Politics & Government
Rep. Honda: We are Imperfect People, with an Imperfect Government
Congressman Mike Honda will represent Gilroy in the 15th Congressional District until June.

When Congressman Mike Honda gave a speech this week, he spoke frankly with the crowd about his job and about what’s been going on up in Washington lately.
“I understand you want to know what’s been happening in Congress the past few months,” he began. “My speechwriter told me to mention the many things we have accomplished. But I’m just going to say it—not much has been accomplished.”
Rep. Honda sits on two of the most powerful, high-profile committees in the House of Representatives—Budgets, and Appropriations. Honda represents Gilroy in the until June.
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He made it clear during a Monday gathering in Milpitas that he understands the frustrations of the American people these days over party politics, budget talks and new legislation like the health care reform bill, better known as “ObamaCare.”
In a surprising turn, though, Rep. Honda said, essentially—don’t just blame Obama for that one—it was all of our faults.
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“In terms of publicity and the kinds of talks that go on, and on TV talk shows, there seems to have been a greater expectation of the President to have done something. But legislation comes from Congress, not the executive branch,” he explained.
“When they blamed Obama for ObamaCare, it was really the House that pushed it through. It was modified in the Senate to some degree and was sent to the President, and it was not exactly what he wanted,” he continued. “It’s not finished. It’s imperfect.”
"Imperfect,” Honda said, is the perfect word to explain the state of our country and its struggles today, going back hundreds of years to the writing of the Constitution itself.
In fact, one quote from the Constitution Rep. Honda said he keeps coming back to, again and again, is “in order to form a more perfect union.”
Rep. Honda said, the framers of the Constitution were imperfect, the document itself is imperfect and our government is imperfect.
“Right there, with that phrase, you see it—the people that wrote the Constitution of our country understood the imperfections of our people and our government,” he said.
Though it’s clear Rep. Honda loves his job, he said the inner workings and bureaucratic processes of being a member of Congress can be trying at times, he said.
“My mom always taught me, you have to love your enemies as you love yourself. Well, I have to say, I’ve been tested this year,” he said with a wry smile.
The Congressman said he can appreciate the idea behind political strategies like the filibuster, but feels what Congress really needs sometimes is just a good, old-fashioned debate.
“We don’t have debates on the floor. If you look at us closely when we’re in Congress, we’re not talking to each other. We’re talking to the Speaker Pro Tem,” he said. “More [debating] goes on in committee–but the way committees are set up, it’s really all about getting the person in power the vote they want.”
As a member of the Budgets Committee, Rep. Honda said he assisted in making sweeping cuts of about 10 percent across the board this year. Then, it was a fight with the “Tea Partiers” about keeping it that way.
“They wanted to go back after the budget had been passed, and cut another five percent across the board from the current budget,” he said, explaining that the committee and others banded together to keep that from happening.
“Cutting another five percent across the board would have been senseless,” he said, explaining that that amount would have affected everything—children, Social Security, the military, everything.
Rep. Honda said he can see how the people of his district—which includes Gilroy and other parts of the east and south Bay areas—are “feeling the heat” from budget cuts lately.
He said, when budgets cuts are made at the federal level, it can often take five to six years for the effects to trickle down to the local level, and get to the point that local governments can really feel it.
Rep. Honda wanted that statement to stick in everyone’s minds—five to six years to “feel the heat.”
“That’s one of the biggest thing I’ve learned in the past 10 years—how much the memory of our country is changing. I’m starting to realize that, when it comes to the electorate, their short-term memory is about three months,” he said. “We find ourselves in a situation, and we can’t remember how we got there. So we look to see whose face is up there, and think, ‘well, it must be his fault.’ I think we need to remember that and be more vigilant.”
For more information about Rep. Mike Honda and his work in Congress, visit his website at http://honda.house.gov.
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