[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 55 (Wednesday, March 29, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H2523]
THE POLITICAL CLASS AND THE REST OF THE COUNTRY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
North Carolina (Mr. Budd) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BUDD. Mr. Speaker, you can divide this country into two classes
of people, not Republican and Democrat but the political class and the
rest of the country. The political class is doing better than ever.
Eleven out of 20 of the richest counties in America are in the D.C.
metro area. For every dollar the average family in D.C. earns, the
average family in Davie County, where I live, earns 55 cents.
The political class is alive and doing well for themselves. On the
other hand, those who are not oriented to government--doctors, auto
mechanics, waitresses, bartenders, factory workers--are still earning
exactly what they did 10 years ago. I am not the first person to point
this out, but I want to speak about a textbook example of how this
dynamic plays out in reality.
I am referring to a recently announced $418 million arms deal between
the U.S. and Kenya. It is for 12 airplanes that are essentially armed
crop dusters. There is only one slight problem with the deal, the
defense contractor that was chosen to fulfill the sale doesn't even
make these type of airplanes. They have never done it before. In fact,
there is an extra $130 million built into this deal to design a whole
new airplane.
IOMAX USA, a service-disabled, veteran-owned small business in my
district, makes these airplanes. They have been doing it for 7 years.
They have got 50 of these airplanes in the Middle East. These planes
have dropped more than 4,000 bombs on ISIS. They are the only U.S.
manufacturer of this type of aircraft.
They were not even considered for the deal, which was awarded without
competition. Nobody got a chance to bid. Nobody knew about it, except
for the company that got it and the bureaucrats who were involved.
That is how the D.C. area got so wealthy. If you know the right
people and you have the right lobbyists, you get awards like this from
the Federal Government without competition. It doesn't matter if you
don't even make the product, they will give you some extra money to
design it from scratch if you know the right people.
IOMAX, a small business just like the millions of others in our
country, doesn't have those connections. The giant defense contractor
involved in this deal does, and so they get the money. Something is
wrong with that picture.
The problem lies with a secretive acquisition unit within the Air
Force called Big Safari. Now, I don't say ``secretive'' lightly.
At one point in 2013, Big Safari's commanding officer told a
reporter: Don't be angry or upset when your Freedom of Information Act
gets turned down; that is just they way we do business here at Big
Safari. And the commander's words were true.
I asked for information on this, and they turned me down saying that
the information was sensitive, but unclassified, and for official use
only. I asked them 19 questions, and they answered only four of them
having to do with the very basic elements for the deal that were
already public.
Under that secrecy, Big Safari doles out billions in government
contracts. I imagine it makes things convenient for when Big Safari
employees go to work for the same companies to which they direct these
large defense contracts, which we have found that they do with some
regularity. You don't even have to go to a different building, in some
instances. We have got a confirmed case of a Big Safari employee
awarding a contract, quitting, and then going to work on the same
program with the same company he has just given the contract to.
The forgotten men in this equation are the employees of IOMAX, mostly
veterans, mostly blue collar, who have to compete against a $13 billion
defense contractor and a $4 trillion Federal Government that appears to
have forgotten impartiality.
We need to shine the light on this deal with congressional oversight,
and we need to ask ourselves who exactly the Federal Government is
supposed to be working for, the country or for the political class.
Mr. Speaker, we need to fix this. It is a symptom of a very serious
disease that our democracy cannot long survive.
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