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Transcripts For CSPAN3 Representative Matthew Cartwright Tow
Transcripts For CSPAN3 Representative Matthew Cartwright Tow
Transcripts For CSPAN3 Representative Matthew Cartwright Town Hall Meeting 20170426
Of allegiance. I pledge allegiance to the
United States
of america and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under god, yi end end visible, with liberty and justice for all. I want you to know im here because i work for you. Yay [ applause ] and im not here to lecture at you. My hope is that we all learn something from each other tonight. Theres some other people who work for you that i want to introduce to you. Theyre all people who work in the district, in the, in pennsylvania, in the 17th
Congressional District
. And i want you to get to know who they are a little bit, in case you ever need to call upon them for help. Starting with my district director, mr. Bob morgan. [ applause ] now bob is also an
Economic Development
specialist. And when i first learned about what it is to be a member of congress, i learned that there are no more earmarks, and well talk about that in a little bit, but what that means is you need
Economic Development
specialists to help local municipal officials write tor grants to get federal funding for important local projects. So bob is an
Economic Development
specialist, and we also have mr. Bill handily down at the end from pottsville, and may i introduce dr. Aprilni b n berg. We have all kinds of constituent case work that goes on. One of the most important areas to me is standing up for our military and nations veterans. And this is
Sabrina Mclaughlin
who sits in our pottsville office, and she specializes in that. A large, large number of people in the 17th
Congressional District
depend on important programs like
Social Security
and medicare, and like any other big organization, sometimes things go wrong and you need some help from your member of congress. And to help me help you i have krista mcaddone. Mrs. Mcadon sits in our scranton office. Give it up for krista mcadon. She sits in the same office with
Jennifer Manganiello
who specializes in mortgage foreclosures and other
Financial Issues
that may arise with our constituents. Jennifer manganiello. [ applause ] and right here we have our staff assistant and my right arm, mr. Brian dowd. [ applause ] now over here we have, we have mrs. Ann laritz, who is a wizard when it comes to problems with your passports, ann laritzen sits in our easton office. Now, as youre a member of congress, you know my time is not my own. To find out what im doing on a daily basis, i look on an online calendar, and its put together by this evil genius down here on the end. Mrs. Tammy ieda, my scheduler. And the current face of our congressional operation, our publ public relations, communications and incidentally, my
Campaign Manager
is colleen from scranton. Well, now you know us. And please avail yourself of our services if ever you need. Reach out to us. Were going to talk about that a little bit. You guys can sit down. Im going to take about 10 or 15 minutes and run over what we do for you so you know. And what i want to do is move to the next slide, whoevers doing that. There we go. So we talked about sabrina. She works on veterans and military affairs. So anything with the v. A. System, you know, mistakes happen there. And military records requests, military medals requests, one of my very favorite things to do is to award military
Service Decorations
on behalf of the president of the
United States
, whoever it is at the time. Its theres no laughing. And but it actually has been a sincere and deep profound honor for me to award bronze stars for valor, from the battle of the bulge, purple heart from world war i. These are very touching ceremonies, and it chokes me up every time. And
Sabrina Mclaughlin
has been wonderful. If you have a
Family Member
or even somebody that youre close to that you know did not get their
Service Decoration
that theyre entitled to, please, please let us know, and sabrina will dig into that and all we need is the dd214, and shell get you those medals. Okay . Next slide. Also, v. A. Has a wide range of services that it does for our veterans and sometimes they mess it up. And sometimes your congressman can help you. Thats what sabrina and i do together. In addition to some of the legislation that i do in behalf of, you know, you worry about veteran suicides, so many combat veterans commit suicide in this country. Its a national embarrassment, and we can talk about that later. Lets go to the next slide. One thing that jennifer and bob both work on are irs. Your favorite federal agency. Its kind of timely to talk about the irs, isnt it . The truth is, if you, if youve actually gone to your member of congress to help you with a problem with the irs, the chances are there isnt a whole lot we can do to help you. But once in a great while, we can help them bump your case up to the top of the pile and work something out. And i tell you that, and i want you to know that because if you have a problem and the irs thinks you owe them money, time is not your friend. Because theyre going to tack on interest and penalties, and if you let that happen, pretty soon the interest and the penalties are way bigger than the original pastdue amount. So dont let the grass grow under your feet if you have that kind of problem. Call our office. Maybe we can help. Okay . As i mentioned, ann laritzen, uscis, its a big issue in the news these days, but there are day to day issues that arise. So, for example, you know somebody that went on a cruise and the travel agent failed to tell them that theyre going to need a passport. And they call our office with only a few days to go before the ship sails. And we have actually been able to pull some rabbits out of hats. Did you bring your hat in . Wheres ann . Is she outside . Theres the lady. Shes a magician with passports. So dont give up hope. There may be some help we can give you. And there are all sorts of other immigration and naturalization questions that may come up, and anns been working with us for four and a quarter years now. So she has learned all the ropes, and she can help. State department. We talked about passport renewals, immigrant visas. Documents from abroad. Things like that. Social security. I talk to you about krista mcadon. And krista has, she opens so many case files for people with issues with
Social Security
. And you know theres one county that i represent, schuylkill county, pennsylvania. And there are 150,000 people who live there and fully 38,000 of them receive
Social Security
checks. Either disability or oldage benefits. And folks really depend on that. They depend on getting the right amount and getting it on time because a big chunk of those people, thats all they have to live on. And we know that, and were very conscious of that. So if a problem comes up with
Social Security
, let us know. We may be able to help. Medicare goes hand in hand with
Social Security
. And they make mistakes sometimes too. And sometimes your provider isnt getting paid. And you dont want your doctor or your nurse to be upset or your therapist. And we can help with that. Economic development. We talked about a little bit. To me, fostering the climate for more and better jobs is probably the most important thing that i can do for the 17th
Congressional District
. I know it. I think about it. I work on it and i talk about it all the time. And one of the biggest ways that i have, that i can directly impact the
Economic Situation
of this part of the world is by getting federal money into our economy. They say for every federal dollar that comes into our economy, it generates 4 in economic activity. So, we have a couple of fine gentlemen here that work at toby army depot, and i work very hard in making sure that they not only get accounts and get funded but that the workforce get appropriate raises from time to time. Thats appropriate, isnt it, boys . Im getting agreement. So but its not just that. Its also the federal grants program, and i talked about that. Economic
Development Grants
and assistance to firefighter grants. We just, we just made a check presentation here, well, down in easton this afternoon. A lot of different
Grant Programs
, and theyre not intuitive. So one thing that we do is to help educate our mayors is we have a, i started a mayors conference every year. This year it will be in may at the
Northampton Community
college,
Monroe County
facility. And the idea is that there is uneven understanding and awareness of all the federal
Grant Programs
, and we dont write for those grants. The local municipal officials do. And what we do is we swap stories at the mayors conference. We make sure that theres a more even distribution of the knowledge, of the information about what
Grant Programs
are available. The more success we can have with getting federal grants into the district, the better off our economys going to be. And thats just scratching the surface of what we do for
Economic Development
. I want to leave a lot of time for your questions. Okay. Next one, april . And we do all sorts of other, you know, black lung benefits, for example. A lot of people, elderly people, made their livings digging coal out of the earth. And they have trouble getting their black lung benefits. And sometimes we help with that. Student loan issues, fannie may, post office issues. There are a lot of stories we could talk about with these programs where weve been able to put some elbow grease into it and help out locally, and its, you know, at a team when not all that much is happening legislatively in washington, it feels good to be able to work with all of these fine people i introduced you to and do some good around northeastern pennsylvania in my part of the
Lehigh Valley
, okay . If you come to visit washington, be sure and call us, and call us in plenty of time if you want a white house tour. They need about three months notice so they can run your
Social Security
number and all that. But we can set up all sorts of furnitur fun tours that you may not have thought about. Again, avail yourself of our offices. Were working for you. Okay. So i want to bob, do we ha have we have some questions . Ahoh. Theres a lot. [ laughter ] all right. First one is, how will you vote on attempts to dismantle
Social Security
. I will vote no. [ applause ] excellent. How can we support
Affordable Health
care for all and block trumps evfforts to cut subsidis to give a tax cut to rich folks. Okay. Well, the first part is
Affordable Health
care for all, i do support that. Remember, this is not a i want to tell you, this is not a political rally. So i, what i try to do at the town halls is kind of give both sides of the issues, and then let you make sure you know where i stand. Right now the republicans in the house are kind of wringing their hands trying to figure out what to do about health care. They, they ran for seven years on a program of repealing the aca. And now theyve won the house and the senate and the white house, and theyre trying to work out whether they can do that. The problem is that the republicans in the house, its not monolithic. They are about 240 different voices who have all their own ideas. And some of them want to simply repeal the aca and not replace it with anything at all. There are some who want to repeal the aca and replace it with something, maybe not quite as allencompassing. And therefore a little less expensive. And there, there are others with all sorts of different views. But the point is, they cant agree with each other on what to do. And so where it stands right now, they couldnt even bring up a bill. Now i want to tell you. My brother member of congress here in the
Lehigh Valley
, charlie dent, made it clear that he wasnt for that bill they cobbled together. And i think hes, hes kind of in the same neighborhood as me on that, that he wants to see something that works. Obviously, there are a lot of problems with the aca. Its too expensive on some groups. It, it has deductibles that are too high on some other groups. And it involves some taxes that kind of disparately impact some, some, some groups and some industries. Im technical im particularly not happy with a number of items on that, and i wont go into them, but the cadillac tax is one of them. The tax on medical devices, im not sure is fair. And it actually hurts some of the manufacturers here in the
Lehigh Valley
, so im willing, as i said, id be willing to look at that. But the question is, how can we support
Affordable Health
care for all and i think the answer is and i forgot who said it, but somebody said we have moved the needle on this discussion. It used to be no way, no how on anything like the aca. But now its lets make it work. And my hope, and i really do hope this, is that members of congress from both sides of the aisle will come together. People like charlie dent and me, and work out something to work out the kinks of the aca and make it work for everybody. And i think the thing thats driving that is thats what the
American People
want. Thats what the people want. [ applause ] and thats the way its supposed to work. Now the second part of it is block trumps efforts to cut subsidies to give tax cuts to rich folks. And that wasnt a major problem with that bill that did come up. The bill that came up, it rushed it. There were, it is a very complicated subject. And they didnt have any hearings. I mean, you have to have hearings to find out from, for example, the
Health Care Insurance
industry. Aca is not insurance. No matter what you see online, its not government insurance. Its insurance sold to you by forprofit insurance companies. And if nobody bothered to ask them whether the ahca was going to work for them, how did they really know that they were going to participate in it . That was a major problem that i saw. But anyway, i think thats the answer work on it. And thats the approach i want to take. I have a question about
Health Insurance
that the congress well come back to it. I have a whole stack of questions that people took the trouble to write out. Ill get back to you. What is the democratic response to aca repeal . We just covered that. With only three
Health Care Providers
left in the
Lehigh Valley
and rising premiums what specifically is your plan to repair, not replace, the aca . That is exactly what i am talking about. I dont have a specific plan. I think it is something we have to wrestle with. We have to have hearings about. We have to be honest with each other about and stop scaring people. Stop making it a political football. I said this over and over. This is people ice lives were talking about. What can you do to oppose the cuts for the nih and other
Research Organizations
. The trump budget is scary. How can we help to oppose it . Yes, the trump budget im glad somebody brought it up. Im going to go back to my friend charlie dent. Charlie dent and i are both on the house appreciations committee. I was very proud to be nominated and appointed to that
Committee Last
fall. And theres some great bipartisan work thats done on the house appreciatioopriations committee and its a breath of
Federal Reserve
air to work with bipartisan people like charlie. I do oppose the cuts to the nih and to research. We saw this budget that came out of the white house. History will prove me will right or wrong. But in my personal opinion, our chief executive and commander in chief never laid eyes on that budget. That budget, in my view, was drafted and compiled in the basement of the heritage foundation. Which is a hardline rightwing organization that wants government out of everything and therefore wants to slash everything except military. And
Mick Mulvaney
, whom i know very well and was one of the founders of the rightwing freed
Freedom Caucus
was nominated and approved to be the director of the office of management and the budget which is one of the most powerful parts of the executive branch in this country. That budget fully reflects things i know to be ideological priorities of
Mick Mulvaney
and the
Freedom Caucus
and its dead on arrival because of that. [ applause ] because there is so much public support. Democracy really works in case youre wondering. There is so much public support for
Scientific Research
done by the government. For health
Research Done
by the government, were not going to cure cancer if we cut off all the funding for the research. People want cancer to be cured. They want all manner of other diseases to be cured. I do. And the people in the
Congress Know
that. If you set aside, i dont know the 30 or 35 members of the
Freedom Caucus
who would rather cut the budget than take care of these priorities, youre talking about a lot of people that hear from constituents at home and understand that we cant be doing these things. And its not
United States<\/a> of america and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, under god, yi end end visible, with liberty and justice for all. I want you to know im here because i work for you. Yay [ applause ] and im not here to lecture at you. My hope is that we all learn something from each other tonight. Theres some other people who work for you that i want to introduce to you. Theyre all people who work in the district, in the, in pennsylvania, in the 17th
Congressional District<\/a>. And i want you to get to know who they are a little bit, in case you ever need to call upon them for help. Starting with my district director, mr. Bob morgan. [ applause ] now bob is also an
Economic Development<\/a> specialist. And when i first learned about what it is to be a member of congress, i learned that there are no more earmarks, and well talk about that in a little bit, but what that means is you need
Economic Development<\/a> specialists to help local municipal officials write tor grants to get federal funding for important local projects. So bob is an
Economic Development<\/a> specialist, and we also have mr. Bill handily down at the end from pottsville, and may i introduce dr. Aprilni b n berg. We have all kinds of constituent case work that goes on. One of the most important areas to me is standing up for our military and nations veterans. And this is
Sabrina Mclaughlin<\/a> who sits in our pottsville office, and she specializes in that. A large, large number of people in the 17th
Congressional District<\/a> depend on important programs like
Social Security<\/a> and medicare, and like any other big organization, sometimes things go wrong and you need some help from your member of congress. And to help me help you i have krista mcaddone. Mrs. Mcadon sits in our scranton office. Give it up for krista mcadon. She sits in the same office with
Jennifer Manganiello<\/a> who specializes in mortgage foreclosures and other
Financial Issues<\/a> that may arise with our constituents. Jennifer manganiello. [ applause ] and right here we have our staff assistant and my right arm, mr. Brian dowd. [ applause ] now over here we have, we have mrs. Ann laritz, who is a wizard when it comes to problems with your passports, ann laritzen sits in our easton office. Now, as youre a member of congress, you know my time is not my own. To find out what im doing on a daily basis, i look on an online calendar, and its put together by this evil genius down here on the end. Mrs. Tammy ieda, my scheduler. And the current face of our congressional operation, our publ public relations, communications and incidentally, my
Campaign Manager<\/a> is colleen from scranton. Well, now you know us. And please avail yourself of our services if ever you need. Reach out to us. Were going to talk about that a little bit. You guys can sit down. Im going to take about 10 or 15 minutes and run over what we do for you so you know. And what i want to do is move to the next slide, whoevers doing that. There we go. So we talked about sabrina. She works on veterans and military affairs. So anything with the v. A. System, you know, mistakes happen there. And military records requests, military medals requests, one of my very favorite things to do is to award military
Service Decorations<\/a> on behalf of the president of the
United States<\/a>, whoever it is at the time. Its theres no laughing. And but it actually has been a sincere and deep profound honor for me to award bronze stars for valor, from the battle of the bulge, purple heart from world war i. These are very touching ceremonies, and it chokes me up every time. And
Sabrina Mclaughlin<\/a> has been wonderful. If you have a
Family Member<\/a> or even somebody that youre close to that you know did not get their
Service Decoration<\/a> that theyre entitled to, please, please let us know, and sabrina will dig into that and all we need is the dd214, and shell get you those medals. Okay . Next slide. Also, v. A. Has a wide range of services that it does for our veterans and sometimes they mess it up. And sometimes your congressman can help you. Thats what sabrina and i do together. In addition to some of the legislation that i do in behalf of, you know, you worry about veteran suicides, so many combat veterans commit suicide in this country. Its a national embarrassment, and we can talk about that later. Lets go to the next slide. One thing that jennifer and bob both work on are irs. Your favorite federal agency. Its kind of timely to talk about the irs, isnt it . The truth is, if you, if youve actually gone to your member of congress to help you with a problem with the irs, the chances are there isnt a whole lot we can do to help you. But once in a great while, we can help them bump your case up to the top of the pile and work something out. And i tell you that, and i want you to know that because if you have a problem and the irs thinks you owe them money, time is not your friend. Because theyre going to tack on interest and penalties, and if you let that happen, pretty soon the interest and the penalties are way bigger than the original pastdue amount. So dont let the grass grow under your feet if you have that kind of problem. Call our office. Maybe we can help. Okay . As i mentioned, ann laritzen, uscis, its a big issue in the news these days, but there are day to day issues that arise. So, for example, you know somebody that went on a cruise and the travel agent failed to tell them that theyre going to need a passport. And they call our office with only a few days to go before the ship sails. And we have actually been able to pull some rabbits out of hats. Did you bring your hat in . Wheres ann . Is she outside . Theres the lady. Shes a magician with passports. So dont give up hope. There may be some help we can give you. And there are all sorts of other immigration and naturalization questions that may come up, and anns been working with us for four and a quarter years now. So she has learned all the ropes, and she can help. State department. We talked about passport renewals, immigrant visas. Documents from abroad. Things like that. Social security. I talk to you about krista mcadon. And krista has, she opens so many case files for people with issues with
Social Security<\/a>. And you know theres one county that i represent, schuylkill county, pennsylvania. And there are 150,000 people who live there and fully 38,000 of them receive
Social Security<\/a> checks. Either disability or oldage benefits. And folks really depend on that. They depend on getting the right amount and getting it on time because a big chunk of those people, thats all they have to live on. And we know that, and were very conscious of that. So if a problem comes up with
Social Security<\/a>, let us know. We may be able to help. Medicare goes hand in hand with
Social Security<\/a>. And they make mistakes sometimes too. And sometimes your provider isnt getting paid. And you dont want your doctor or your nurse to be upset or your therapist. And we can help with that. Economic development. We talked about a little bit. To me, fostering the climate for more and better jobs is probably the most important thing that i can do for the 17th
Congressional District<\/a>. I know it. I think about it. I work on it and i talk about it all the time. And one of the biggest ways that i have, that i can directly impact the
Economic Situation<\/a> of this part of the world is by getting federal money into our economy. They say for every federal dollar that comes into our economy, it generates 4 in economic activity. So, we have a couple of fine gentlemen here that work at toby army depot, and i work very hard in making sure that they not only get accounts and get funded but that the workforce get appropriate raises from time to time. Thats appropriate, isnt it, boys . Im getting agreement. So but its not just that. Its also the federal grants program, and i talked about that. Economic
Development Grants<\/a> and assistance to firefighter grants. We just, we just made a check presentation here, well, down in easton this afternoon. A lot of different
Grant Programs<\/a>, and theyre not intuitive. So one thing that we do is to help educate our mayors is we have a, i started a mayors conference every year. This year it will be in may at the
Northampton Community<\/a> college,
Monroe County<\/a> facility. And the idea is that there is uneven understanding and awareness of all the federal
Grant Programs<\/a>, and we dont write for those grants. The local municipal officials do. And what we do is we swap stories at the mayors conference. We make sure that theres a more even distribution of the knowledge, of the information about what
Grant Programs<\/a> are available. The more success we can have with getting federal grants into the district, the better off our economys going to be. And thats just scratching the surface of what we do for
Economic Development<\/a>. I want to leave a lot of time for your questions. Okay. Next one, april . And we do all sorts of other, you know, black lung benefits, for example. A lot of people, elderly people, made their livings digging coal out of the earth. And they have trouble getting their black lung benefits. And sometimes we help with that. Student loan issues, fannie may, post office issues. There are a lot of stories we could talk about with these programs where weve been able to put some elbow grease into it and help out locally, and its, you know, at a team when not all that much is happening legislatively in washington, it feels good to be able to work with all of these fine people i introduced you to and do some good around northeastern pennsylvania in my part of the
Lehigh Valley<\/a>, okay . If you come to visit washington, be sure and call us, and call us in plenty of time if you want a white house tour. They need about three months notice so they can run your
Social Security<\/a> number and all that. But we can set up all sorts of furnitur fun tours that you may not have thought about. Again, avail yourself of our offices. Were working for you. Okay. So i want to bob, do we ha have we have some questions . Ahoh. Theres a lot. [ laughter ] all right. First one is, how will you vote on attempts to dismantle
Social Security<\/a> . I will vote no. [ applause ] excellent. How can we support
Affordable Health<\/a> care for all and block trumps evfforts to cut subsidis to give a tax cut to rich folks. Okay. Well, the first part is
Affordable Health<\/a> care for all, i do support that. Remember, this is not a i want to tell you, this is not a political rally. So i, what i try to do at the town halls is kind of give both sides of the issues, and then let you make sure you know where i stand. Right now the republicans in the house are kind of wringing their hands trying to figure out what to do about health care. They, they ran for seven years on a program of repealing the aca. And now theyve won the house and the senate and the white house, and theyre trying to work out whether they can do that. The problem is that the republicans in the house, its not monolithic. They are about 240 different voices who have all their own ideas. And some of them want to simply repeal the aca and not replace it with anything at all. There are some who want to repeal the aca and replace it with something, maybe not quite as allencompassing. And therefore a little less expensive. And there, there are others with all sorts of different views. But the point is, they cant agree with each other on what to do. And so where it stands right now, they couldnt even bring up a bill. Now i want to tell you. My brother member of congress here in the
Lehigh Valley<\/a>, charlie dent, made it clear that he wasnt for that bill they cobbled together. And i think hes, hes kind of in the same neighborhood as me on that, that he wants to see something that works. Obviously, there are a lot of problems with the aca. Its too expensive on some groups. It, it has deductibles that are too high on some other groups. And it involves some taxes that kind of disparately impact some, some, some groups and some industries. Im technical im particularly not happy with a number of items on that, and i wont go into them, but the cadillac tax is one of them. The tax on medical devices, im not sure is fair. And it actually hurts some of the manufacturers here in the
Lehigh Valley<\/a>, so im willing, as i said, id be willing to look at that. But the question is, how can we support
Affordable Health<\/a> care for all and i think the answer is and i forgot who said it, but somebody said we have moved the needle on this discussion. It used to be no way, no how on anything like the aca. But now its lets make it work. And my hope, and i really do hope this, is that members of congress from both sides of the aisle will come together. People like charlie dent and me, and work out something to work out the kinks of the aca and make it work for everybody. And i think the thing thats driving that is thats what the
American People<\/a> want. Thats what the people want. [ applause ] and thats the way its supposed to work. Now the second part of it is block trumps efforts to cut subsidies to give tax cuts to rich folks. And that wasnt a major problem with that bill that did come up. The bill that came up, it rushed it. There were, it is a very complicated subject. And they didnt have any hearings. I mean, you have to have hearings to find out from, for example, the
Health Care Insurance<\/a> industry. Aca is not insurance. No matter what you see online, its not government insurance. Its insurance sold to you by forprofit insurance companies. And if nobody bothered to ask them whether the ahca was going to work for them, how did they really know that they were going to participate in it . That was a major problem that i saw. But anyway, i think thats the answer work on it. And thats the approach i want to take. I have a question about
Health Insurance<\/a> that the congress well come back to it. I have a whole stack of questions that people took the trouble to write out. Ill get back to you. What is the democratic response to aca repeal . We just covered that. With only three
Health Care Providers<\/a> left in the
Lehigh Valley<\/a> and rising premiums what specifically is your plan to repair, not replace, the aca . That is exactly what i am talking about. I dont have a specific plan. I think it is something we have to wrestle with. We have to have hearings about. We have to be honest with each other about and stop scaring people. Stop making it a political football. I said this over and over. This is people ice lives were talking about. What can you do to oppose the cuts for the nih and other
Research Organizations<\/a> . The trump budget is scary. How can we help to oppose it . Yes, the trump budget im glad somebody brought it up. Im going to go back to my friend charlie dent. Charlie dent and i are both on the house appreciations committee. I was very proud to be nominated and appointed to that
Committee Last<\/a> fall. And theres some great bipartisan work thats done on the house appreciatioopriations committee and its a breath of
Federal Reserve<\/a> air to work with bipartisan people like charlie. I do oppose the cuts to the nih and to research. We saw this budget that came out of the white house. History will prove me will right or wrong. But in my personal opinion, our chief executive and commander in chief never laid eyes on that budget. That budget, in my view, was drafted and compiled in the basement of the heritage foundation. Which is a hardline rightwing organization that wants government out of everything and therefore wants to slash everything except military. And
Mick Mulvaney<\/a>, whom i know very well and was one of the founders of the rightwing freed
Freedom Caucus<\/a> was nominated and approved to be the director of the office of management and the budget which is one of the most powerful parts of the executive branch in this country. That budget fully reflects things i know to be ideological priorities of
Mick Mulvaney<\/a> and the
Freedom Caucus<\/a> and its dead on arrival because of that. [ applause ] because there is so much public support. Democracy really works in case youre wondering. There is so much public support for
Scientific Research<\/a> done by the government. For health
Research Done<\/a> by the government, were not going to cure cancer if we cut off all the funding for the research. People want cancer to be cured. They want all manner of other diseases to be cured. I do. And the people in the
Congress Know<\/a> that. If you set aside, i dont know the 30 or 35 members of the
Freedom Caucus<\/a> who would rather cut the budget than take care of these priorities, youre talking about a lot of people that hear from constituents at home and understand that we cant be doing these things. And its not
Just Research<\/a> for science and medicines its things like lowincome heating or meals on wheels. Or head start. There are an awful lot of
Popular Program<\/a>s that americans like and have depended on for many years that i can tell you from my own part and i think this is true across the aisle in the
Appropriations Committee<\/a>, we will be studiously ignoring the president s budget on those things. [ applause ] sorry. How many people are on the
Appropriations Committee<\/a> . About 40. About 40. We didnt have enough. Okay. With being on the
Appropriation Committee<\/a> how is it working with republicans and are you able to get goals accomplished . Well, again, i really enjoy working with the republicans on the
Appropriations Committee<\/a>. I tell you, the overall chair of the entire
Appropriations Committee<\/a> is a man named rodney frelinghisen, a real gentleman. If everybody is throwing around political epithets about each other hes the last one to do that. He is a practical person. He likes to get the job done. I just got on this committee. We are kind of gearing up now to do our work. So check back with me later. Ill let you know how much i like it. What steps this is small writing here. What steps are being taken in the house to have
President Trump<\/a> release his tax returns . [ applause ] ok. A bunch of questions here. But, yeah, theres a bill. One of the democrats introduced a bill in the house, and you remember from sesame street, before they cut the budget for public television. You remember from sesame street how bills work. Im just a bill. Bills get assigned to committee but its all about whos in charge. Right now, the republicans are in charge of the house. That means they control everything that happens. Other than the introduction of bills. They cant really control what the democrats say on the floor of the house. But other than that, they control what bills come up for votes in committee. And if its a bill they dont favor it doesnt even come up in committee. There is a bill that went to the government oversight and
Reform Committee<\/a> about forcing the president to release his tax returns. But remember the end of the story from sesame street if the house passes it and the
Senate Passes<\/a> it, it goes to the white house for signature by the president. Raise your hand if you think the president is going to sign that bill. I will say this. I think that there is an outside chance that the democrats will win the house in 2018. Oh, yeah. [ applause ] its hard to predict. But if it did happen, what that would mean not only would it mean that the democrats have control of the committee agendas, but they also have control of the
Oversight Committee<\/a>, which has subpoena power. And if you are in the minority in the
Oversight Committee<\/a> you dont have subpoena power if you get into the majority, you do. My dear friend
Elijah Cummings<\/a> is the ranking democrat on the
Oversight Committee<\/a>. And by his request i actually also continue to serve on that committee. If the democrats win the house back, representative cummings will have the power of subpoena. That committee can subpoena anything and anyone in the u. S. Including the president of the
United States<\/a>. Things may get very interesting if that happens. Well, they have to the election is in november of 2018. The other one is what steps are being taken to preserve and improve medicare, medicaid and
Social Security<\/a> . What about having the federal government negotiate drug prices . What is your position . Okay. The first question is, preserving medicare. Medicare is so important to me that when i first ran, i called myself a roosevelt democrat. Medicare and
Social Security<\/a> go hand in hand. It was roosevelt who invented
Social Security<\/a>. Medicare came in in the 60s. These programs you often hear about doomsday dates for those programs, dont you . Social security goes insolvent in 2034 and medicare is belly up and you know, 2025 whatever it is. What does that all mean . Well, first of all, its not recent. They have always had ininvolve sven insolvency dates on those programs. And they just adjust the years closer or further away depending on what else is happening in the federal government. When obamacare came in. That pushed medicares insolvency date back
Something Like<\/a> 11 years. So its something that the economists wrestle with. Does it mean if the date is 2034 does that mean theyre out of money, theres no more money in that bucket . No, it means you cannot pay 100 cents on the dollar for what is owed. Thats the date they start paying 99 cents on the dollar. It doesnt mean kaput but it means trouble. The question is, what is being done in the house to preserve these programs . Theres something if you get a chance when you get home, fire up the computer and plug in
Social Security<\/a> 2100. Ands and
Social Security<\/a> 2100 is a bill that my dear friend john from connecticut authored and im a co sponsored that raises the cap. If you notice you pay into these programs until you make a certain amount and if youre lucky enough to hit that amount then you stop paying. Well and thats what the idea is, that they raise that cap up. Actually the way larsons bill works is that you have kind of a donut hole. You pay into a certain amount and then you stop. And then once you make over 450,000 a year you start paying in again. Just give me the 450,000. Youre willing to make that sacrifice . Okay, good. The benefit of that, the bills get scored by the congressional budget office, cbo, its a
Nonpartisan Group<\/a> of accountants that see what kind of an affect they have. They scored that and said it would push back the doomsday date for medicare and
Social Security<\/a> for 75 years. I think we need to do it sooner rather than later. Because what youve got is youve got this disconnect between the outflow and the income and the closer that disconnect gets in timewise, the more pain is going to be involved in closing the gap. So the further apart we can do that, the sooner we can address it the better because it becomes a more gradual change. Im in favor of that. I am a cosponsor. So moving along. Last month, congress voted on hr 998, the scrub act searching for and cutting regulations that are unnecessarily burdensome which established a
Bipartisan Committee<\/a> to review regulations 15 years old or older that are unfunded mandates, obsolete, due publ duplicative or harmful. You voted against that bill. I did. The question is, why. The answer is that bill i talked about how i was dissatisfied with the lack of hearings about the
American Health<\/a> act. The problem with this the way they structured this bill was they established a commission. The commission comes up with a list of regulations. I dont call them regulations. I call them protections. [ applause ] thank you. But the commission has to come up with the list of the protections that they think ares on lute or duplicative or harmful to wage growth. They come up this
Blueribbon Panel<\/a> comes up with their list of the protections they hate the most and then it goes to congress for one vote, up or down. It could be hundreds, it could be thousands of protections, all at once with one vote of congress, sweeping them away on the word of some panel thats a
Blueribbon Panel<\/a> and i dont know what their priorities are and you didnt elect them. So thats why i voted no. [ applause ] keep in mind, there are some bad regulations out there that need to go, but we need to go over them carefully one at a time and make sensible decisions. Are you willing to work with all parties on fixing health care and saving planned parenthood . Also can you tell senator toomey to meet with us . [ laughter ] [ applause ] all right. What can be done to encourage the
Justice Department<\/a> to uphold the civil rights gains of the past 50 years . If they dont support these laws, what are our options . I think thats something that we all have to work on together, to tell you the truth. What can we do to encourage the
Justice Department<\/a> to stand up for the civil rights laws . We have to raise our voices. If you care about that and you want to be heard, we have to raise our voices. Dont think they dont listen. They do listen. Democracy works. I mean, i can write bills until im blue in the face but im in the minority in congress and i can write letters and i do write letters. And for me, its a core value standing up for civil rights gains of 50 years ago. I was at selma for the 50th anniversary of bloody sunday when president obama gave that wonderful, majestic speech. John lose is a personal dear friend of mine. I deeply care about these things, but i cannot do it by myself. We all have to come together and make it clear to the people in the
Justice Department<\/a> we will not brook. We will not tolerate them walking away from these standards of american decency. [ applause ] will you join a bipartisan call for an independent investigation into transactions between russia and all members of the
Trump Administration<\/a> . Sure. No problem. Will you back, support, and help strengthen the
Public School<\/a> system despite the efforts of betsey devos . Yes. Yes. [ applause ] and i tell you, i do that because i believe
Public Education<\/a> is the education is how we better ourselves in this economy. If you cut off the ability to better ourselves, so that only the people that were born on third base get to go to the best institutions, you are not being fair. Thats the political view and thats the one that i hold to. Question, if an
Infrastructure Initiative<\/a> ever goes forward how can
Congress Protect<\/a> the american taxpayer from privatization scams . Good question. Yeah, that is make no mistake, i am not here to trash donald trump. He is the president. He won the election. He won it by the rules that were laid out. And i have to work with them. But he said some things that i kind of like. And the thing he said that i like a lot is that he wants to invest 1 trillion in american infrastructure. I didnt read the footnotes, but that did not show up in his budget. But, see, that gets back to when i said i dont think that the president really read that budget, thats a hopeful thing. That is my hope. Because i think i think he really does want to invest in american infrastructure. And i dont think he had a choice about how we do it. There was some noise made about giving tax credits to big corporations so they can, you know, redo the infrastructure with trickledown economics. And i will fight that. And i think that that will be fought on a bipartisan basis out of the
Appropriations Committee<\/a>. Remember what congress does. The essential functions of the u. S. House. To tax and to spend. And we all spend all our time fighting over how much to tax, how much to spend, who to tax and what to spend on. That is in a nutshell most of what the hot air and gas in washington is about. But the way its been done ever since the founding of the house
Appropriations Committee<\/a> in the 1790s has been to have the appropriators carefully, painstakingly go through what were going to spend money on and do it in a transparent way. So that there are hearings and people are heard. And we come to sensible decisions on how the money is spent and what its spent on. For my own view, it is about making sure look, if were going to redo american infrastructure, the roads, the bridges, the suhr systems, broad band internet, all of the things that are going to grease the skids for the
American Economy<\/a> and the
American People<\/a>, we are going to do that, there are people who are going to be doing that work. And i want to make sure they get treated right and paid fairly. So thats why [ applause ] thats why its hopeful to me that i dont think the president read that budget. That budget. I think he does want to do infrastructure and i think there is going to be significant republican support that we did with the right way, the way we have always done it, through appropriations. Question, who are the democrats grooming for president in 2020 . Not me. Some significant milestones have been achieved. With the pen east pipeline. On april 7th, ferk released the eis recognizing but ignoring severe environmental impacts. What can you do to assist landowners who are concerned not only for the environmental impacts but for the risks and threats of
Eminent Domain<\/a> . That is a well stated question. Heres where i am on that. I think pipelines are with us. Pipelines create jobs. Pipelines move the natural gas. We have factories springing up in eastern pennsylvania in connection with generation of electricity. In a perfect world, we would not have to do anything. The money would just flow to us automatically but it doesnt work that way and we have to think about jobs and the economy. As far as pipelines, there are jobs involved in laying pipelines. These are highpaying, familysustaining jobs and so there are voices who are in favor of doing away with pipelines and doing away with gas drilling. I understand those voices. They come from people i care about. But im not there. I see natural gas as a bridge fuel. I think we need to get to
Sustainable Energy<\/a>. We need to get wind and solar powering this nation. But its we cant do it right away. And theres going to be too much suffering if we were to outlaw that right away. And i speak to you as somebody who is sticking up for the environment is one of my top priorities. What im looking at is the tradeoff. Either you do it with coal or you do it with natural gas. And i know thats not going to please everybody. Its also not going to please everybody what i tell you about the laying of pipelines. Every time a pipeline goes through, ferc has the power of
Eminent Domain<\/a>. They get to decide the route and whose land it goes over. It can go over your private property and all they have to do is give you reasonable complication, fair market complication for your land. And thats the law. That is the law, the way it works. What we get a lot in our office is we get folks that call up and say, why is this pipeline coming over my land instead of farmer jones land, you know, a mile away . That is a legitimate question. The point i have been taking is, ferc needs to be transparent about how they pick their routes. And i think thats fair. And i dont think its overly burdensome on ferc or the
Pipeline Companies<\/a> to explain how they pick their route. Otherwise, people are going to go away thinking, nobody told me why the pipeline has to come through my property. My greatgrandfather homesteaded this land. Or you know, this has been in the family for generations but farmer jones down the road and maybe he thinks i know farmer jones made a political contribution to his state senator so hes tied in thats why he doesnt have this in his backyard but i have it. And that may be a bunch of hooey but people will think the way people think when you dont have transparency. So i think the very least that were entitled to is an honest explanation of why the routes were picked and why thats the best route. If we were to make a stronger effort to be more progressive about that, we wouldnt have to worry about
Eminent Domain<\/a> and pipelines. I want to repeat that. If you didnt hear that, the question was if we had stronger advocacy for renewable and
Sustainable Energy<\/a> we wouldnt have to worry about
Eminent Domain<\/a> for pipelines and things like that. Thats absolutely true. And i want you to know that i am absolutely in favor of every kind of tax advantage we can give to
Sustainable Energy<\/a>, solar and wind, it was a major victory. People dont realize it but even in a republicandominated house we can score victories by taking advantage of the dysfunction among the republicans in the house. For example, about two and a quarter years ago, it was december. We had to keep the government funded. Paul ryan did not have the votes to fund the government because the
Freedom Caucus<\/a> were revolting. He had to come to the democrats to get votes. One of the things we insisted on was the fiveyear investment tax credit for solar and wind which had not happened until that moment. That is a small victory, but that is the kind of thing we can scratch out the current environment. Democrats win back the house, win back the senate, win back the white house you can expect to see a very aggressive, progressive approach to
Renewable Energy<\/a> and i will be leading the charge. [ applause ] thank you for that question. What can or should the dnc do to improve representation in congress . What if anything can congress do about the terrible gerrymandering . [ applause ] well, there are efforts afoot about fair districts. I think it makes sense. Its interesting, congress doesnt control that. Its the individual states. If you followed it, california pushed through a fair district bill and it passed and the governor signed it. And they have addicts that are recognizable geometric shapes. [ laughter ]. Did you ever see a map of my district . [ laughter ] . That is a shape that does not occur in nature. [ laughter ] who drew that . This is the question was who drew that . In pennsylvania, here is how it happens. It happens every 10 years. We do a census every ten years. Thats why they do it to figure out to make sure that members of congress represent equal numbers of people throughout the country. In fact, we expect because in proportion to other states, pennsylvania is losing population, and we will probably lose a member of congress after the next census. They do that census before they draw the congressional map. The way they draw the congressional map is it begins with a bill in the state house and then it goes to the state senate and then it goes to the governor. The current map was drawn by the republican state house the
Republican State Senate<\/a> and we was signed into law by a republican governor and thats why we have in a state with a majority democratic registration we have 13 republicans and five democrats in our congressional delegation. So what can we do about it . Again, raise our voices. The problem is, the democrats, once they get back in charge of the process, they are going to say, now its our turn. Youre going to be calling them up. The question is what can the dnc do and they cannot do anything. Dnc is not in control, it is harrisburg driven. I cannot read this one. This question is, where do you specifically stand on the toxic use of biosolids or sludge . I am for all sensible protections not regulations that is another thing that trump budget did was it cut the epa by a third. You know, in addition to wiping away masses of protections all at once they want to do away with a third of the people who are supposed to enforce the protections. Im against the toxic use of the biosolids in violation of epa regulation. Pardon me . [ inaudible question ]. I couldnt hear you. Can you specifically say how you are against it . But what can you do to help us . I mean, you do not eat organic food, chances are you are eating food grown in toxic waste. Any animal that eats that, you are consuming that. It is like this is not a good it needs to be screamed from the rooftops and why are people allowing it to go by . Why are
Companies Getting<\/a> away with this . Children are being poisoned every day they consume food and no one, no one is screaming really loud that has the power to. I appreciate that. Please. Would you stay after . I want to put you in touch with my legislative staff. I have a number of people on my legislative staff that i want to put you in contact with. Ok, why did we drop 26,171 bombs on iraq and syria in 2016 . Okay. Well, that was a decision of the department of defense. And the only thing i can really say thats relevant on that is that you know, that came out of the white house, came out of the executive branch. Whoever is in the white house, whether you like him or hate him, theyve been overreaching on the use of military force. Not to say specifically that this is a mistake or that is a mistake, i think just generally they need to check in with congress about it. If youve been following it theres something called the aumf, the authorization for the use of military force. The executive branch and the department of defense have been operating off of the authorization the aumf that was enacted in 2002 and 2003. Everything they have done since then, theyve done some kind of a legal limbo dance to connect it up to their authority under those very old bills those very old acts that gave the president authority. I am absolutely in favor of redoing the authorization for the use of military force because [ applause ] because congress is supposed to be involved in these decisions, and right its not. Pardon . What is stopping congress from carrying out their functioning . Again, its impossible to just refer generally to congress. You there v to talk about which house and who is in charge of which house. Where i work it is the republicancontrolled house of representatives every single bill that comes out of there is what the republicans want, what the
Republican House<\/a> leadership wants. If they wanted to curtail the use of military force by the white house, they could bring it up. And i wish they would. What is stopping them . Nothing. [ inaudible question ] i feel that doesnt happen often in washington. An example is the
Supreme Court<\/a> judge that was just nominated, i felt the democrats could have done a better job of negotiating something in favor of the democrats when they knew for a fact that judge was going to be nominated. But yet they let that opportunity pass by to make a point. Okay. So if you didnt hear. The question was really about a democratic activism and pushing back against things happening in the congress, and by the president. Yeah, those are political decisions. For example, the nomination and confirmation of judge gorsuch was mentioned. And that that was actually unfortunate because they had to abandon the filibuster rule in the senate. The comfort there is they only abandoned the filibuster rule for that case. Its still in place for ordinary legislation. Now this is important because for tactical purposes, it means that if something is a core democratic value, for example, and the senators who are democratic know that, they can refuse to let something come up. They can filibuster it. And they do. There are a lot of bills that have passed through the republicanheld house since ive been there that simply died in the senate even though the republicans controlled the senate. And so, when day abandoned the filibuster rule to get judge gorsuch through, i was disappointed because it means a dismantling of the kind of bipartisan spirit that you are used to in the u. S. Senate. That is a long discussion, what you brought up but thank you for the question. How are you going to prevent this president from bankrupting our country with travel costs for his family and himself . [ applause ] im open to your ideas on that. [ laughter ] we hear about it every single day about it. Were americans. We have short attention spans. Every single day. Everybody hear that . That is the correct answer. The correct answer is that we have to raise our voices together, if thats the way we feel about it. And dont stop. [ inaudible question ]. In the white house . The
Renewable Energy<\/a> job sector occupies three times the number of jobs in the coal industry. What can be done to bring more of those jobs to your district . Its its something that i think about a lot. I was in washington one morning, and i saw across the street a panel van and it said, solar innovations, pine grove, pennsylvania. And i walked across. And they were installing solar panels and pine grove is in my district. [ laughter ] so i got all excited. [ laughter ] and i ran across the street and theres a couple of guys lugging heavy stuff into this house. And i said, solar innovations, pinegrove . And they said get lost, buddy. [ laughter ] undeterred i wrote down the phone number on the side of the truck and called them up. And indeed there is a
Wonderful Company<\/a> in pine grove that employs upwards of 300 people. They make they started with greenhouses. But they graduated to a highefficiency glass and they use it for highend buildings and i think they built a house out in seattle for one of these software zillionaires. And they sold glass for highefficiency energy homes in russia. They also power their entire operation with their own solar array which provides 115 of all of the electricity they use in their processes at the factory. So its there. Its happening. And i look for it. Its true that the number of jobs of people actually digging coal is
Something Like<\/a> 75,000 versus in the neighborhood of a half a
Million People<\/a> working in solar and
Renewable Energy<\/a>. The other thing we have in our district is wind. We have a bunch of wind farms. Its funny because thats also an area where you get local landowners complaining about the placement of wind generators. But i am all in. I think that the cost will continue to come down. You dont pollute the atmosphere, you dont pump carbon into the atmosphere. And you dont have to go exploring for the sun. You know where it is. And the wind is there, too. The one thing i like about
Sustainable Energy<\/a> is who are the people who will benefit most when
Renewable Energy<\/a> is prevalent . The poor people. The poor people. Because we all pretty much use the same minimum amount of energy. And if youre spending a third of your income on the energy needs you have, imagine having a third of your income back or close to it. Its important to me. Would you support a singlepayer plan . I assume we are talking about health care. The answer is if it came up for a vote, i would vote yes. [ applause ] but im not going to pull the wool over your eyes and suggest it will come up for a vote any time soon. It will not come up for a vote during a republicanheld congress. Even if the democrats come back in charge, remember the democrats were in charge when the aca came up and there was this massive fistfight over what was going to happen to the forprofit
Health Insurance<\/a> companies and they ran ads with harry and ethel, you know, scaring people that they would never be able to see their favorite doctor, marcus welby ever again and make no mistake, youre talking about putting an entire industry out of business. It isnt that youre annoying them with protections or regulations. You are threatening them with extinction. So they will fight with everything they have. To bring to the battle. Theyve done it before. Theyve won. So they will be encouraged to do it again. And so i think there is a wide, wide gulf separating us here from single payer. But the reason i like it is that medicare works on a 3 administrative fee, not 20 , not 18 , 3 . [ applause ] the other thing was that was brought up was what about medicare negotiating drug prices. Theyre not allowed to. Why not . Because the pharmaceutical industry has the power not to let that happen. I would be in favor of allowing that negotiation to happen, but there again, youre talking about an entire industry that has a lot of money and a lot to lose. And so theyre going to fight that tooth and nail all the way through. Dont expect to see that go through any time soon, eertsz. What is the
Health Care Plan<\/a> for congress . And can we all get in it . [ laughter ] i am on obamacare. I dont know. Does everybody have the same thing . I chose it for myself and for my family because i dont want to be a hypocrite. [ applause ] and its kind of expensive not to be a hypocrite because i have to pay for a plan that covers me at home in scranton and also covers me down in washington, d. C. But dont make any mistake about it, im darn grateful to have this job. And im so proud to represent all of you. [ applause ] im going to take one more question from the floor. Does somebody have a burning question that needs to be answered before we leave . You won the lottery. Thank you. Yes. Im very sorry very disturbed about the defunding of meals on wheels, which is so incredibly important, not just for dignity, but so important. And i just want to know what you think because its so desperately needed. It astonished me. Thank you for the question. What about meals on wheels . They really want to defund that. Its awfully important to keep it going. And i agree with that. I was astonished that that showed up in the president budget to cut meals on wheels. And they asked did you see this on television . Mick mulvaney was answering questions about this with a dry eye and a cheery expression that meals on wheels is not working. You remember he said that . [ laughter ] st not working. Its not working. No. It wouldnt be working if people were starving to death. Then it wouldnt be working. The fact that people can eat and live and take advantage of the program, the program works. Thank you for raising the question. Im fully in support of it and i can tell you that is a very
Popular Program<\/a> that i fully expect the house
Appropriations Committee<\/a> on both sides of the aisle to stick up for. Everybody, thanks for coming. Thank you. [ applause ] nice to meet you. Cspans washington journal live every day with news and toll pohlsy issues that impact you, coming up wednesday morning, new
York Democratic<\/a> congressman, vice chair of the
Problem Solvers Caucus<\/a> talks about the budget deadline and tax reform. And tim murthy talks about federal
Mental Health<\/a> and
Substance Abuse<\/a> policies. And
Bradford Fitch<\/a> on
Health Care Options<\/a> for members of congress be. Sure to watch cspans washington journal live at 7 00 a. M. Eastern on wednesday morning. Join the discussion. Wednesday, treasury secretary stevemy mnuchin talks about this tax plan announcement. Thats followed by a panel with house ways and means chair and other policy officials. Live coverage on cspan. A reminder you can follow that live on www. Cspan. Org and listen on cspans radio app. Wednesday a hearing on u. S. Military strategy in the
Asia Pacific Region<\/a> with admiral harry harris testifying before the
House Armed Service<\/a> committee, live coverage here on cspan. Also available at www. Cspan. Org and on the cspan radio app. Sunday on q a, the house of truth. We talk with the author on his book about a group of intellectuals who met regularly in the early 1900s to debate politics and the future of the country. I think everybody associated with this house, race wasnt a salient issue for them. They cared about the rights of workers and it took
Oliver Wendell<\/a> holmes jr. In some of his opinions including
Moore V Dempsey<\/a> which found for the first time that the mob dominated criminal trials of southern blacks violated the due process clause. That is the first time that a conviction was struck down. That was a huge moment in putting fair criminal trials in the liberal agenda and linking them with race. Sunday night at 8 00 eastern on cspans q a. Next, wall street journal writer
Sohrab Ahmari<\/a> in remarks from
Princeton University<\/a> he talked about how nationalism and identity","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia804702.us.archive.org\/7\/items\/CSPAN3_20170426_012800_Representative_Matthew_Cartwright_Town_Hall_Meeting\/CSPAN3_20170426_012800_Representative_Matthew_Cartwright_Town_Hall_Meeting.thumbs\/CSPAN3_20170426_012800_Representative_Matthew_Cartwright_Town_Hall_Meeting_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240628T12:35:10+00:00"}