mr. huizenga: mr. speaker, i will address my remarks to you. but again, this is not about parliamentary procedure. this is about results. the only bill that we will see here that may bring confusion to this entire process is the one that my colleagues are advocating for, the senate bill. it's the only bill that we haven't dealt with in committee, it's the only bill we haven't had a vote on in the house. the other three bills have passed, two of them unanimously, by voice vote, and the other one had 12 people out of a body of 435 vote against it. sounds like overwhelming. if it's that confusing to my colleagues to figure out what bill and how they voted for it when they come to the floor to vote on this package, they maybe should reconsider their current line of work. this should not be that tough. this is, again, something that we need to move forward on. the political theater that seems to be happening here is on the other side. and i'm not sure why. if it's about trying to play to a base for an election issue or what. but this is the one time