[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 93 (Monday, June 21, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5163-S5164]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAR-REACHING CONSEQUENCES
Mr. REID. Mr. President, what we do on the Senate floor has
consequences far beyond this building. We know our work has real world
costs, far beyond the beltway. But it is not just what we do that
touches our constituents' lives and livelihoods, it is also what we do
not do. When the Senate refuses to pass good bills, the people in our
States pay the price. I hope we can avoid more of that this week and we
can come together and work productively.
Right now, loopholes reward corporations for shipping jobs out of
America, putting them out of reach of the many unemployed workers in
each of our States. Every day we do not act, the loopholes remain wide
open, those jobs vanish, and those we represent get hurt.
Right now, small businesses are desperate for tax incentives to
create jobs at home. Every day we don't act, those small businesses
have a harder time hiring, and the unemployment rate has a harder time
falling.
Right now, Nevada's unemployment rate is the highest in the country.
Victims of the recession who have been
[[Page S5164]]
out of work for a long time are struggling to make ends meet while they
are looking for a job. This bill extends the emergency unemployment
assistance they need, critical help that, for many, has expired or
dried up.
Every day we don't act, those families in Nevada and across the
Nation continue to suffer unnecessary pain. This will be the eighth
week since March the Senate has debated the tax-cutting, job-creating
bill currently on the Senate floor. That is 2 full months, 2 full
months we have been waiting and they have been waiting--the people in
our States--for us to respond to an emergency. That is unacceptable.
The richest corporations continue to get richer while the unemployed
remain out of work. Every minute we waste, it gets worse. It is our job
to debate and not to delay. It is our job to legislate; it is our job
to do something about the plight of the people in America. We need to
legislate relief.
As we serve our citizens, it would serve the Senate well to remember
the consequences of decisions that are driven by politics, purely, and
the consequences of our actions and our inaction alike.
____________________