[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 16 (Wednesday, February 3, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H526]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TACKLING THE DEFICIT OF TRUST
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Quigley) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mr. QUIGLEY. Mr. Speaker, this week, the President unveiled his 2011
budget, along with the promise to cut nonsecurity discretionary
spending for 3 years. I actively support the President's initiative to
rein in spending and to tackle our ever-growing deficit. However, the
President and Congress must go further. In order to understand our next
steps, we must understand how we got here.
Eight years of fiscal irresponsibility, a blatant disregard for pay-
as-you-go budgeting, and sky-high tax cuts have left us with a debt
that is over 50 percent of GDP. To add insult to injury, we work in a
town that thrives on pet projects and individually directed spending.
We recklessly spend on defense projects that are intended to keep us
safe--the government's number one duty--but actually help make us
vulnerable and that are often untested and ineffective. In a March,
2009, GAO report assessing selected weapons programs, researchers
estimate that cost overruns totaled nearly $300 billion. GAO continued
to recommend that DOD move towards sound, knowledge-based acquisitions.
The President should continue on this path toward reform spending by
recommending cutting programs like expensive warships, planes, and
flawed missile defense systems that don't help in the fight against
terror. Congress must also reassert its constitutional right to provide
for the common defense by denying money to produce any weapon before it
is thoroughly tested. If we are smart with our dollars, we will not
only be safer but we will be stronger.
We're fighting two wars while simultaneously attempting to reassert
our power as a global economic influence. Now is not the time to pick
and choose where we cut our spending. Now is the time to reinvent,
streamline, and reform the way we do business in Washington. Now is not
the time to protect sacred cows. Nothing should be beyond our scrutiny.
Now is the time to subject tax expenditures to budget discipline. I
agree with the President that we must extend middle class tax cuts, but
end the support for those making over $250,000 a year. And we must
refocus domestic spending so that our number one priority is job
creation.
Next month, the Secretary of the Treasury will submit to Congress and
the President an audited financial report for the U.S. Government.
Similar to those required of publicly traded companies, this report
projects our unfunded liabilities, or the present value of future
expenditures in excess of future revenues. This report helps us
understand the true expense of promising to pay Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid benefits at some future moment, even if no cash
is disbursed today.
The 2008 report projects our unfunded liabilities at $56 trillion.
Our large and growing deficits continue to increase government debt
levels as a percentage of GDP to unprecedented and unsustainable
heights. The most troublesome and crippling outcome of all, however, is
that in this process of unethical and unabashed spending we have lost
the public's trust. Without this trust, we simply cannot govern.
Tackling this deficit of trust must be our first priority. ``Let's
try common sense,'' the President said. ``Let's invest in our people
without leaving them a mountain of debt. Let's meet our responsibility
to the people who sent us here.'' Our responsibility, then, is to take
the more difficult road--the road that includes reform, the road that
includes reinventing government, and the road that includes the Members
of this House leading by example.
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