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In Defense of Executive Action

July 29, 2014
Speeches

WASHINGTON -- Today, U.S. Representative Mike Quigley (IL-05) spoke on the president's use of executive action and the majority's lawsuit against him.

Below is a video and transcript of the speech.

Mr. Speaker,

As the House uses what little legislative time is left this year to sue the president, I'm reminded what Benjamin Disraeli once said, "How much easier it is to be critical than to be correct." There's a reason why a majority of the American people think this lawsuit is a political stunt, because it is a politcal stunt.

The majority argues the president's executive actions give them no choice but to sue the president; that it's the legislative branch's job to defend against the executive branch's supposed overreaches. But I'll tell you what the job of the legislature is, the job of the legislature is to pass legislation!

For 112 congresses before this one, the fight over the separation of powers has endured, with each Congress before us using the power allocated to it in our Constitution to pass legislation to counter the actions of the president.

It's not a unique idea. You don't like the job the president's doing? Well then let's do our own job! You don't like the president's policies? Well then let's enact some policies of our own. Rather than litigating, we should be legislating.

My colleagues on the other side of the aisle have been so busy trying to prevent the president from doing his job that they've forgot to do their own. For years, their #1 legislative priority was making President Obama a one term president. To discredit him, to delegitimize him.

Time and time again, with every issue from extending unemployment insurance to comprehensive immigration reform, climate change to name a few, this Congress has punted the ball.

Instead of finding the courage to tackle the tough issues the American people are begging us to take on, we've retreated. For many issues, we even refuse to allow a simple up or down vote on the floor. We're afraid that if we actually allowed a vote, we might pass something.

This Congress make's Truman's do-nothing Congress seem downright busy. No wonder why our approval numbers are so low.

It's ironic that a Congress that refuses to get anything done has the audacity to accuse the president of getting too much done. The president isn't taking our power away from us. We've abdicated it to him.

Since George Washington, our presidents have used executive actions to get things done, yet the majority argues that this president is the exception to the rule. President Obama may be the exception, but not in the way they think. Out of our last ten presidents, President Obama has signed the least amount of executive orders on average per year. So far, President Obama hasn't even signed half as many as President Reagan did.

Yet, despite this, let's remember what the president has been able to accomplish over the last six years. President Obama brought our economy back from the brink of depression, lowering employment from 10 percent in 2009 to 6.1 percent today.

We've had 52 straight months of private sector job growth with last month being the fifth month in a row of adding 200,000 jobs or more to the economy.

The president passed healthcare reform, achieving what every president since Teddy Roosevelt had tried and failed to do. Now millions of Americans, who were previously barred from health insurance coverage because of preexisting conditions or because they simply could not afford it, can access the care they desperately need.

And the president has taken unprecedented action to protect our environment. He's proposed the toughest fuel economy standards for passenger vehicles in U.S. history, put a plan in place to cut carbon pollution from new and existing power plants, and significantly increased production of renewable energy.

In six years, President Obama has accomplished more than many who have come before him, despite a do-nothing Congress whose stated mission has been obstruction.

Mr. Speaker, Malcolm X used to say that if you have no critics, you likely have no successes. The intent of the majority's lawsuit may be to spotlight the president's critics, but I'm confident that what it will actually do is prove his successes.