[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 20 (Tuesday, February 9, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H607-H608]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE 2011 BUDGET IS A SPENDING AND DEBT TSUNAMI
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FOXX. Madam Speaker, last week President Obama unveiled his new
budget for fiscal year 2011. I am afraid this budget will result in
more of the same runaway spending that led to a record $1.4 trillion
deficit last year. Just like the budget the President introduced a year
ago, this budget spends too much, taxes too much, and borrows too much.
It includes $3.8 trillion in Federal spending for 2011, a record high.
It projects a $1.6 trillion deficit, a record high. It assumes $2
trillion in tax hikes over the next 10 years, a record high. And it
estimates $14 trillion in government debt that will be inherited by our
children and grandchildren. In fact, the President's budget will more
than double the Federal Government's public debt.
One of the most touted parts of this budget is its call for a
spending freeze, which is a good idea. Just like the millions of
Americans who have adjusted their budgets, the Federal Government
should respond to record deficits by halting its spending expansion.
But unfortunately, this budget freeze is merely papering over our
record Federal deficits. Instead of a meaningful freeze, the proposed
freeze in the budget covers only one-eighth of the Federal
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budget. That means that more than 80 percent of the Federal Government
will continue to grow under this so-called freeze.
A freeze that allows the vast majority of programs to stay on the
path of unsustainable growth will not solve our budget problems. And so
this budget predicts another year of record deficits. More than one in
three dollars spent by the Federal Government next year will be
borrowed. With such astonishing deficits and debt, we need much more
than a freeze on one-eighth of government spending.
We should be taking a hard look for underperforming areas where we
can reduce spending. Congress could also start tackling our debt
problem by immediately passing strict budget caps that will limit
Federal spending each year. Unfortunately, this looks unlikely to
happen also. Instead, Democrats in Congress, along with President
Obama, appear to be dead set on pushing a trillion-dollar government
takeover of health care and another multibillion-dollar stimulus plan.
Just last week, Democrats in Congress showed their true colors by
passing a $1.9 trillion increase in the national debt limit, making way
for more deficit spending. After all, reckless spending requires
reckless borrowing. Federal spending on so-called discretionary
programs increased 84 percent over the past 2 years. These increases
have been financed entirely by new debt. The time has come to stop
these out-of-touch spending increases so we don't have to keep jacking
up the national debt.
The President's budget lacks the sort of spending accountability
Americans want from Washington. It contains more spending, more debt,
and more taxes, which will not restore our economy or help the
unemployed in North Carolina and around the country find work.
Government growth and exploding debt are just more of the same big
government policies that Americans are weary of watching in Washington.
While President Obama's budget does get some things right, it
unfortunately gets most things wrong. As North Carolina taxpayers
continue to tighten their belts, we can do better than $1.6 trillion in
new debt for more wasteful Washington spending.
Republicans are ready to go line by line through the Federal budget
to cut wasteful spending. The debts Congress is racking up are not
going to go away if we don't get a handle on spending. And during a
time of double digit unemployment, the American people want solutions
that will encourage economic growth and help create jobs, not just more
debt for our children and grandchildren to pay off.
Madam Speaker, we cannot borrow, spend, and tax our way back to a
growing economy.
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