[Congressional Record Volume 152, Number 57 (Thursday, May 11, 2006)]
[House]
[Pages H2573-H2575]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                        THE OFFICIAL TRUTH SQUAD

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Reichert). Under the Speaker's announced 
policy of January 4, 2005, the gentlewoman from North Carolina (Ms. 
Foxx) is recognized for 60 minutes.
  Ms. FOXX. Mr. Speaker, if all the American people listened to the 
Democrats and what they say here night after night, day after day on 
the floor, you would think that we lived in the worst country in the 
world.
  It is just amazing to me that people are risking their lives every 
day to get into this country when you hear what they have to say, 
because from their perspective all Republicans are evil. All 
Republicans are liars. All Republicans are no good, and this is the 
worst place in the world to be living. And yet we have one of the best 
economies that the country has ever had, and as I said, people are 
risking their lives every day to get into this country. I think because 
it is the greatest country in the world. And frankly, I think that it 
is not good for this country, for our colleagues to constantly, 
constantly be saying negative things about it.
  We are not perfect. Nobody is perfect. The President is not perfect. 
No Member of Congress is perfect. No elected official is perfect. But 
we certainly do work hard trying to have a good country where the basic 
instincts of the people are good and people are trying to do good for 
their neighbor as well as for their country. And frankly, I get a 
little tired of it and I know a lot of my constituents tell me that 
they are tired of it too.
  I want to come here tonight and talk a little bit about positive 
things. I think that while we can all acknowledge that we are not 
perfect and the country is not perfect, we do not have to dwell on the 
negative all the time. And I want to talk a little bit about our 
economy tonight and some other things relating to the economy and the 
impact that actions of the President and the Republican Congress have 
had on the economy.
  I am going to put up one chart to start with because I want to keep 
with our theme that a group of us have come up with so that we can 
present the truth. The Truth Squad is here tonight. Just part of the 
Truth Squad is here, but we are going to try to keep our record of 
getting out the truth to the American people.
  The economy is strong and it is continuing to grow; 138,000 jobs were 
created last month alone. That is April 2006. In the past 12 months, 2 
million new jobs have been created; and since August of 2003, more than 
5.2 million jobs have been created. Our unemployment rate is 4.7 
percent, lower than the average of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. 
The GDP grew at a strong 4.8 percent annual rate in the first quarter 
of this year. This follows economic growth of 3.5 percent in 2005, the 
fastest rate of any major industrialized nation.
  Over the past 12 months, employment increased in 48 States and four 
States set record-low unemployment rates.
  Now, our colleagues on the other side would say, well, you know, 
yeah, there are new jobs being created, but they are not good jobs. 
They are just service jobs; they are no good. So I thought I would 
share a little bit about where those jobs are.
  Between May 2003 and March 2006, job growth in key sectors, the five 
key sectors, in transportation, 197,000 new jobs; in the financial 
area, 294,000 jobs; in construction, 808,000 jobs; in education and 
health services, 1,039,000 jobs; in professional and business services, 
1,288,000 jobs.
  Now, those do not sound like bad jobs to me. And they must not be 
real bad jobs since our unemployment rate is only 4.7 percent. It must 
mean that Americans like those jobs pretty well because they are taking 
them.
  Now, our tax policies, Republican tax policies, have spurred this 
economic momentum. Republicans have reduced income taxes for every 
American who pays income taxes. Republicans doubled the child tax 
credit, reduced the marriage penalty, cut taxes on capital gains and 
dividend, created incentives for small businesses to purchase new 
equipment and hire new workers, and put the death tax on the path to 
extinction. Together this tax relief has left $880 billion in the hands 
of American workers and businesses.
  Now I have said this before, there is an easy explanation or easy 
definition for the difference between Democrats and Republicans. 
Democrats think that the government knows how to spend your money 
better than you know how to spend your money. Republicans believe that 
you know how to spend your money better than the government knows how 
to spend it. We do not want to take any more of your money than we 
absolutely have to to do the things that Americans cannot do for 
themselves. The Democrats want to take all of your money.
  If you listened to their leader this weekend, she talked about no 
deficit, no deficit if Democrats were in charge. But when pressed to 
say how she would get rid of the deficit, she really could not quite 
bring herself to say raise taxes, but the commentators pointed out that 
is the only way you can keep spending and do away with the deficit, and 
especially spend more as they have said on this floor they want to do 
and in committees. They want to spend billions more dollars, and all 
that would do would be to add to the deficit.
  Now, I want to share a chart that shows some information about what

[[Page H2574]]

Americans pay in taxes because, as I mentioned, the tax cuts benefit 
all Americans. Let me put this one up first. I will start at the lower-
income levels. The top 20 percent of people in this country pay 87 
percent of all Federal income taxes. And if you look at the chart, 
people who make between 10 and $20,000 a year get a rebate of $686. 
They do not pay anything in taxes. In fact, people earning more are 
actually giving some of their money to these people in the form of a 
rebate, mostly earned income tax credit.
  People making between 20 and $30,000 get a rebate of $183. People 
earning between 30 and 40,000 pay approximately $1,000 a year in taxes. 
People earning between 75 and 100,000 pay approximately $7,500 in 
taxes.
  Now let's look at the higher incomes. People making between 100 and 
$200,000 pay almost $16,000 in income taxes. People who make more than 
a million dollars pay $609,670 in taxes. So as I said earlier, the top 
20 percent pay 87 percent of all Federal income taxes.
  This information is very widely understood and produced so it is not 
something Republicans are making up. These are the facts, again, coming 
from the Truth Squad. But if the Democrats in Congress had had their 
way, they would have let tax relief expire.
  Earlier this week we were able to extend the tax relief that had been 
put in place 3 years ago because we know that cutting those taxes is 
what is going to keep our economy going forward. And we did not want to 
see a tax hike on all Americans. Middle Americans would have been hit 
with that tax hike as well as all other Americans. But the Democrats 
all voted against that bill, or most of them voted against the bill, I 
think we did pick up a few, but they understand what this is all about.
  They understand that the economy depends on you having more of your 
money in your hands and not the government having that money. But they 
do not want to vote for tax cuts because they want to keep their mantra 
going that all we are doing is giving tax cuts to the rich. Well, it is 
the wealthier people that are paying the taxes and the people who are 
not paying any taxes are not going to get those tax cuts. They will 
wind up, probably many of them, getting more in rebates.
  Well, early on Saturday morning, I got up and turned on the TV and I 
heard the last few minutes of the ``Neil Cavuto Show'' and it really 
struck a nerve with me, something that I had been thinking about that 
was going on in this country, and he presented some information that I 
want to share with you tonight as well as some information from a study 
being done, that has been done by a very well respected organization in 
this country.
  Neil Cavuto called it ``the greatest story never told.'' He talked 
about how this very, very positive economic news is not getting out and 
not being presented to the American public by and large by the news 
media.
  Now, we know that some of our news media do give us fair and balanced 
reporting. However, some of our media has failed to share the good news 
with the American public. And so people depend, they are working hard. 
They are doing their jobs. They are depending on hearing what is going 
on in the country and forming their opinions from it. But our economy 
is humming along under this Republican Congress and the leadership of 
President Bush, but the American people are not hearing that. They are 
hearing a very slanted story that affects what they think about the 
economy.
  So despite one of the strongest economies in recent history and last 
month we collected the largest amount of money in revenue, the second 
highest that has ever been reported and collected in this country, that 
did not get reported very well. Neil Cavuto said this weekend this 
quote: ``I think it's the greatest story never told: an economy that is 
humming but most in the media insist we are bumming.''
  Many in the media would report that ``only'' 138,000 new jobs were 
created last month. Well, 138,000, that is a whole lot of jobs. I do 
not understand why some in the media continually put qualifiers like 
``only'' in front of such an accomplishment.
  You know, I have spoken before on the floor about the importance of 
language. Our language is very, very important. It governs our 
perception of things. When we have done our best to try to cut spending 
here, we have been merely trying to cut the rate of spending and the 
rate of increases, but the Democrats say we are engaging in massive 
budget cuts.
  Another example I could use is just the words ``unemployment rate'' 
or ``employment rate.''

                              {time}  2015

  We talk all the time about the unemployment rate. Our unemployment 
rate right now is about 4.7 percent. So the employment rate is 95.3 
percent. Again, you get the perception if you are always putting the 
emphasis on the negative, then that is what you are going to think 
about, but our employment rate is 95.3 percent.
  I want to give you some other examples of the way some in the media 
try to influence the way we think about things through the use of their 
language.
  When is the last time that you have heard the media follow the 
statistic about our unemployment rate with the phrase that I used 
earlier, lower than the unemployment rate of the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s 
and 1990s? You almost never hear that in the media, and you will never 
hear again an employment rate of 95.3 percent because that sounds way 
too positive.
  Now, I am not the only one who is concerned about this issue. As I 
listened to Mr. Cavuto this weekend, and it was very, very early in the 
morning when I heard it, but it really struck a nerve for me. I was 
thinking back to the comparison of the way many in the media compared 
things that were happening in the Clinton presidency with what is being 
said now.
  I do not have a whole lot of real positive things to say about the 
Clinton presidency, but during parts of his time in office, our economy 
was strong and, in many ways, similar to the economic surge we are 
experiencing today.
  However, I seem to remember that during the Clinton presidency, the 
good news about the economy was everywhere, often shouted from the 
rooftops by the media to anyone who would listen.
  Now, during the Bush presidency, the economy is just as strong and, 
in some cases, even stronger, but many in the media are nowhere to be 
seen.
  I am not the only one, again, who has noticed the difference in 
coverage between the Clinton days and today.
  The Media Research Center is the largest media watchdog organization 
in America. It was formed in 1987, and it has made media bias a 
household term, tracking it and printing the compiled evidence daily. 
The founder and president of the Media Research Center is Brent Bozell, 
a nationally syndicated writer whose work appears in publications such 
as the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, the Washington Times, 
the New York Post, the LA Times and the National Review.
  So let me talk a little bit about one economy and two spins. In a 
recent report, the MRC compared economic conditions during the Clinton 
presidency and the Bush spit. Amazing: Economic conditions portrayed as 
positive during Clinton were presented as negative for Bush. For 
example, economic growth under President Clinton averaged 2.2 percent; 
under President Bush, 3.7 percent.
  Many in the media have given President Bush consistently negative 
press about perceived poor job creation and unemployment, especially in 
the summer of 2004, but their reports were overwhelmingly positive when 
President Clinton ran for reelection in the summer of 1996 under 
similar circumstances.
  Let me give you some highlights of the report. Clinton, good; Bush, 
bad. Stories about jobs during Bill Clinton's reelection campaign were 
positive 85 percent of the time, more than six times as often as they 
were for Bush, despite similar economic data. Reporters praised the 
Clinton unemployment rate of 5.6 percent as low, but they downplayed a 
5.4 percent rate under Bush and called job growth anemic.
  Now, let me repeat that. The unemployment rate in 2004, when 
President Bush was running for reelection, was 5.4 percent, lower than 
the unemployment rate was under President Clinton when he was running 
for reelection, but many in the media portrayed the unemployment rate 
under President Bush as something a lot worse than it was under 
President Clinton.

[[Page H2575]]

  How do they make good news become bad news? Under Bush, reporters 
presented good economic data as bad news stories by minimizing positive 
achievements and emphasizing people who might be out of work or regions 
of the United States that were still ``struggling.'' The opposite 
approach was taken under President Clinton. Then, reporters explained 
away a 2/10ths of 1 percent rise in unemployment as minor.
  The media's slanted scorecard is presented in a chart in Brent 
Bozell's report on this. In 1996, they did a list of the stories for 
Mr. Clinton. Positive stories: On ABC, 4; CBS, 6; CNN, 3; NBC 4; New 
York Times, 12; Washington Post, 6. These are positive stories. 
Negative stories: ABC, 1; CBS, 0; CNN, 3; NBC 0; New York Times, 1; 
Washington Post, 1. A total of 35 positive stories, 6 negative ones.
  Now, President Bush in 2004, positive stories: ABC, 1; CBS, 0; CNN, 
1; NBC, 1; New York Times, 1; Washington Post, 2. Six positive stories. 
Negative stories about President Bush and the economy: ABC, 6; CBS, 7; 
CNN, 4; NBC, 4; New York Times, 10, Washington Post, 7. A total of 38, 
a flip-flop. Actually, more negative stories in 2004 when the economy 
is actually better off than it was in 1996. Thirty-eight negatives for 
President Bush, six positives. Thirty-five positives for President 
Clinton, six negatives.
  I am a former college professor and president and sort of teacher all 
my life. So I always like to look for the data when you can get it. 
Again, my gut was telling me this, and I think the American people see 
this, but it is always great when you have got the data to back up what 
you are thinking about.
  While the business press reflected the strong economy, much of 
mainstream media coverage of employment did not. The reporting under 
Clinton was overwhelmingly positive. For Bush, it was overwhelmingly 
negative. Eighty-five percent of the stories portrayed the economy 
under Clinton in a good light. Only 13 percent of the stories gave the 
employment situation under Bush the same treatment.
  Many in the media commenting about employment and job growth during 
the Bush reelection campaign tell the whole story. They used terms like 
``poor,'' ``stalled,'' ``struggling,'' or ``lackluster.''
  Comments during the similar time period during the Clinton presidency 
were the exact opposite. Many in the media instead used terms like 
``showing its muscle,'' ``encouraging,'' ``surprisingly strong'' and 
``impressive, but not excessive.''
  I have come to the floor many times and talked about, again, the 
importance of language in our country. To everybody, actually, language 
is very important, and in many ways, we are not as precise with our 
language in this country as some other languages are, but I think it is 
important that we point out the bias that occurs in much of our media 
about what is happening in the economy.
  It is one of the reasons why the Truth Squad has been so concerned 
about getting out the truth. We realized that we have challenges 
presented to us. Not only do our colleagues misrepresent the facts, but 
we have many in the media where a lot of Americans get their 
information about the economy and form their opinions are being 
presented negative kind of information.
  Now, I want to give a couple of more charts to show some other 
positive things that are occurring in the economy that have been put 
together by members of the Truth Squad.
  Since the President signed the Jobs and Growth Act in May 2003, this 
is an example of how the GDP has gone up. Again, that is a result of 
our having cut taxes, letting people keep more of their money. It works 
to cut taxes. Again, if you listen to our colleagues on the other side 
of the aisle, you would think that cutting taxes is the beginning of 
Armageddon, but cutting taxes is what helps make this economy grow. If 
the government has your money to spend, it is not investing it. It is 
spending the money. It is not an investment. People do the investments 
in the private sector, not in the government.
  Again, this chart shows when the President signed the Jobs and Growth 
Act and what happened with unemployment. We see unemployment going 
down. We see job growth going up and going up significantly. This is 
not a small little line going up here. This is major in terms of what 
we have seen, the job growth, in this country since we cut taxes, and I 
am really proud that Republicans have understood that and voted this 
week to extend many of those tax cuts.
  What we need to do now is to work to get the death tax made 
permanent. We heard a lot from businesspeople this week about that. 
They can then plan their lives, plan for investments, plan to know what 
they are going to be able to do, so that businesses can stay in the 
families. That is one of the biggest challenges still facing us, and if 
we can get the Senate to understand more about economics and what that 
means to us, then hopefully we will make that permanent.
  Now, let me give you a couple of other charts. Again, we can tie this 
very directly to the Jobs and Growth Act, and you can see how that 
spurred business investment and how that went up. This is before 
President Bush came into office. You can see that the economy was 
beginning to slow down, and then, of course, we had 9/11 and we saw 
investments go down. Once we got the tax cuts made, we see investment 
going up, and that is what we needed to do in this country to get the 
economy growing.
  The last one shows revenue growth and what we project revenue growth 
to be in the next 5 years. We expect it to grow at the rate of 5.3 
percent in the next 5 years. The President has promised that he would 
cut the deficit in half by 2009, and we think we can do even better 
than that, especially with the revenue that came in last month, the 
second highest amount in the history of this country.
  So cutting taxes spurs growth in the economy. That is the economic 
lesson here, and it is the facts. We can point to it. We can see it, 
and I think it is, again, very, very unfortunate that it is so 
difficult to get that message out to the American people, but I can 
promise you that there is a group of us that is going to continue to do 
that, despite the fact that our colleagues are always shouting gloom 
and doom and the fact that many in the media do not want you to know 
that there are a lot of positive things happening in this country and 
many of them are related to the tax cuts that the Republicans have put 
into place.

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