[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 79 (Monday, May 24, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Page S4111]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DISCRETIONARY SPENDING CAPS
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, when our colleagues arrive, I will be
pleased to yield the floor to them, but I will be offering, after 3
o'clock, along with Senator Claire McCaskill, my Democratic colleague
from Missouri, an amendment we voted on before in the Senate. It is an
amendment that would establish 3-year discretionary spending caps,
limits on how much we can spend, how much debt we can run up. To
violate those limits, it would take a two-thirds vote of the Senate and
the House to pass. So this is a spending limitation amendment that will
have some teeth to it.
It will allow us to have in effect a budget because it looks like,
even in light of the incredibly disastrous financial crisis we are in,
we will not pass a budget this year. We need to do that. But the House
has not even moved one. One has been moved out of committee on a
straight party-line vote, but there are indications we may not move it
in the Senate, and if the House does not move, we will not have a
budget.
What our amendment would do is help fill that gap. That is another
reason for it. It would set spending limits for 3 years. The limits we
would set are the limits President Obama submitted as spending limits
last time. I recall, of my colleagues, 59 Senators voted for it, 1
short of moving through the Senate, a few weeks ago. I will talk about
that at 3.
I see my colleague is here, Senator Johanns. I will be pleased to
yield the floor. We will talk about this amendment later.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Nebraska is
recognized.
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