go to constituent meetings in every one of our 99 counties every year. 

I talk to my constituents.  I read their mail. 

And I know, for instance, how hard Obamacare has been on families in my state. 

So I find it personally offensive for the Majority Leader to come to the floor -as he did last Wednesday - and accuse Americans - including my constituents - of telling lies when they share their stories about how Obamacare is impacting them. 

So, last Thursday evening the Majority Leader came to the floor so he could, as he described it, "say a few words about the man who does all the objecting around here." 

Well, Mr. President.  Do I object?  You bet I do. 

So do the rest of my committee members.  And so does the rest of our caucus.

We object to the authoritarian way this Senate is being run.

We object to being shut out of the legislative process.

We object to dismissing constituent stories about Obamacare as lies.

We object to taking to the floor of the United States Senate to attack fellow citizens as "un-American" because they have the audacity to exercise their First Amendment rights.

And yes, we object to discourteous ad hominem attacks on Senate colleagues because they choose to exercise their right to demand roll call votes on lifetime appointments.

It should stop.  The Senate should return to being the greatest deliberative body in the world.

I yield the floor.

WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said today that John Mark Gorman of Marion has received an appointment to the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in Great Neck, N.Y., for the 2014-2015 school year.

Gorman is the son of Cathy and Joseph Gorman.  He will graduate in May from Marion High School.  Gorman is a member of National Honor Society, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, the National Council on Youth Leadership and is an Eagle Scout with Boy Scouts of America.  He lettered in basketball and football, as well as served as captain of the football team.  Gorman's hobbies also include fishing, camping and archery.

"Admission to the service academies is highly competitive and a great honor," Grassley said.  "Students work very hard to earn this kind of opportunity.  I wish John well and thank him for his commitment to serve our nation."

Gorman was among the 55 Iowans Grassley nominated this year for appointments to the U.S. service academies.  Information about seeking nominations can be found on Grassley's website.

For more than 200 years, these academies have educated and trained individuals to lead and command the U.S. armed forces.

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Q & A on the National Guard

with U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley

 

Q: What are your thoughts on the President's military budget proposal?

A: First, getting this administration to propose less federal spending in any area ought to be music to the ears of the taxpaying public. It's long overdue for Washington to exercise across-the-board fiscal discipline and dial back Uncle Sam's spending spree that puts taxpayers on the hook for generations to come.  That's why I voted against raising the debt ceiling and against the budget agreement in December that raised fees and lifted the spending lid previously agreed to in the Budget Control Act of 2011. The Obama administration's $496 billion military spending request previewed by the Defense Secretary raises important questions. As a tight-fisted fiscal conservative, I'm all for trimming the fat. But the plans put forward by Secretary Chuck Hagel may do more harm than good. Specifically, does the proposed reduction in troops put at greater risk our men and women in uniform? We can't afford to gut America's military muscle that may undermine the federal government's most fundamental responsibility to provide for the nation's security. Will shrinking the armed forces to pre-World War II levels maintain military readiness to respond to unforeseen, emerging 21st century threats? There are plenty of cuts to go around. But the Pentagon needs to consider cost-saving measures that would not destabilize U.S. military authority and strategic interests around the world. For example, reducing troop levels and trimming military pay and benefits without taking accountable steps to root out systemic financial mismanagement at the Pentagon would be a terrible mistake.  I've identified cost savings that could be achieved through better audit procedures, completely apart from personnel levels.

Q: How does the National Guard tie in to the proposed budget request?

 

A: The U.S. Army is made up of three components: full-time, active duty soldiers; Army National Guard troops (in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and three U.S. territories); and, Army Reservists. The Iowa National Guard includes 9,200 members. The adjutant general of the Iowa Guard recently told state lawmakers that for the first time since 2003, the Iowa National Guard does not have troops serving in combat missions overseas. The National Guard serves a unique dual mission. In addition to training combat-ready soldiers who may be called up to active duty, the Guard also responds to homeland security threats, domestic emergencies and natural disasters in local communities across the state. According to the budget proposal advanced by Secretary Hagel, the U.S. Army would drop from 520,000 to roughly 440,000 soldiers by 2019. The Army National Guard and Army Reserve would see a five percent reduction, trimming the National Guard from today's 335,000 to 315,000; and reducing the Army Reserve from 205,000 to 185,000. The Defense Secretary pitched the budget proposal under the guise of fiscal discipline. And yet, the National Guard has a strong record of making the most cost-effective use of defense dollars. Policymakers need to make sure we don't shortchange the taxpaying public by downsizing the military to levels that would require even more expensive upgrades, recruitments and training in the long run to address unforeseen security needs. The National Guard has proven itself as a capable, experienced force on the front lines when called to active duty. As good coaches know, your team is only as strong as your bench. So as Washington looks to cut costs, we need to make sure the savings aren't misguided shortcuts that turn out to be more expensive down the road.

Q: What is your position on how the budget request would impact the National Guard?

 

A: Every tax dollar spent by Uncle Sam deserves scrutiny.  No doubt the Defense Department needs to make sound fiscal decisions as it makes adjustments from wartime spending levels and looks ahead to maintain military readiness with looming budgetary restrictions. However, I'm concerned the proposed military spending request fails to adequately reflect the National Guard's role as a fully operational reserve, which is a vital, cost-effective component of the total force structure. That's why I joined bipartisan forces with a dozen lawmakers in a letter to Secretary Hagel that points out the shortsighted approach to the Guard's share of proposed cuts.  It would be penny-wise and pound-foolish to squander the investments made to train and outfit the men and women serving in the National Guard. The American people depend on the best Army we can afford to protect the homeland and U.S. strategic interests. Iowa communities, law enforcement and emergency preparedness teams have reason to take pride in their local heroes who work full-time in the private sector and make the time to serve their country and their community as members of the National Guard. They embrace the motto of the National Guard in service to their country and their community: "Always Ready, Always There."  As a keeper of the purse strings in Congress, I will work to make sure the Army isn't cutting off its nose to spite its own face.  To meet the nation's most urgent threats, America will need a nimble, expandable, affordable and experienced force structure. By that measure, the National Guard is not an expendable part of our military readiness equation.

Friday, February 28, 2014

The Affordable Care Act made significant cuts to the Medicare Advantage Program.  Late last week, President Obama's administration proposed regulations to implement those cuts.

Americans are learning, over and over again, that the President wasn't being honest when he promised that you could keep the health insurance you had and liked.

In Iowa, we fought hard to have access to Medicare Advantage so that seniors would have more choices and the range of valuable services available to seniors in other parts of the country.  With the payment cut specified as part of the Affordable Care Act, more and more Iowans will find they can't keep the health care coverage they have.

I hear from Iowans every day who have lost their insurance, lost access to their doctors, and have seen their premiums go up because of the Affordable Care Act.  I have serious concerns that because the President insists on barreling ahead with his law rather than coming to Congress to start over again, more Iowans are going to lose access to the services they need.

I am committed to supporting common-sense approaches to reform that provide access to high-quality, low-cost health care.  

Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa today testified before a House committee on the Food and Drug Administration's aggressive email monitoring of employees who were concerned about the safety of certain medical devices and released an investigative report on the monitoring with Rep. Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, which convened the hearing.  Grassley made the following statement on FDA comments in media reports on the agency's actions in the case.

"An FDA official is quoted as saying the agency did not target, intercept or prevent any communications to Congress.  That's false.   The FDA may not have begun the email monitoring to try to capture privileged communications with attorneys, the Office of Special Counsel and Congress, but senior managers certainly knew early on that it was happening and they kept doing it.  Emails with two Senate committees' staff and a House member's staff were all intercepted, stored, and summarized for senior managers by the FDA contractors conducting the monitoring.  The FDA is trying to deny the facts rather than own up and take responsibility for what it did."

WASHINGTON - Today, House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, R-Calif., and Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, released a joint report on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)'s highly-invasive surveillance program that monitored employees who contacted Congress and the media with concerns about FDA's medical device approval process.

Grassley's testimony before the Oversight Committee on the report is available here.

In April 2010, the FDA initiated a surveillance program of unprecedented scope to monitor employees in the Center for Devices and Radiological Health.  The program allowed FDA managers to read communications between FDA employees and Congress, the U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC), and their personal attorneys.  The Joint Committee report, entitled "Limitless Surveillance at the FDA: Protecting the Rights of Federal Whistleblowers," found the FDA acted without regard for employees' whistleblower rights, which protect their communications to Congress and OSC.  The joint report also found that FDA conducted the program without adequate guidelines in place and made no effort to limit the scope of the program to exclude protected communications.

The Oversight Committee will hold a hearing on the FDA's surveillance today at 10:00 a.m. in 2154 Rayburn House Office Building.

Key Findings:

•   Insufficient authorization and guidelines. The monitoring was implemented with insufficient written authorization, no policy in place and no legal guidance given to the contractors conducting the monitoring. As a result, FDA captured communications that are protected by law, including communications with Congress, the media, and watchdog groups like Project on Government Oversight.

•    Unlawful capturing of protected communications. Because no formal monitoring policy was in place, FDA managers did not understand the legal limits of employee monitoring. The FDA's surveillance was not lawful, to the extent that it monitored communications with Congress and the Office of Special Counsel. Federal law protects disclosures to OSC and Congress.

•    Lack of explanation for capture of future communications. Instead of looking back at previous communications using available tools, the FDA captured real-time communications of current and future communications. When interviewed, FDA managers and IT professionals failed to explain clearly how the rationale offered to justify the monitoring (investigating a past leak) was consistent with the method used (monitoring current activity).

•    New policies do not offer sufficient whistleblower protections. In September 2013, the FDA issued interim policies that require written authorization prior to initiating employee monitoring. However, the policies do not offer sufficient protection for whistleblowers concerned about retaliation from agency officials.

You can read the complete joint report here.

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WASHINGTON - Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa said today that Katie Marie Gibson of Sioux Rapids has received an appointment to the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy in Great Neck, N.Y., for the 2014-2015 school year.

Gibson is the daughter of Carolyn and Thomas Gibson.  She will graduate in May from Sioux Central High School.  Gibson participated in volleyball, basketball, cross country, softball, individual speech club, 4-H, Future Business Leaders of America, National Honor Society and the Harlan Institute Program, a law-based debate club.

"Admission to the service academies is highly competitive and a great honor," Grassley said.  "Students work very hard to earn this kind of opportunity.  I wish Katie well and thank her for her commitment to serve our nation."

Gibson was among the 55 Iowans Grassley nominated this year for appointments to the U.S. service academies.  Information about seeking nominations can be found on Grassley's website.

For more than 200 years, these academies have educated and trained individuals to lead and command the U.S. armed forces.

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Floor Statement of Senator Chuck Grassley

On How the Senate Should Operate

Delivered Monday, February 24, 2014

Mr. President, either tonight or tomorrow, the Senate will consider several district court nominees.  These nominees will be brought up, considered by the Senate, and in all likelihood, confirmed in short order.

As I've mentioned several times, this is the procedure that the Democrats voted to pursue in November when they voted for the so-called "nuclear option."  The Majority voted to eliminate the filibuster on nominations, and to cut the Minority out of the process.

So, while the Senate is debating these district court nominees, it gives me a good opportunity to continue the discussion about how the Senate ought to be functioning.

There's no debate that the Senate isn't functioning properly, and we've been treated to relentless finger-pointing from the other side regarding who is to blame.

Unless we can establish a non-partisan account of how the Senate ought to function, this debate will amount to nothing more than a kindergarten shouting match.

So, I would like to return to the Federalist Papers, which are the most detailed account from the time the Constitution was being ratified about how our institutions were intended to operate.

Although they were written over 200 years ago, the principles the Federalist Papers articulate are timeless and the problems they highlight are strikingly relevant to today.

The last time I addressed the Senate on this subject, I quoted at length from a passage in Federalist Number 62.

Although all the Federalist Papers were published under the pseudonym Publius, we know that they were written by three of our Founding Fathers - James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay.

Federalist 62 has been attributed to the Father of the Constitution, James Madison.

In it, he lists several problems that can be encountered by a Republic that the U.S. Senate was specifically designed to counteract.

The first point Madison makes is that having a second chamber composed differently than the House makes it less likely that one faction will be able to take over and enact an agenda out of step with the American People.

The second point deals with the tendency of unicameral legislatures to yield to sudden popular impulses and pass "intemperate and pernicious resolutions."

The third point is that based on the experience of the early, unicameral state legislatures, a second chamber with longer terms and a more deliberative process will make sure that any laws passed are well thought out.

The Framers of our Constitution determined that it was better to get it right the first time than to subject the American people to the upheaval caused by the need to fix poorly conceived laws.

Madison talks about the early American experience with "all the repealing, explaining, and amending laws" which he calls:

"monuments of deficient wisdom;

-so many impeachments exhibited by each succeeding against each preceding session;

-so many admonitions to the people, of the value of those aids which may be expected from a well-constituted senate."

In my last speech, I did not get to Madison's fourth and final point in Federalist 62, which is quite long and deserves to be examined in detail.

Madison concludes Federalist 62 with an extensive discussion of the importance of stability to good government and the danger to the rule of law from constant change.

This section starts: "Fourthly. The mutability in the public councils arising from a rapid succession of new members, however qualified they may be, points out, in the strongest manner, the necessity of some stable institution in the government.--

"Every new election in the States is found to change one half of the representatives.

"From this change of men must proceed a change of opinions; and from a change of opinions, a change of measures.

"But a continual change even of good measures is inconsistent with every rule of prudence and every prospect of success.

"The remark is verified in private life, and becomes more just, as well as more important, in national transactions."

Here, Madison is making a case for stable government instead of constant change.

He says that constant change, even with good ideas, will not produce positive results.

Madison then elaborates on the various problems caused by an unstable government.

He first says about a country that is constantly changing its laws that "...she is held in no respect by her friends; that she is the derision of her enemies; and that she is a prey to every nation which has an interest in speculating on her fluctuating councils and embarrassed affairs."

Madison then makes the case that the domestic ramifications of constantly enacting and changing laws "poisons the blessing of liberty itself."

He goes on to explain, "It will be of little avail to the people, that the laws are made by men of their own choice, if the laws be so voluminous that they cannot be read, or so incoherent that they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes that no man, who knows what the law is to-day, can guess what it will be to-morrow."

This sounds like the Health Care Law, which is being rewritten daily on the fly by the Obama Administration.

But, it's part of a bigger problem we face with new laws and regulations from agencies, which have the force of law, being churned out in such a volume that no American can possibly know them all.

Just based on probability, Americans are likely to violate some regulation or another without knowing it at any time.

Madison is making a case not just for more thoughtful laws, but fewer laws.

When the Majority Leader and many in the media complain that the Senate should be passing laws at a higher rate, they miss the point entirely.

To listen to some members of the majority and many in the media, you would think the success of a session of Congress was measured solely on the sheer number of laws passed, not the quality of the laws it passes.

The Senate was specifically designed to slow down the process and make sure Congress passes fewer, but better laws.

Madison then elaborates further on why fewer laws are better in a passage that is extremely relevant today:

"Another effect of public instability is the unreasonable advantage it gives to the sagacious, the enterprising, and the moneyed few over the industrious and uniformed mass of the people. --

"Every new regulation concerning commerce or revenue, or in any way affecting the value of the different species of property, presents a new harvest to those who watch the change, and can trace its consequences; a harvest, reared not by themselves, but by the toils and cares of the great body of their fellow-citizens."

In other words, a situation where Congress is constantly changing the laws gives more influence to those who can hire lawyers to keep on top of the changes, and lobbyists to influence them, versus the little guy who is on his own.

It is sometimes said that big businesses don't like regulations, but that isn't my experience in many instances.

The bigger and wealthier a business, or a union, or other special interest group, the better chance they have to shape a new law or regulation and the more people they can hire to help them comply.

On the other hand, small businesses and individuals can't hire a team of lawyers to read the latest laws and regulations and to fill out the proper paperwork.

Small businesses and individuals are the ones squeezed out of the marketplace by the constant flow of new laws.

An overactive government benefits the big guys at the expense of the little guys, and if you think that fact is lost on the big guys and their lobbyists when they come to Congress, you would be mistaken.

As James Madison so wisely noted, an overactive government is an invitation to the rich and powerful to use government to their benefit and the detriment of their competitors.

That goes to show that there's a great benefit to stability in law as opposed to constant change.

A cornerstone of liberty is the Rule of Law, meaning the law is transparent and no one is above the law.

If you look around the world today, the poorest and least free countries are the ones where there is no rule of law.

If someone can take what you've earned through force and you have no legal recourse, that's an example where there is no rule of law.

If the rich and powerful get special privileges, that's an example where the rule of law has broken down.

The Rule of Law is one of the principles our country was founded on.

But, when there are so many rules, and they are changing so quickly that the average citizen cannot keep up, that undermines the Rule of Law.

Of course, the situation is only made worse when the rules already on the books are waived for the politically connected.

That is another problem but one that has become all too common under the Obama administration.

Getting back to the Senate's role, I'm not making a case for doing nothing, or that we should be happy with the failure of the Senate to debate legislation.

The Senate is supposed to be slow and deliberative, not stopped.

Still, it is important to get away from this notion that somehow the failure to ram legislation through the Senate with little debate and no amendments is the problem.

The reason the Senate doesn't function when the majority leadership tries to run it that way is very simple:

The Senate was not designed that way.

The Senate was intended to be a deliberative body, and has been for most of its history.

It has now become routine for the Majority Leader to file cloture to end consideration of a matter immediately upon moving to it.

By contrast, the regular order is for the Senate to consider a matter for some period of time, allowing senators from all parties to weigh in, before cloture is even contemplated.

Cloture was invented to allow the Senate to end consideration of a matter after the vast majority of senators had concluded it had received sufficient consideration.

Prior to that, there was no way to end debate so long as at least one senator wished to keep deliberating.

Cloture was a compromise between the desire to move things along and the principle that each senator, as a representative of his or her state, has the right to participate fully in the legislative process.

The compromise was originally that two-thirds of senators voting had to be satisfied that a matter had received sufficient consideration.

That was reduced to three-fifths of all senators.

Each time this matter is renegotiated, the compromise leans more in favor of speeding up the process at the expense of allowing senators to fully represent the people of their states.

Now, the majority leadership routinely files cloture immediately upon proceeding to a matter.

Again, cloture is a tool to cut off further consideration of a matter when it appears that it is dragging on too long.

You can hardly claim that the Senate has taken too much time to deliberate over something when it hasn't even begun consideration of the matter.

According to data from the Congressional Research Service, there were only seven times during the first session of the current Congress that the Senate started to consider a bill for a day or more before cloture was filed.

That's out of 34 cloture motions related to legislative business.

The number of same-day cloture filings has more than doubled compared to when Republicans last controlled the Senate.

Moreover, the total number of cloture motions filed each session of Congress under this majority leadership has roughly doubled compared to the period from 1991 to 2006 under majority leaders of both parties.

Before that, cloture was even more rare.

This is a sign that cloture is being overused, even abused by the majority.

Still, if this alarming rise in cloture motions was a legitimate response to a minority of senators insisting on extended debate to delay proceedings beyond what's necessary for reasonable deliberation, otherwise known as a filibuster, it might be justified.

That's clearly not the case when the overwhelming number of motions to cut off debate are made before debate has even started.

What amount of time is necessary for deliberation, and what is purely dilatory in any particular case is a subjective determination.

However, the practice of routinely moving to cut off consideration of virtually every measure when there has not yet been any deliberation cannot be justified.

This is an abuse of the cloture motion.

Along with the routine blocking of amendments, cloture abuse is preventing senators from doing what we are paid to do -- that's represent the people of our states.

Shutting senators out of the deliberative process isn't just an argument about dry Senate procedure, as the Majority Leader has tried to suggest in response to criticisms.

When senators are blocked from participating in the legislative process, the people they represent are disenfranchised.

When I say that people are disenfranchised when the majority leadership shuts senators out of the process, I don't just mean the citizens of the 45 states that elected Republicans.

The citizens of states that elected Democrat senators also expect them to offer amendments and engage with their colleagues from different parties.

Shutting down consideration of a bill before it has even been considered prevents even members of the majority party from offering amendments that may be important to the people they represent.

Voters have a right to expect the people they elect to actually do the hard work of representing them, not just be a rubber stamp for their leadership's agenda.

Senators who go along with tactics that disenfranchise their own constituents should have to answer to those who voted them into office as to why they aren't willing to do the job they were elected to do.

That job includes not just offering amendments when appropriate, but taking tough votes that reveal to your constituents where you stand.

The majority leader has gone out of his way to shield members of his caucus from taking votes that may hurt them back home.

Senators don't have any right to avoid tough votes.

That's not the deliberative process James Madison envisioned.

If we are going to have good laws that can stand the test of time, the Senate must be allowed to function as it was intended.

One aspect of what's needed to return the Senate to its proper function as a deliberative body is to end cloture abuse.

I would ask my colleagues to reflect on all of the changes to the Senate recently, including those negotiated between the two leaders a year ago in return for a promise not to use the nuclear option, as well as the subsequent use of the nuclear option 10 months later.

Those reforms, if you can call them that, have been in the direction of reducing the ability of individual senators to represent the people of their states and concentrating power with the majority leadership.

It's time we had some reforms to get the Senate back functioning as a deliberative body like it was intended to under our Constitution.

The Senate is supposed to be a place where all voices are heard and reason can rise above partisanship.

I would urge all my colleagues to reflect on that and think about your responsibility to the people of your state.

If we do that, I'm sure we can come up with some sensible reforms to end the abuse of cloture and restore the Senate to the deliberative body the Framers of the Constitution intended it to be.

I'll be thinking about that and I would encourage all my colleagues to do the same.

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WASHINGTON - A bipartisan group of U.S. senators led by Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.) urged the top U.S. trade negotiator to negotiate a comprehensive and acceptable agreement with Japan that will increase market access for all agricultural products as part of the ongoing Trans-Pacific Partnership talks.

In a letter to United States Trade Representative Michael Froman sent on Friday to coincide with key talks over the weekend, the senators expressed concern that Japan has not yet made a comprehensive offer on agricultural talks that would increase access for U.S. agricultural products in Japan.  The senators said the lack of a comprehensive agreement would undermine the Administration's "goal of significantly increasing market access for U.S. agricultural products in TPP party countries."

In addition to Grassley and Bennet, the senators signing the letter are Mark Pryor, Joe Donnelly, Kay Hagan, Mark Udall, Pat Roberts, John Cornyn, James Inhofe, Mark Kirk, John Thune, Mike Johanns, John Boozman, Roy Blunt, Rob Portman, Deb Fischer, Richard Burr and Jerry Moran.

A signed copy of the letter is available here.  The text of the letter is available below:


Dear Ambassador Froman:

We write to express our concerns that Japan has not yet made a comprehensive offer on agricultural products as part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) negotiations. We believe that this situation could undermine the Administration's goal of significantly increasing market access for U.S. agricultural products in TPP party countries.

In previous trade negotiations, the United States requested and received full and comprehensive liberalization in the agricultural sector from both developed countries like Japan as well as developing countries. By requesting special treatment for its agricultural sector in the TPP, Japan may upset the careful balance of concessions that the eleven economies involved in the negotiations have achieved. If Japan continues to insist on protecting certain agricultural products, other countries with sensitivities in the agricultural sector may make similar demands.

As intended, the TPP will facilitate additional trade relationships with Asia-Pacific countries and set an important precedent for future trade agreements. Most immediately, a positive outcome with Japan on sensitive agricultural products will buoy the prospects for reaching an acceptable agreement with the EU in the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership negotiations.

The market access package that the Administration negotiates with Japan has the potential to support billions of dollars in future exports and hundreds of thousands of jobs. For this reason, we seek assurances from you that the U.S. will not close the TPP negotiations without an acceptable comprehensive agreement with Japan to eliminate tariff and non-tariff barriers in agriculture.

Sincerely,

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Friday, February 21, 2014

Senator Chuck Grassley issued the following comment about cuts to the Medicare Advantage program announced this afternoon.  Senator Grassley is a senior member and former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, which is responsible for Medicare policy and oversight.

"The announcement made today by the Administration emphasizes the reality that the Affordable Care Act built in cuts to Medicare Advantage.  In Iowa, we fought hard to have access to Medicare Advantage so that seniors would have more choices and the range of valuable services available to seniors in other parts of the country.  With the payment cut specified today as part of Obamacare, more Iowans will find they can't keep the health care coverage they have."

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