[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 15 (Tuesday, February 2, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H453-H454]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PRESIDENT OBAMA'S VISION FOR AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Texas (Mr. Conaway) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. CONAWAY. Mr. Speaker, I'd like to continue the theme that my
colleague just had, and that is the President's vision for these United
States over the next 10 years. That vision is exemplified in his budget
that he brought to Congress yesterday, which, for fiscal year 2011,
which doesn't start until October of this coming fall, which spent $3.8
trillion, a record, it would generate another deficit of $1.3 trillion
in 2011; it would have some $2 trillion in tax increases over the 10
years; and it would accumulate $8.5 trillion in cumulative deficits
during that 10 years. It would double the national debt.
Mr. Speaker, I would argue that that's not much of a vision for
America that my grandkids really want to look at and want to see.
To put that in context, if you look at the cumulative deficits during
the 8 years of the previous administration, they total $2 trillion.
{time} 1945
To put that in context, if you look at the cumulative deficits during
the 8 years of the previous administration, they totaled $2 trillion, a
number that we ought to be embarrassed about. But if you look at the
deficit in the first 15 months of the current administration, it is
$1.8 trillion, and we will surpass the $2 trillion number some time
during this second quarter. If you look at just the first quarter
deficit under this administration in 2010, in 15 months, it is larger
than all but two annual deficits in our Nation's history. Again, Mr.
Speaker, that is not a vision for America that my grandchildren would
embrace, nor is it one that we ought to embrace on behalf of our
grandchildren.
My appeal tonight is to the Budget Committee. The Budget Committee
now takes up the President's budget, and I would appeal to my former
colleagues on the Budget Committee to simply ignore this flawed vision
for America. It is unsustainable, and it is not one that is worthy of
us to even consider in the least.
What I would ask the Budget Committee to do instead is to bring forth
a budget that truly addresses what I believe is the single greatest
threat to our way of life that we face these days, and that is the
growth of this government as represented by spending growth, 29 percent
growth in spending since 2008. And again, that is unsustainable. Our
budget colleagues on the Budget Committee, Mr. Speaker, have the
ability to do that. They have the ability to say let's put out a budget
that truly does address this threat, this grave threat to our Nation's
prosperity.
There are a couple of suggestions I would make. Let's roll back
spending to fiscal 2008 levels and start the spending freeze there.
Let's put a hiring freeze on today for all Federal Government agencies
except perhaps DOD, Homeland Security, and maybe intel communities.
That is a true action that every business and every family around this
country knows exactly what it means and exactly why we have to do that.
I'm reminded of the folks, and you see them all the time, who are
constantly searching for a way to lose weight. They are always looking
for that new diet plan, and they are always willing to start, however
draconian the plan might be, ``tomorrow.''
Well, Mr. Speaker, any of us can start a diet tomorrow, but we need a
spending diet that starts today. And I ask that our Budget Committee
brethren start that process. We need a spending diet that starts today,
not 20 months from today when the President's statement of a freeze
would actually start. His freeze won't start until October 1, 2011, and
then it's a bit of a fig leaf at that.
Mr. Speaker, these are tough times. These are hard times. This isn't
about being Republicans. This isn't about being Democrats. This is
about a vision that we all ought to have for this country. That vision
ought to include ways of fixing today's problems, however difficult
those might be, with today's money. We have taken the process of using
future generations' money to fix today's problem as far as it will go,
and we simply cannot continue to do that.
Mr. Speaker, I would also ask that my colleagues consider a balanced
budget amendment. If you were to ask me what is the most important
constitutional amendment that we ought to be considering among that
broad array of important constitutional amendments, it would be a
balanced budget amendment that would force Congress to make those tough
decisions; not a commission out there that could be some sort of a
facade to try to get it done, but a true balanced budget amendment that
every State government except one has to operate under.
Municipalities, counties, families, and businesses have to operate
under the exact same discipline. We ought to be doing the same thing.
Mr. Speaker, I would call for both of those things tonight.
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