[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 9 (Monday, January 25, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S173-S174]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE ECONOMY
Mr. KYL. Mr. President, it is time for the people of the U.S.
Congress to be sure we are listening to what our constituents, the
American people, are telling us. If it was unclear before, the
Massachusetts Senate race should put to rest any doubts about what is
really frustrating Americans. Americans have had it with the soaring
level of spending and debt. They know that enormous spending and
skyrocketing deficits take a bite out of the economy, dragging down our
gross domestic product, our standard of living, and making investors
and job creators very nervous. They are concerned about the
unfathomable amounts of money now being spent.
For the first year of the Obama administration, the numbers are eye-
popping. Consider, one, a wasteful $1.2 trillion stimulus that was a
failure, according to the administration's own yardstick; two, a $410
billion omnibus Federal spending bill that increased nondefense
spending by 10 percent; three, a $2.5 trillion government takeover of
health care that this Senate passed on Christmas Eve. Hopefully, this
will never actually become law. We have had two huge increases in the
debt ceiling, with a third being debated now, and a massive budget that
doubles the deficit in 5 years and triples it in 10. It is not
necessary. It is not inevitable. We can and should prevent it.
Remember, we have to borrow most of this money. Americans are very
concerned about the amount of money we are borrowing from other nations
such as China to help finance the exploding debt.
The administration and its defenders are still blaming President Bush
for out-of-control deficits and debt, even though the other party has
been in control of the Congress now for 3 years and the President has
been out of office for over a year. Here are some important facts.
President Bush's deficits ran an average of 3.2 percent of GDP, while
President Obama's spending plans call for deficits that will average
4.2 percent of GDP over the next decade--in other words, an entire
percentage point higher. From the day President Obama took office until
the last day of fiscal year 2010, debt held by the public will grow by
$2.3 trillion, according to the Office of Management and Budget. You
can't blame that on President Bush. President Bush added less than
that--about $3 trillion--to the debt during the entire 8 years he was
in office. So in just 20 months, President Obama will add as much debt
as President Bush ran up in 8 years.
This administration needs to take responsibility for its actions,
start listening to what Americans are saying, and stop talking about
the mess they inherited. Americans want Congress and the administration
to stop their grand spending plans and focus on what is really needed
for an economic recovery.
December saw another 85,000 jobs lost. Unemployment has not gone
down; it is holding steady at about 10 percent. In my State, it is over
11 percent.
Mort Zuckerman wrote Friday in the Wall Street Journal:
The problem in the job market going forward is not so much
layoffs in the private sector, which are abating, but a lack
of hiring.
That brings me to concerns over tax policy. Americans look ahead and
they see new taxes on the horizon. Unless Congress takes action this
year, taxes are set to go up by $2 trillion over the next decade,
starting in 2011. The child
[[Page S174]]
tax credit would be cut in half. Marginal tax rates will go up.
Dividends and capital gains taxes will increase. It is no wonder that
businesses are timid about hiring and investing and consumers are more
cautious than ever about their own spending. Even if economists say we
are technically out of the recession, dollars have not begun to flow
because people and businesses are uncertain about what their burden
will be in the coming years. They are very nervous that it will be
higher.
We can eliminate some of that uncertainty and instill some much
needed confidence in the economy by extending current tax law. Again,
unless Congress acts, taxes will increase automatically. If the
President is looking for a job stimulator, I suggest this is where to
start. If he were to announce on Wednesday night that he is calling on
Congress to keep taxes right where they are--in fact, if we can cut
them in some areas, that would be even better--I think he would see
businesses react immediately and positively to the news. But instead of
increasing taxes, we need, as Zuckerman says, to draw up credible plans
to bring down bloated deficits without triggering another downturn.
Let's keep something in mind about the American people: They know you
can't spend what you don't have. The message this Congress and the
administration have been sending to Americans is that even though they
are bound by limits, Washington is not. As I said, it is time to start
listening to our constituents and then act on their instructions. Stop
spending, keep taxes where they are, reduce them where we can, and stop
running up deficits.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Montana.
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