good afternoon everyone good afternoon everyone welcome to the Ford school I'm Michael Barr I'm the Joan and Sanford Weill Dean of the Gerald R Ford School of Public Policy it's my delight and pleasure to welcome you here this afternoon for this very special policy talks at the Ford school event voices from across the aisle and a welcome to of Michigan's own representatives Debbie Dingell and fred Upton we have brought them together as part of our new initiative conversations across difference in a dialogue today moderated by Ford Professor Brendan Nyhan I won't read their extensive and impressive BIOS which you have in your program as you well know these are extremely challenging times for our nation with fractious political discourse gridlock and partisanship in our nation's capital and an increasing lack of trust in institutions everywhere the relationship between representative Dingell and Upton is the antithesis of the partisan politics operative today in Washington this depth of the relationship has been perhaps most pointedly displayed in the last week with the passing of Debbie's husband John Dingell Debbie we are so sorry for your loss and in the course of last week's event we heard wonderful remarks from fred Upton a eulogy for John that was really very very powerful I'm John will be sorely missed by by many of us here at the Ford school and in our country our two guests today have worked on numerous bipartisan efforts together most recently during the shutdown introducing emergency legislation to allow states to make unemployment benefits available to unpaid federal workers congresswoman Dingell and congressman Upton however do represent different parties and different constituencies parties and people's with sometimes different ideologies and different policy positions this session will look at the manner by which such divergence can help or sometimes hinder the democratic and how we can work better together I think it's an especially appropriate way for us to spend this afternoon of President's Day let me just say a small word on format' we'll have some time towards the end for questions from the audience please write your question on the cards provided by our staff and our staff will collect them joining me to present the questions and really presenting the questions themselves rather than me our students Kate Weston and Brett is as laughs key the new co-presidents of we listen a wonderful University of Michigan student group that fosters dialogue across difference here on campus for those of you who are watching online please tweet your questions using the hashtag policytalks again welcome to all of you Brendan I'm going to turn things over to you and thank you very much all right thanks so much everyone for being here congressman up there I wanted to start by saying a few words of the relationship between the Fords and the Dingell so maybe I'll turn the floor over to him well it really is apropos I mean President Ford really was known for working across the aisle and great tribute urge all of you to go to his Presidential Library in Grand Rapids and see some some of the things that he did but it's interesting we did it we did a tribute on the House floor earlier this week seems like a month ago to john dingo a mentor to me but obviously the the dean of the house with just credible credentials and we're so fortunate to have as debbie now serve in that seat and a Dingell representing southeast Michigan for 86 years but I want to share this with you because it's from the Ford family Mike Ford actually sent an email to Debbie Wednesday afternoon and Jim and she shared it with me and it's just a couple paragraphs I just thought I'd read it because it's a good intro for this afternoon Debbie since learning of John's recent passing my thoughts and prayers have been consistent with you and your extended family through my reading of the many wonderful branches of attributes to John I have been deeply moved and blessed to revisit his remarkable legacy of leadership and service to the people of Michigan into all of our nation John and my father though identified from competing political parties holds so much in common as men of wisdom integrity compassion and selfless service for all of humanity and their friendship was true and enduring through a shared lifetime calling of public service John Dingell and Jerry Ford represent what is good honorable and decent in our country may you know of God's abiding comfort but it's appropriate for where we really want to see the country move we work together to solve the nation's problems Jerry Ford did that certainly John Dingell did that Debbie and I try our best to follow that path John and joy Ford for friends for decades and they did a lot of stuff together they really did so I thought we could say that's a beautiful way to start this this event and really consistent with the kinds of issues we'd like to talk about I wondered if we could talk first about bipartisanship and practice which is something that you to practice in your relationship as legislators and something that people often hunger for in this country we talk about a lot but I actually think people don't hear about it very much a lot of the bipartisan work in Congress is is somewhat under the radar the conflict gets more media attention and more coverage so I wonder if you could talk about an issue or two where you've worked closely together in your offices and collaborated so shouldn't things that are relevant to us here in southeast Michigan like pee fast or opioids I'm and you know Congress cars well maybe you could start and talk about that you know first of all I want to say I don't look at somebody and say oh you're a Republican you know you're a Democrat I look at somebody as an individual who's coming from someplace from I'm looking at rusty Hills who I've known for decades maybe longer than Fred I don't know which one up no longer I don't look at rusty and say he's a Republican he's someone I've worked with for and I hope you're teaching the kids well too but you know you start you can't if you want to pass something if you want to get something done that's gonna be good and right for this country you don't do it working for just one side you build a coalition you find the common ground you find the way that you can get something done so for us I mean fred has been one of my dearest friends he's always he'll always be older than I am Mikami ground and for the Michigan delegation the common ground is Michigan we love this state we want to do what's right for it so the Great Lakes the auto industry PFS so many issues that really matter to people in this state that we talk with each other how do you build that coalition that will get done what's got to get done to do what's right for the state that we represent you know things flip when I was first elected so I work for President Reagan a lot of years ago and he had a wonderful relationship with the Congress you know Republican president Democrat Congress but he got a lot done in the country loved him when he ran for re-election he won 49 states I mean that's the real test you know and he lost only Minnesota in one California New York as a Republican but when I came I never thought the Republicans would ever be in the majority because they hadn't been for my lifetime they really hadn't and so I was I sat down with our leadership and they brought in all the Republican freshmen together and they said you know a if you have a good idea two things are gonna happen it's either gonna get stolen or to be defeated you're really you know you don't have a lot of Republican votes here I said no that's not gonna happen to me so I made the decision that virtually every issue that I've ever worked on has been bipartisan I'll reach across the aisle I got a lot of Debbie four I got a lot of friends like Debbie on the other side of the aisle and a lot of Republicans on my side that want to work together and somehow I got to be end up chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee through arguably the most important committee in the Congress because we have more jurisdiction than anybody else and guess who taught me John Dingell who was a great chairman for me and I like to think I was a great chairman for him because he was on the committee later on and the proof in the pudding is that you know we had a Democratic president President Obama was president all my tenure as chairman and guess what he's something more than 200 bills that we moved through our committee all on a bipartisan basis you know one of those that impacts everyone here a big time and Debbie did a wonderful we had a couple of roundtables here in Ann Arbor called 21st century cures where we speed up the approvals of drugs and devices we added forty five billion dollars to health research over ten years span and NIH money is so important for all of our educational institutions but if we're going to find the cure for cancer and Parkinson's and Alzheimer's it will be because of the work that we did on this bill Debbie had a great group here of the different disease groups talking about the need to make sure that we can find the answers to these and it was overwhelming powerful and at the end of the day that bill took three years to get done we passed it 390 to 226 on the House floor in 92 to 8 in the Senate and we went and it literally took the very last day of the Congress to get it done I mean you know we had to get cloture we had all these different things in the Senate to run things through but you know it was bipartisan and it will impact everybody's life on the planet so let me let me also give a plea for the value and of partisanship and polarization sometimes the parties do disagree and that's an important part of our democracy too we should need to make sure not to lose sight of that right political scientists think parties are essential to democracy parties help you know contesting the issues of our day is an important feature of our political system too so I wondered if you could talk about it when you decide to move forward with a policy issue on a partisan basis you mentioned health care that's certainly an issue where the parties have moved in different directions not on that bill right but on the core issue of the ACA and whether it repeal it or not right the parties have taken really different paths so I wonder if you could talk about the congresswoman the challenge of policymaking on these issues where the parties fundamentally disagree and what can be done about her whether you should just go on your own I don't think it was good and I got in trouble with the Young Turks because I said that I wish that there had been Republican support and actually portrait watch that soldier I hit a tree skiing so I just had a little surgery over here but I have great friends on both sides of yeah so last week there was a I love that Republicans he's a Republican someone I know you can tell how Fred feels that Louie come here from Texas is I mean he and I did some good look I know everybody thinks he's crazy I love him but he is writing an op-ed for Nolan Finley right now Fred can't believe this and he is making the point that if John Dingell had been and I'm I don't want to get political this is but he's making the point that if John Diggle had been chair of the committee the Affordable Care Act would have been written with Democratic Republican support and that it would have Democrats would have had the previous what he was telling Nolan on Friday Democrats would have had the problem they had in 2010 I think I built when you are passing a bill of some significant policy that if it is partisan half the country's not going to accept it I'll tell you right now I don't know if I'm gonna make somebody mad I don't know if we if the time comes for impeachment impeachment should never be done on a partisan basis it's going to tear the country apart you need to have everybody there understanding what that wrongdoing was and you need to we're not Republicans or Democrats we're Americans first so I you some I horrify everybody by saying some days why do we need the two-party system or there shouldn't we have independent candidates so I'm not gonna go I mean I do think that the parties provide us and I I mean well I mean I don't know how many people here know I was a Republican when I'm married I knew that militant Republican and Bill Milliken was more liberal than John Diggle on some subjects so I think it's important for somebody who gets elected to know what their values are and to know what you stand for and to always stand for that values and never never never not know what you believe so let me just say two things first of all I concur with what Debbie said about John Dingell been chairman of the Energy and Commerce Committee if I didn't say it Louie did all right Louis said all right I'm gonna remind him next week when I see he it would have been bipartisan I think that there's some things that they could have done to have done that and you know I can remember when President Obama first came into office and we did this big stimulus package member was like 750 billion dollars and I went to Rahm Emanuel and some others and said you know I care about jobs we were going through a terrible recession then a lot of people you know we're really hurting bad and there were some things as it related to the auto industry that had they done it I think looking back you can ask her when you talk to her tomorrow Candice Miller she was one of my colleagues great great friend and colleague no longer in the Congress but she and I were both on the Auto caucus and they done something on autos I think we would have been there and I think we did a motion recommit which is a little inside baseball but it had that been as an amendment on the bill you would have got us on board you know the tax bill that we did yes I believe strongly that it really helped the economy could have been better the coordinator could have been better no it could have been better I could and I wish that that we had had some Democratic votes for it then you should have written a better bill well hide it yeah time out wait a minute it wasn't our committee in ways it means they have this special right when they bring a bill to the House floor there's no amendments but they should have had I worked with some of the folks on the committee trying to get get it to be where I think they would have had some democratics Democrat votes but they it was tragic that they didn't you know I get some of those provisions included so what do you think are the forces that are the reason right so a lot of this there are good people right there good people we have good people on this stage right but there there's an institutional process right that's generating the bills that people vote on right so how do you think a lot of the bills that we pass oh you read you know yet the 24/7 news and everybody watches one network or the other depending but where their mindset might be but at the end when you really look so we just came through a terrible shutdown the last five weeks okay but look how it finished up 300 people voted for it Debbie and I two of the 300 that voted for it it could have happened five weeks ago it should have happened five weeks ago that there was actually a better deal that maybe would have even had more votes at the end we went through this terrible dilemma the last five weeks that nobody was happy with everybody was a loser and it was really unfortunate but at the end it was bipartisan to get us out of that hole that we were in and the Senate did the same thing I was with Gary Peters this morning over in Holland and you know he was one of those with debbie Stabenow both our senators voted for it but it passed three to one over there now you know that wasn't what we saw Friday when the president cited in the law but it really was a bipartisan effort getting putting Humpty Dumpty back together again and all of us pretty disappointed with what happened the previous five weeks do you think that's gonna set a precedent so I mean so let's let's talk about the consequences of polarization so something people worry about it it's not just that the parties disagree it's when government can't function because of polarization right so the shutdown has made that quite dramatic right and there's definitely a temptation right to take these more extreme steps right there's a lot waise as you both know to shut government don't control things so you got the hard right and the hard left but most of us are in the in the main lane there and if you allow so one of the things that Debbie and I did a couple years ago we joined this thing called the problem solvers caucus and we had a real win beginning last month January when the rules of the house actually were changed forced to change as frankly I don't as an outsider I don't think Nancy Pelosi would have been speaker had she not agreed to those changes to the rules changes but now there is going to be a much greater emphasis I think on bipartisanship on forcing amendments that are bipartisan to be allowed and debated on the House floor where they were denied before and we've been working together for the last couple years now on a number of issues but now with these rules changes we're going to be in a better spot but because if you can show it's bipartisan the Rules Committee which is not something you learn about in ninth grade civics or even poli-sci when I went here graduated from Michigan but that Rules Committee dictates what amendments can be allowed on the House floor after the committee is done with them and if you can promote bipartisan amendments that may change that the whole thrust of that bill whether it be a tax bill whether it be a healthy or whatever all of a sudden you put more emphasis in the middle where if you can get agreement that's gonna happen and and we're gonna push that we got a couple of really good ideas that we're going to be pursuing whether it's on you know health policy or some other things congresswoman what do you think I think we're at a precipice and I think you know we're most focused and a lot of people's lives were hurt by the most recent shutdown there were people have no idea you know really good I mean if you just look at the Coast Guard the custom and Border Patrol the TSA the FBI Secret Service we're all working and not being paid they were if you meant I was trying to meet with them almost every day or talk to them and they were scared to death you know all of those branches are if you get a bad credit rating and you could lose your job but they couldn't afford to drive to work they couldn't I had a woman from this district that had been deemed essential she couldn't afford to pay for her daycare she was gonna lose her daycare spot for her child she wasn't allowed to take time off to take care of her child even though she was not being paid because her first status she would have lost her job so she took the midnight shift at Denny's to pay for her job and I think there was more but remembered that a year ago we had two shutdowns almost back to back and I think all of us have to look at what's happening in our country it's not a way to govern I think each of us Democrats and Republicans have to look ourselves in the eye I think this is a a this isn't Republicans or Democrats we Democrats have had these but we cannot let the far right and the far left dictate what is happening there I mean Fred I love you but too many members of your party are afraid to stand up when the president is doing something wrong because they're afraid what the impact will be I I'm worried about what is happening in the future of this country and I think every Americans got a responsibility to stand up to elect people that are gonna do what's right and we need to worry about this democracy I think we live in the greatest land in the world united we stand divided we fall do you think there are things we can do to pull the parties back from that kind of those kinds of extreme measures or is it just something where you have to feel the political caustics you both describe the human costs and the political costs of the shutdown but imagine a world where now the Democrats have the opportunity exploit the debt ceiling the way we saw in the past right if the next time the debt ceiling has to be increased right that threatens financial chaos right and you can stick something on that use it to exploit your you you know you exploit your levers to pursue some policy priority right so the concern is right that under those circumstances right there are a lot of pressure points that people can apply if they're more extreme so is that something if for folks who just both to kind of describe ourselves being the main Lane of your parties how do you keep both parties from - from using those kinds of tactics well def sealing is a is a tough vote for anyone to vote for you know or a Democrat is right but it has to be done I mean we're we're on the tracks that you know you're not gonna get a balanced budget this year hey you know it's not gonna happen under any under any scenario and you know it's unfortunate that there was actually a budget reform effort at the end of last year there was bipartisan but they had to get a supermajority to get the votes to get it done I was asked a little bit earlier this morning you know we have this one-year budget issue it ought to be a two-year budget we're dealing with trillions of dollars and you know the budget is supposed to by law supposed to be done by April 15th when I work for President Reagan it came up to Capitol Hill on the first week in January I worked at the Office of Management and Budget and we sent the Reagan budget up in an ambulance because we were told it was dead on arrival and so we wanted a sort of a clever idea that we did and it got a lot of attention and it was dead on arrival urgent but it sort of sets the stage well here we are now it's already mid-february and because of the shutdown we're not gonna see the President's budget even released until for another month how in the world are we gonna you know live to the law that it's got to be enacted by April 15th ain't gonna happen so changing that process which would include the debt ceiling and that was the ideas that they were looking at I think we just have to realize that times have changed from where we were before and in it has to go up because otherwise we default and if you default that means interest rates are even gonna be higher than they otherwise would have been which only adds to the deficit I mean it's just a it's it's a bad snowball that goes down the mountain you know you keep saying party system sort of implying that the two-party system I would actually argue with you that I mean who is the Democratic Party we know who is the Republican Party but it's also the demo it's actually the socialist democratic Justice Party which is not I mean is a different party that is that defeated Joe Crowley and AOC who I love actually and and talk to a lot it's people you know inside the Democratic Party such as the same inside the Republican Party that is terrifying so each party has its own so I don't in it too even when you talk about the two-party system it's Ralph Nader that kept Al Gore from being elected when you look at the populist vote Ross Perot Ross Perot so it's not it's clean if you want to make it and there are a lot of dynamics you got it absolutely well so let me let me ask about one so let me get so the parties are quite diverse internally and that's one of the things that creates opportunities for bipartisanship in some cases so I want to ask congressman up then about joining the climate solutions caucus that's that's an area where people are though the parties may differ on how to address climate change but the underlying science and coming to agree on it yeah and starting to find a path forward on addressing it seems like an important issues does anyone here not believe in climate change and it's happening right there may be one Yoshio college is not in my district you know I'm just me tell the truth yep yeah I'm proud to be on that climate caucus it's happening we all want I mean I grew up on the shores of Lake Michigan well I care about the environment air and water and everything else and if we can have a cleaner environment we are all better off for it I was one that publicly scolded the president for pulling on a Paris let's have these goals let's see if we can work together and yeah I wasn't really happy that China and India weren't part of that and they get to go you know increasing their missions dramatically over the next couple of decades before they they come to magic moment with Jesus on this but at the end of the day we all got to work on on the environment you know we're gonna have a hearing it was canceled this week but our first hitting is the top Republican on the energy subcommittee is gonna be on energy efficiencies I'm glad you know I got a new Jeep this year or I guess it was last year I'm delighted that against 10 or 15 miles better per gallon I had two miles per gallon and then my old Ford and this one has four-wheel drive it I needed it this morning that's a terrible accidents but you know we ought to be investing in that type of energy efficiency so that we can reduce emissions not only here but shall show the way for the rest of the world yeah this is a bipartisan caucus the climate change group and I'm delighted to be part of it and and it shows that you know we do need to work together just another issue of where we can get some bipartisanship on an issue that most Americans would agree is it really is happening so congresswoman are you are you optimistic so I was just on the hill and I heard kind of two stories one that the green new deal was potentially polarizing Republicans and another that this was maybe a moment where the parties could find some common ground so do you think climb is an area where their progress can be made it is okay question the green new deal maybe a little bit too heavy the Republicans are gonna try to force them both at everything they can inside the Green Deal let's be honest there's gonna be a vote on it I even read in the Senate but I do you know look we come from Michigan so I I went to ALC Alexandra she's actually become a good friend he would like and he's a lot of people are trying to figure out how we become good friends with me being from an out of state but I said to her I want you I want to work with you on something I if part of the Green Deal is to go to a carbonless Society which means we got to keep improving automobiles which means you need electric vehicles but people aren't buying electric vehicles because they don't have confidence in the battery they don't we have no infrastructure system we have nothing so they don't trust the range we've got to build an infrastructure system to support it so instead of Italy instead of everybody you know the end of the world is here at the end of the world is here let's work together to do what we've got to do to keep us put it in positive way and then actually Rashida was with me on another day and I said Rashida I'm inviting it she's another colleague for those of you I'm sorry I think everybody knows the names of three Democrats we don't know my side of the state but you know not me I don't do that he doesn't but she's gonna come to Detroit and we're gonna so you know I get I don't mean by the way I don't look at her and say she's a dimmer and I don't I talked to people I find where that common ground is because by the way we do need to do something about it but I want to protect jobs and I want to build the infrastructure so I don't instead of looking at people oh that's Republican or Democrat I look at somebody where can we find their common ground and actually find something I think that's now this I think is the difference between a man and a woman I think women are problem solvers I think we're used to balancing multiple balls in the air and we try to figure out and that's why we need more women in politics and that's why we need more women and government cuz we look at things and we don't look and say oh he's our view near that we look at and say how do we solve the problem and that's what I think we need to do more of period alright well that was good that was good so well let's talk about in a hard issue to get people together to solve problems on which is immigration we just had a government shutdown over it the president has declared a national emergency it's going to go to the courts right there's a lot happening and one thing I think that's important to think about is is you know when the president when any person gets involved in issue it can sometimes actually make it harder to find compromise so I wonder how you think about this issue right where Democrats actually are counter polarized on immigration as Trump has come has come out so strongly on it right you're seeing more Democrats who are taking more liberal positions on that issue than they have in the past I wonder how you think about how the the house is going to be able to handle this issue and what the right as a policy matter what you think the right path forward is well I hope that we can get this done actually it's it was the first issue that really brought the problem-solvers caucus together on an issue it was newly formed we were in a shutdown in December of 1617 December 17 we're supposed to be we're supposed to be home in our districts doing something else and we weren't getting out of session and a bunch of us got together at tijuana coat would Tijuana where does that restaurant it wasn't Tijuana its tortilla Coast yeah tortilla Coast he'd out I know down in the basement and then I drank your water remember I started choking on my anyway all right but we started working together there are about thirty members of Congress that literally filled up this space we had two tables and we started you know what is it that we have to do on immigration reform to really open up the process so we can have some votes because it's broken it's going on way too long not only for employers but you know the the dreamers and the daca kids and all these different issues that just it breaks your heart and I worked with Debbie on a couple of cases individuals in her district to try and help her so they could stay I've got a couple people on my side of the state as well that it just just breaks your heart and we made a difference I mean we we forced it but then at the end we didn't have the votes to get it done in the house or the Senate and the Senate they actually got couple different versions again and their bipartisan groups that came together and our group problem solvers met with the president President Trump a couple weeks ago during the shutdown I didn't yeah you were supposed to go but you didn't you anyway was by it really had about you know 15 members or so down in the Situation Room we talked about immigration and you know the president I know he'd like to see us move this is on the overt not the wall part but yeah he does want to go there but I mean on the other issue of dreamers and others he spoke to the American Farm Bureau National Conference in New Orleans a couple weeks ago and in his speech he talked about solving the issue for the AG workers yeah that's that's gonna be hard to do but it's got to happen and as I told the president I complimented on that but I said we there's some low-hanging fruit here a lot of us thought that this whole shutdown issue if you go back look at The Wall Street Journal or now you look at the Chamber of Commerce and some other people some proposals they really thought there was a and deal that we could do that he could do both border security and you could combine a number of elements on the immigration side that would make some sense to get a package to get it done legal status for folks that have been here I mean a whole number of different things and at the end that part didn't make it in the equation it has to though we've gone too long and I know that just this week in fact I was sitting behind Steny Hoyer at the funeral and for Jonna I'm Thursday and I you know I was doing business you know and before it started I was talking to - Steny who's the majority leader number two position in the house and there's been there was a public effort this week to talk about some legislation with dreamers that'll be bipartisan so I want to say hundreds of businesses have signed on to some letters of support to try and get things done and I leaned over to study and said we've got to make sure that this is bipartisan because we got a lot of Republicans they want to work on this to try and get it done and I'd like to think that we can it's it's a major issue for me particularly as I know so many of these folks and their individual stories and some of the bad things that are happening to them because we don't have status for them that that's really got to get it so I'm I'm hopeful I'm a Cubs fan I'll confess a you know I root for the Tigers as well but so I'm an optimist and I'm encouraged that we can get something done on this and I know that our problem solvers group has been very involved in this really from the first moment of its inception do you have anything you wanna add in Congress one we need comprehensive immigration reform we need to get some balls and get it done it's been we've needed to get it done for 20 years the daca kids they are Americans in every single way these kids I mean they're your classmates they go to school with you they just they they they're paying taxes they're fighting and defending in this country and they've become a political football so that's where we got to find that in getting businesses we got to build the coalition that's just gonna get this done once and for all and that's that's what business has become much more involved in it I mean we did the hospitality and entertainment industry the construction industry the agriculture industry they all have economic issues here so we got to build the coalition that's gonna bring people from both sides and say and that's enough let's get this done the country needs to get us done and let us stop and stand up to the people trying to divide this country with fear and hatred and we need to do that on both sides of the aisle stand up to it call bigotry for what it is and stop letting people divide us with fear and hatred so what we have what let's take up that point I mean so when people worry about our political system it's not just that the parties disagree right it's the way they view the other side so I wonder if we could talk about that a little more like what do you see of the forces that make it so hard for these compromises to be found and and to what extent you think what are the factors that are making your colleagues in some cases appeal to the worst in people or be more competitive and uncivil than we'd like to see because we do see it in public opinion right we see people see the other party in more negative terms than they have in the past right so people are getting this kind of message about the other side I wonder how you know why you think that is about what we can do about it they see all politics from a negative perspective yeah so you want me to go first you got it you got to reach out and find people on the other side of the aisle that you can work with and I got it you know this is early in the Congress for this Congress you know we went through this you know terrible thing the last five weeks things now I think get back to normal when we come back into session next week but I think it's it's the caucuses it's your state delegations it's the votes that you have that you really do you know I've not met a OC yet I know she is you know seen her but I've not been anywhere close to say hello but you got you got to build those relationships and see people look at you in in Reverse side of having respect for you know willing to stand up you know when when you need to honor any particular issue and and to build that relationship of trust that hopefully can try to get things done I would also say that the Congress needs to remember that they're an equal branch of government to the executive branch and the Congress needs to stand up and do its job I guess I'd I'm would encourage you all to read something that was in The Washington Post last week okay you finish well Big John on his name day wrote a really wonderful piece that really reflected on his career and where the country needed to go and we should have actually made copies and had him here but you can you can google it and it was more than just the Washington Post it was the national news broadcast news it's it's everywhere you can find it real easy but he you know he he will he was involved in every issue though since I've been live I mean he was voting on those issues Steny Hoyer made the point at the funeral earlier this week that John had already been in Congress 25 years before he was elected and then they served 38 years together so he saw these debates and he really offered pearls of wisdom for where we have to go and it's very much along what this place for policy school really cares about working together having ideas go first put policy have it politics and let the chips fall where they may don't worry about your next election but really worked I don't know you name the issue to get things done was it was a wonderful piece and if you read his book and you know he gave me a copy that I finished a couple weeks ago you know I I've saved the article that was in the post and that'll be taped only inside of the book jacket but talks about this point yeah I wonder if you could maybe speak to the especially the young folks in the room the students and the people are thinking about their lives like both in terms of you know what you would say about the importance of public service which is something that's really come through and both of what you've said but also how they can how they can be involved in the political system what are the ways that you know they can make their voice heard in Congress like you know about how members of Congress think about what their constituents are feeling so you know what are the best ways for them to kind of communicate that to be heard in our democracy you know I first of all everybody needs to become involved your voice matters you know I got public service what the only decent thing the only good thing that came out of this most recent government shutdown is maybe people thought about public service and thought about you know we all love to take take potshots at government officials and they began to realize the functions they serve and that they're there for the common good to make all of our lives better and to make our community strong I got involved in politics when I was your age my roommate got very sick with a heart condition and she was a woman and in I found out there was no information you know the Heart Study and aspirin a day keeps your keeps the doctor away it's still the most significant cardiac heart study that's been done in the history of this country Framingham Heart Study is what it is and there are to this day there are no women in it think about that so I started the National Women's Health Resource Center because the federal government would not allow women to be included in any research program because we had hormones where more than 50% of the population but we had hormones whoops so that's what got me involved and it got me very and I met people and I started to become gage and I tell I know you're gonna now they're gonna hate me when I say this I tell young people don't get a political science degree care about something I know but Kara but the Ford school is not public but you guys get into she had too much of this care about is it poverty is it a housing I was talking to some of the kids before this kid understand what your passion is and go learn about that and then go into the public policy arena and fight for the change you want to see I guess the other piece of it I said this earlier just I think to somebody social media is a great tool it's one great thing that's happened it's also the worst thing that's happened in the world forget the United States of America the world people are not civil you feel like you've got a blanket you know to say whatever you want that's awful and terrible you take it as a substitute for involvement I think I would you know and actually this was another message that John did go ahead last week which is just to take a second and try to be a little gentler to try to think about the way that you say things and I would also say that as you look at public service how do you connect with somebody else John Diggle would always say this you've got two ears and one mouth for a reason use those ears to listen to understand other people's perspective to grow I don't believe in the same things today that I pay I'm a Democrat now not a Republican I got Merton [Music] but I guess that's one of the things that I would say I'd say real quick start it's real easy to be involved I gotta say that when I graduated from Michigan with a journalism degree my goal was to go right for the the Cubs or somebody else and I met a young guy that was running for Congress who I had never met before and I volunteered to help him I got six cents a mile and later I and he won and my dad said I cannot believe I remember him sitting down as if read you graduated from such a wonderful school you had a great start you know and we had we were challenging an incumbent incumbents don't lose so you're working for a loser yeah I don't know where this is gonna take you because six months from now you're not gonna have a job at all and guess what we want and I had never been to Washington and I went and you know I was in charge of special projects and you know working with local leaders it was a wonderful job and four years later I was ready for another challenge and you know ended up at the White House I did that for four years and then people called that would you run for Congress and I said I'm happily married I got two black labs I salute the the marine guard in the West Wing of the White House every day going in no I'm not interested I never thought about running for you know I'm about even a precinct captain let have run for Congress and so then they convinced me to change my mind and we won and it's real easy you know you know I look you know easy well nobody know you didn't let me finish it's real easy to get involved it didn't let me say finish I'll cut me off like that but but you know I look at you know we couldn't do the job that we did without our staff without our spouse couldn't ever do it and I'm just so fortunate to have you know we have a terrific interns but you know the the people that work for me they're just as dedicated they worked just as hard they care just about those same issues so it's easy it's easy get involved start okay well I'm gonna turn over to the questions huh thank you my name's Brett zovsky along with Kate West uh and SD bar was saying we're the new co-presidents if we listen our first question is coming from Facebook which is in a spirit of bipartisanship what major bipartisan legislative milestones or policy areas can you anticipate progress on this coming session I'm hoping for a lot of issues but I think I'll give you one that I think is very important health care prescription drugs I don't think there's a Republican or Democrat that doesn't have constituents a diabetic patient whose insulin costs have gone up monthly by two hundred three hundred four hundred dollars we all know we've got to do something to make drugs more affordable for working men and women I think that's an area we will reach don't you I think there's some real possibility there I will just say I've driven across the state twice now back and forth in the last six days infrastructure five calls and I look at our roads and you know we've had the worst winter ever and they're really bad but you know we were all up together up at the Soo Locks two years ago as a delegation with Governor Snyder that lock hasn't been was built 60 years ago the Pollock peoe and if that locks somehow went out you would double the net and the nation's unemployment rate almost overnight none of that iron ore would get down into the steel plants so whether it's the autos or you name the industry that needs steel we're done it's going to cost a billion dollars to replace that lock and we're starting now to see that happen that will be I hope part of that infrastructure project that will be bipartisan that we need to get done you're also seeing on clean water P fast your I think there's you will see very significant hearings and legislation to the health begin to hold EPA more accountable than they were under certainly the administrator as you touched on the media promotes partisan controversy for ratings and advertising over the types of relationships that you guys have what can we as Americans do to incentivize bipartisan action well I you know I yeah you need to look people need to look at the whole picture they pick out one you know this year will cast 600 volts some people will just focus on a handful of those votes and think you're evil or an old girl or whatever I think that you know part of the reason we're here today is to talk about you know what really is happening where is some bipartisan success and for us to get encouragement for a you from you that we're on the right track because we're not ideologues and you know way on one side or the other and so you know it's it part of it is an education experience on both sides I think American people have to start to hold people accountable they need to say to their elected representative shutting down government not okay I think the American people have to I mean too many people don't think their vote matters and they stay home and they don't engage and I think that people need to start to really become more engaged in the electoral process and they need to go to town hall meetings get your elected representatives to whole town hall meetings and to really ultimately you know if you look at when in the last year you saw people suddenly when they realize children were being ripped away from their parents this country's conscience thank God woke up and the president backed off you saw something happen we need more of that we need more people saying this isn't what we are in America it's not okay our next question is also from the audience the question is when you see conflicts in the interests of your constituencies versus the interests of your parties in Washington do you ever see such conflicts first off and second off if so how do you reconcile that how do you how does that sort of manifest itself in the in the day-to-day well I mean you have to look at the background that you have the people that you trust you know I I'm I consider myself a governing Republican I want to work you know keep the government open a whole number of different things and I'm trying to think of where an issue might be purely partisan I mean you know you look at the association of groups that you're with so you got all these caucuses they don't need all that often but you'd get a lot of information particularly for the staff you look at the groups that you're involved in you know problem solvers caucus meets almost every week there's 30 members that are there we bring in you know secretary minuchin from the Treasury Department or they had a you know the White House congressional Affairs office she was she was there the other day I mean they hear from lawsuits it's got to be a two-way street I started the Tuesday group which is the moderate Republican group in the house back in in the 90s we meet every week we talk about every issue that's there you find a group of folks no one likes to be the only person voting yes or no longer so and and you build relationships something on the other side I mean you don't like to see a political position you know work on the daily functions of the house of things that we have to do we have to pass all 12 appropriations spending bills we have to you know deal with immigration we have to you know we have to deal with the defense authorization bill there's a lot of things that routinely come we have to reauthorize the clean water bill we to reauthorize a highway bill first time in five years this year we have to do in an Ag bill which we did last year which happens five years you get into these cycles and you got to know the issues and work with people on both sides to get them done knowing that we have a now Republican Senate that doesn't have 60 votes and I don't think Senate ever will have 60 votes again for one side or the other in a house that's pretty narrowly divided not a big margin for for Pelosi not like what she had 10 years ago when she was speaker and he got a Republican White House that's you know sometimes four bills that they end up being against so I mean it's you know it's it's a whole new dynamic that's out there you know I'll give you an example and I'll tell you where I probably won't be with Fred but I'll be with President Trump trait went out before I ever got sworn in I was on CNN and they thought you did a gotcha question about supporting President Trump on TPP P TPP and I said let me be clear I will not support the president I was opposed to TBD I know well that's not what I'm talking about I'm talking about the one we have to do what I called me after 2.0 maybe you'll be with me I don't know but I said I was elected to represent the men and women of my district in my state and I am NOT going to support legislation that is going to cost people jobs and I it was never it was I was one of the leaders of the anti TPP Ford Motor Company Chrysler of the UAW that supply there was this state knew that that bill was bad for him and I'm gonna do what's right for the people that elected me now NAFTA I do not agree with President Trump on his trade policy in the way that it's been chaotic not consistent what he says at 10:00 a.m. may not be the same thing at 3:00 p.m. trying to understand the but NAFTA you see all those shuttered factories in this state it happened because NAFTA was a bill that cost us millions of jobs in this country we no longer had a level field you cannot compete when you've got Mexico paying a dollar fifty to three dollars the most that people are making in a General Motors plant right now is three dollars and fifty cents an hour that's not a living wage you need a level playing field now Neff does not and I call it NAFTA 2.0 because I don't want anyone to forget what laughter 1.0 did to this country but if the talk to flight Howser regularly I've talked to it and if we get some of the things fixed if it trade Rob he's a trade rep thank you if we I don't want to see General Motors put one more you know work just shuttered for plants here and a plant in Canada and General Motors announced its building Blazers in Mexico and by the way every one of those Blazers is coming back into this country that to me is not good policy my job is to protect jobs for working men and women in this country so that I'll work with whoever will do what's right for the people I was elected to represent I think he does do it what do you tell the president you might be the key well I want to see what he's doing on tariffs what do you see as the main values of your respective parties and have the parties moved farther from the center in recent years if so why do you think this is how it is you know these questions are all a little bit sort of the same to a degree but it's I just think the American people want us to deal with the issues that are before us and their patience isn't real long these days we got to look for areas that where we or we can agree and we knowing that so many of these different issues have to be reauthorized and you know a two point always a good thing and NAFTA needs to be improved we'll see what the elements are of it in our bill of 21st century cures we're working already on another version that's good add to what we did over those 10 years learn looking back and learning from what's happened the last three and what's frustrating is that at least on the big picture so the MSNBC's and the fox you see you know their guess not debby are often the folks that are on the fringes because they're the ones that are screaming at each other and they're the ones that maybe get higher ratings versus someone that may be trying to put some of the things together Debbie is actually quite good on TV and she's not in that that same group that I would put louis gomer in a republican friend but I think that's that's part of the problem that we have is that the 24/7 news cycle often gets the the folks on the far end and and the other side or the middle just turns it off yeah I think again I keep getting struck but if it's a hypothetical when you talk about the two-party system but nobody's monolithic and either of these parties so you know we've got a brand new freshman class in this new Congress and I bet every one of you could give me the name of three who who are great and they're all friends of mine but they don't represent this isn't a monolithic class the fact of the matter is is that there's a group of veterans women veterans who are really much more and they all have one in what we call red to blue districts which are now frontline that are they're not going to support the the new Green Deal has very important principles in it some we're going to have to really study it and and look at we all agree that we've got to do something about global climate change and we've got about a dozen years left and you can see what's happening how you get there and what the goal is you know where the difference should be so this class had I mean just look at the Michigan delegation by the way and they kind of represent the diversity of this freshman class you have Rashida who's I'm sure one of the names that everybody here does no EMF kind of helped make her popular but Alyssa slacking is one of the veterans that get one Mike Bishop seat she is a someone who's very dedicated to bipartisanship working across the aisle I by the way I'll give you an example of something that I won't do I will not campaign against an incumbent member in Michigan I just I won't give money and I think our Michigan delegation needs to be a delegation that's got to work together and that's just it's and Alyssa said to me when she I'm gonna do the same thing when I get elected in Hass and she's gone in I don't know if she's she's tried to meet with that Republican and is trying to I mean were there the other day for about an hour and a half yeah you know one of the things so our delegation really is pretty close we have regular meetings sort of know well they're regularly there are lobbyists for a for regular meetings Fred you know but the delegation is we look at issues where we can you walked into that yeah I know I did it on purpose but I'm always making friends but you know whether it's Great Lakes whether it's autos you know you know the auto rescue plan saved Michigan what was that it was our delegation working together and we work together and that was the time of the election with McCain running against Obama and we got both of the candidates on board and President Bush to finish up the job as it as it wasn't getting started but it was almost off the tracks and Speaker Boehner was the speaker and Dave camp and I was from Midland we went in to see him and said you can't let this get off the tracks we have to have this vote to get it done and we passed it with an overwhelming margin which helped carry it through the Senate without that bill Michigan would be dead as for the country yeah it would have been so again it was our deli working together shoulders shoulder that that really got it done this next question from the audience is on more of a policy note the question is how does Congress plan to address the opioid country or do excuse me there would a crisis it is sweeping our country in a bipartisan manner and maybe if you could outline the progress that is made so far couple things this this hits everybody every community every family we all know somebody last year probably don't know this but we passed about sixty bills you know in the Congress and the President signed every one of them there might have been altogether in those sixty bills maybe twelve people that voted against him and we moved them all individually Debbie had a good number of bills I was co-sponsor her she was co-sponsor of mine more education more funding one of the things I'm going back to 21st century cures so Obama signed that in December of 16 we put two billion dollars into that for opioids I bet a lot of people back then couldn't even spell it but we knew it was a real problem we're now seeing that money come down to the locals to try and help when we one of the things that we did over in my district just the last two months there I'll tell you the story we had a young man that I knew that played basketball for Lake Shore High School and he got into heroin and he didn't make it I think he might even go into jail a little bit but he tried treatment and it was my boss's nephew Dave stopping was my first boss he died Sammy so we have now started a Center in st. Joe that's been funded tens of thousands of dollars to help families deal with this crisis don't know what to wear where to turn to try to get the Surgeon General come and do a form there this fall before school starts we've done those we all know people families what can we do to help you know thank God so and so they didn't go to jail or what ever see the movie Ben is back you know there's no answers this stuff is so addictive this fentanyl is so bad I mean we found that there was one postal inspector for all of West Michigan I can't use dogs at the State of the Union address there was an officer and he policemen from Ohio and pulled somebody over I don't know the whole story but just the loose fentanyl he he was overdosed almost died he talked to your law enforcement folks and they're using not calm you know what sometimes multiple times no individual officers and sometimes the same people over three or four days stretch so we need to do a lot more money is part of this and we're just starting now to scratch the surface but it's just it's so scary to see the stuff that's so addictive and it comes in and it's so cheap you know there was a raid last week and they figured that there was enough fentanyl to to impact every American in the United States okay that's all it takes the President on his interview on Meet the Press or whatever was two Sundays ago said that he raised it with the Chinese about trying to get it stopped but at the same time I mean one of the bills that I got done that the President signed into law was more research to try and find out if we can find some non addictive painkillers no pain is an awful thing I mean people are willing to do anything that they have a you know that whatever that medical issue might be you need the painkillers for it but maybe we can develop some that are non addictive that are not gonna be like some of the others that are out there and we're just starting and again it was hugely bipartisan and something that we move through our committee and Debbie was a big part of that in terms of getting it done it's a very personal issue to me and I can't talk about today because I'm I get near tears several times today so we'll talk about it another day but I will say this that we're not doing enough we made we did a beginning we started we've only said that we needed mental health we need to remove the stigma from mental health many of you will remember about a year ago a Central Michigan University student ended up killing his parents this was a very educational experience for me because he knew he had a drug problem he went to the emergency room seeking health there was no provider and no bed available to him I met around the same time the grandparents of that we're now taking care of their two grandchildren because their daughter was an opiate addict their grandson was already drawing pictures that showed her and he could not get an appointment with a mental health provider for they could not 8 months and I said well what is it you know I was trying to understand was there a money problem it wasn't a money problem it was simply and it's true here at the University of Michigan I've got since then I've gone I've met with the doctors at U of M I've been to the emergency room and they know they've got a problem that night of that horrible incident at Central I was with many of the hospital administrators and they told me that not one person had gone into inpatient psychiatry residency that year we kind of think we've got to incentivize more people going into there are many things every time FDA or NIH comes up it appears before the committee I asked the same question which friend was just talking about when are we gonna get a non-addictive pain treatment drug I mean that's an Frances or says it's coming it's coming well it's got to do more than it's coming it's got to get here so we got to work together and do a lot of things this is going to be the last question do you think Veterans Affairs is headed in the right direction and does Congress have any plans to address veterans issues well Congress will continue need to the men and women who served this country and defend us need to be taken care of period it is one of my number-one priorities but I do believe that the easiest vote that we cast is to take care of them there are issues there have been management issues well I mean even there been issues here at the Ann Arbor VA hospital Tim Walberg has gone with Tim and Ike I don't think we should ever politicize taking care of a veteran ever and when there been issues I always make sure that Fred or Tim are with me it both the John Dingell VA hospital in the in our or birth and we just have a moral responsibility to take care of those so it's not where it needs to be but all of us I've got it are terrific students for organizing questions just a a great event please join me outside along with our guests and our moderator for a reception in the Great Hall and thanks very much for being here at the Ford school