[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 96 (Thursday, June 24, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S5412-S5430]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICAN JOBS AND CLOSING TAX LOOPHOLES ACT OF 2010--Continued
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington State is
recognized.
Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, I rise to express my disappointment that
we have gotten to this point on this very important piece of
legislation that is before us, the tax extenders bill, the jobs package
we have been trying to get passed. We have worked very hard to put
together a bill that will provide much needed help to families and
communities across the country. It is a bill that will make sure our
recovery is not jeopardized. It is a bill that would extend tax credits
to individuals and small businesses that both of our parties think are
important. It provides incentives for clean energy companies to expand
and create jobs at a time when we need them. It allows families in
States such as mine to deduct local sales tax from their Federal
returns, an important boost to the economy. It provides critical
support for States that are struggling today to provide health care for
their families in these very tough economic times. And it will extend
unemployment benefits to support those in our communities who,
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through no fault of their own, have lost a job and now, as the economy
is getting back on track, need support for a few months longer so they
can get a job and go back to work. It is a commonsense bill to help our
economy get back on track. When we originally brought this bill to the
floor, every single Republican said no to supporting our communities.
Instead of walking away on this side, instead of furthering their goal
of partisan gridlock, we extended a hand to our minority colleagues and
worked with them. We trimmed sections they wanted trimmed. We reduced
the support we thought was important for our families, but we reduced
it in order to get their support and brought it back to the floor
again. But once again, they said no to American families. So we went
back and a third time trimmed it back even further. We did exactly what
they asked us to do.
Now I am saying to our Republican colleagues, it is time to stop
saying no. It is time to stop saying no to clean energy companies in my
home State and across the country that depend on these tax credits to
stay competitive. It is time to say stop saying no to the thousands of
police officers and corrections officers and so many others who will
lose their jobs in my home State and everywhere if this bill does not
pass and our State has to further slash its budget. It is time to stop
saying no to the men and women across the country who are desperately
trying to find work today but need a little more help to keep their
heads above water in these tough economic times. It is time to stop
saying no to middle-class families across Washington State who depend
on that sales tax deduction that would be extended in this underlying
bill to help. They will be out hundreds of millions of dollars if this
bill continues to be blocked.
We have tried very hard. Senator Baucus, chairman of the Finance
Committee, deserves our gratitude for reaching across the aisle time
and time again to work with the other side. We have compromised, and
then we compromised again and then again. It is disheartening that the
other side has refused to work with us. I say enough already. I go back
home to Washington State every weekend. I talk to my constituents. I
try to explain what we are doing here in Washington, DC. To be honest,
I am having a heck of a lot of trouble explaining why when big banks
and Wall Street were on the brink of failure and threatening to blow up
our economy, Republicans immediately came together with us to help step
us back from the brink. But now that Wall Street is fine, regular
families and communities are continuing to struggle, those same
Republicans are nowhere to be found. I don't have an answer for the
families at home who ask me about this. Quite honestly, I don't get it
myself. Because the fact is, we have had put together a bill that is
fully paid for with the exception of unemployment benefits, that is a
direct stimulus to the economy, that has been passed as emergency
spending time and time again under both Democratic and Republican
control, because that is exactly what it is. We have done all we can.
If those on the other side say no again, it is pretty clear to me they
are putting their interests before the interests of our hard-working
families who are struggling today.
I know in the State of the Presiding Officer and in my State families
are hurting. They are fighting every day to stay on their feet. I am
not going to stop fighting to be on their side. There is a tremendous
lot at stake in this bill.
I urge all of my colleagues to follow our example and put families
and communities and States above partisan politics and goals and work
with us to pass this bill so hundreds and thousands of American
families can wake up tomorrow and know the Senate was on their side.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in
morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Nomination of Elena Kagan
Mr. WICKER. Mr. President, I rise today to speak briefly on the
upcoming hearings the Judiciary Committee will hold on President
Obama's nomination of Elena Kagan to be a Justice on the U.S. Supreme
Court. I am not a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and I do
not envy the difficult task before the committee members. However, I
would like to highlight a few things I will be watching, as a Member of
this body with the constitutional duty to advise and consent, and
listening for as Ms. Kagan's nomination hearings begin on Monday.
First and foremost, I will be listening for indications on how
closely Ms. Kagan will adhere to the Constitution and the laws of our
Nation as written. The judicial oath requires judges to apply the law
impartially to the facts before them--without respect to their social,
moral, or political views.
Although Ms. Kagan certainly has an impressive resume in academia and
as a political adviser in the Clinton and Obama administrations, she
lacks key courtroom experience as either a judge or as a private
lawyer. Therefore, it is appropriate and vitally important that members
of the committee perform their due diligence to question her judicial
philosophy.
This is a line of questioning that Ms. Kagan herself has endorsed. In
a 1995 University of Chicago Law Review article, she wrote:
The kind of inquiry that would contribute most to
understanding and evaluating a nomination is . . . discussion
first, of the nominee's broad judicial philosophy and second,
of her views on particular constitutional issues. By
``judicial philosophy'' . . . I mean such things as the
judge's understanding of the role of courts in our society,
of the nature and values embodied in our Constitution, and of
the proper tools and techniques of interpretation, both
constitutional and statutory.
I could not agree more with Ms. Kagan. I hope she will live up to her
own measuring stick and provide the Senate with the open and
constructive answers which she has herself advocated.
In addition to her general judicial philosophy, I hope my colleagues
on the Judiciary Committee will question Ms. Kagan on two specific
issues important to many Americans and many of my constituents in the
State of Mississippi; that is, her views on abortion and the second
amendment.
I am concerned that many of the documents from Ms. Kagan's service as
a law clerk for the late Justice Marshall and as a political adviser
during the Clinton administration reflect a troubling bias.
Two years ago, the Supreme Court ruled, in District of Columbia v.
Heller, that the second amendment guarantees an individual's right to
keep and bear arms. Ms. Kagan has said publicly that she views Heller
as settled precedent of the Court. But as a law clerk for Justice
Marshall, Ms. Kagan wrote a strikingly personal memo on gun rights.
The case in question on that earlier occasion challenged the District
of Columbia's handgun ban that was markedly similar to the Heller case.
In her 1987 memo urging Justice Marshall to vote against hearing the
case, Ms. Kagan stated:
[The petitioner's] sole contention is that the District of
Columbia's firearm statutes violate his constitutional right
``to keep and bear arms.'' I'm not sympathetic.
The recommendation itself is troubling, but the personal note she
employed is even more disturbing. Rather than pointing to text and
precedent, rooting her analysis in law or looking to the Constitution,
Ms. Kagan chose the personal pronoun saying: ``I'm not sympathetic.''
This should concern Senators because it seems to indicate a personal
aversion to the right to bear arms. I hope members of the committee
will question Ms. Kagan on this issue.
Ms. Kagan's work in the Clinton administration raises further
questions about her views of the second amendment. According to records
at the Clinton Presidential Library in Little Rock, Ms. Kagan was a key
adviser to President Clinton on gun control efforts. She drafted an
Executive order restricting the importation of certain semiautomatic
rifles and was involved in the creation of another order requiring all
Federal law enforcement officers to install locks on their weapons.
[[Page S5414]]
She advocated various other gun control proposals, including gun
tracing initiatives, legislation requiring background checks for all
secondary market gun purchases, and efforts to design a gun that would
automatically restrict the ability for most adults to use it.
In a May article, the Los Angeles Times put it this way:
As gun rights advocates viewed it, there was one clear
message: The Clinton White House wanted to remove as many
guns from the market as it could.
Records show that Ms. Kagan was a key player in this effort.
I believe the upcoming hearings present an opportunity to hear more
about Ms. Kagan's views on the second amendment--a right clearly
enumerated in the Bill of Rights--and whether she views it as binding
on all levels of government. I am confident I will not be the only one
following her answers closely.
With regard to the second issue, with regard to abortion, Ms. Kagan,
having neither served as a judge nor spent any significant time in a
courtroom, lacks a judicial record to give us insight into her views on
abortion. But there are several red flags that show the need for
pointed questions from Judiciary Committee members on this issue.
First, Ms. Kagan has extensively criticized the 1991 Supreme Court
decision Rust v. Sullivan, where the Court upheld the constitutionality
of the Department of Health and Human Services' regulations that
prohibit title X family planning funds from being ``used in programs
where abortion is a method of family planning.''
The rulings in that case and others like that case are absolutely
vital to protecting the unborn. Congress has the constitutional duty to
maintain the power of the purse. If, as Ms. Kagan argues, that
authority should be limited in the name of free speech, then the
American people will lose the ability for their elected Representatives
to prohibit abortion funding and provide any balance to the executive
branch.
One of the most noteworthy issues on which Ms. Kagan advised
President Clinton during her time at the White House was partial-birth
abortion--a truly reprehensible procedure. Memos from Ms. Kagan to
President Clinton indicate she believed partial-birth abortion is
constitutionally protected. I have profound concerns about that point
of view and believe this raises serious questions about how she would
interpret the Constitution if confirmed to the Supreme Court.
In closing, there is no doubt these are important issues deserving
lengthy and deliberate consideration by the Senate Judiciary Committee,
particularly for a lifetime position on the highest Court in our
Nation.
I hope Ms. Kagan will adhere to her own advice and be open and
forthright with the committee as to her judicial philosophy and views
on the specific constitutional questions I have mentioned. I look
forward to joining many Americans in closely following Ms. Kagan's
responses.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Shaheen). The Senator from Maine.
Ms. SNOWE. Madam President, today I rise to express my concerns about
the pending tax extenders legislation that we are debating and will be
voting on in the Senate shortly. As you know, we have had a series of
votes on this particular question, to no avail. There is no substantive
reason for the impasse at which we have arrived on this package. It
certainly could have been different. I have been involved in a number
of discussions over the last 2 weeks with respect to how we could reach
a resolution on some of these questions, so I think it is important to
set the record straight.
Frankly, I think it is the result of the yawning chasm that exists
between the artificially generated political landscape in Washington
and the actual real-world state of our economy that Americans have been
experiencing on a daily basis beyond the Capital Beltway.
If we are serious about creating jobs, we absolutely could identify a
pathway to extend the expiring tax provisions in this legislation which
are important to America's job generators, without simultaneously and
inexplicably raising taxes on our small businesses--the very entities
we look to in order to lead us out of this recession--in the name of
increased spending and a more expansive tax extenders package. This
approach simply makes no sense and lays bare the stark disconnect
between Washington and the entire rest of the country.
We hear the mantra of ``jobs, jobs, jobs'' as our No. 1 priority, as
it should be. Concerns about the economy are foremost on the minds of
the American people, rightfully. That is why there is so much anxiety
across America today on Main Street. They do not think it is being
replicated in the Senate and the overall Congress with respect to the
actions we should be taking.
Yet what is proposed for legislation today--which highlights the
disconnect between here and the rest of America--is ``taxes, taxes,
taxes'' and ``spending, spending, spending,'' which will do nothing to
grow our economy. In fact, we still have not considered a small
business jobs package, and it is now almost July.
What is it that we do not understand? What is happening on the
economic landscape and among small businesses upon whom we depend to
create jobs? It is not exactly that we are mass producing jobs in
America's economy today. In fact, I met yesterday with the president of
the Boston Federal Reserve, Eric Rosengren, and as he pointed out, the
growth the economy has demonstrated thus far is, for the most part, in
inventory. This is not exactly real growth. It is drawing down
inventory. But the economy has not demonstrated an ability to create
jobs and real economic growth because there is uncertainty among the
business sector and, in particular, small businesses that do not want
to take the risk of investments or hiring additional people because of
the uncertainty of the policies that are emanating from Washington.
Last month, as we discovered with the unemployment numbers: of the
431,000 jobs that were created, 411,000 were due to temporary
government workers--that is why our national unemployment rate is not
worse than it is. So, ultimately, our government is the only real
growth industry in this country, and I challenge anyone to seriously
argue that is a sustainable path to a brighter economic future.
The fact is, growth is not occurring in our economy. I have heard
that time and time again. I have heard that from small businesses,
medium-sized businesses, large businesses, every organization that
represents businesses in America. They are saying there is no real
growth in our economy, and they are not going to be hiring, they are
not going to be making the investments necessary because of the
uncertainty coming from Washington with respect to taxes, with respect
to regulation, with respect to the health care legislation that became
law this year.
So what will it require? In the Federal Reserve's analysis, it will
require, in terms of reducing the unemployment rate in this country--
just in order to reduce the unemployment rate to, let's say, 5 percent
by 2012--in the charts they gave me yesterday, it would require at
least a 6-percent annual growth rate in GDP in order to equalize the
losses in jobs we have already experienced and suffered.
That rate would be slightly higher than the level of growth we
experienced during the recovery from the 1982 recession and
approximately double the growth following the 1991 and 2001 recessions.
So when you think about it, in order to achieve a 5-percent
unemployment rate by 2012, it would require approximately a 6-percent
annual growth rate in 2011 and 2012. Would it be possible under the
scenario that is occurring? Probably not because the growth is not
occurring, and job creation certainly is not. That is disturbing, and
it is deeply troubling.
In fact, I was talking to someone today who is in the business
community who said small businesses are not going to take those risks.
You will not see the kinds of startups in America because of the state
of the economy, because of the policies that are coming out of
Washington that mean more taxes and more spending, which gets to the
tax extenders package that is before us today. And that is my concern,
with the detachment we have between what is happening in America on
Main Street and what is happening in Washington, DC, in the House of
Representatives and the Senate. There isn't that
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reality check, and that is obviously exemplified by the kind of
legislation we are trying to ram through the Congress, once again, that
means more taxes and more spending and that is going to cost more jobs.
It is going to provide more risk in the economy. Therefore, we are not
going to see the kind of economic growth the American people deserve.
Somehow, we think there is not a cause and effect and a correlation
between what we do here and what happens across America. I know that in
speaking to my constituents and to small businesses, I hear it day in
and day out. I go home and I talk to them and I listen, more
importantly, and I hear what they are saying. They are uniformly saying
the same thing: that the policies coming out of Washington cause them
great pause. It causes them alarm. Therefore, they will not take the
risk. They will not make the investments to increase the number of
employees and to add to their personnel or to make the capital
investments, because they do not know how much the Federal Government
is going to cost them with respect to taxes, with respect to regulation
and, of course, the new health care law, as well as all of the other
tax consequences that have now resulted in this legislation that is
pending before the Senate. Somehow, people think it won't matter.
Then I am beginning to think that maybe people haven't read these
provisions to understand exactly how they work, and that is why there
is so much concern and apprehension across America. That is why
Congress has such a low approval rating that has certainly crossed the
historic thresholds in terms of how low it is, and understandably so,
because there is no connection. There is no correlation between what we
are doing and what is happening in America and in small businesses and
in family households which have lost their jobs and are enduring
anxiety and apprehension about where the next job is going to come from
and how they are going to make ends meet.
So we truly have our work cut out for us when we look at the low
economic growth, the inability to create jobs and, frankly, the fear.
When we think about what has been created in this economy, from their
standpoint, it isn't so much the problems we are dealing with today, it
is the direction Congress is taking with respect to the issues that
matter most to them in order to take the risks we need them to take in
order to reverse this economic cycle.
Also, when we think about the projections for economic growth, this
bill doesn't take into account the potential effects of what is
happening in Europe and the economic turmoil that certainly could
engulf our own economy or the potential fallout from the BP disaster in
the gulf. That has not manifested itself in the unemployment numbers or
economic growth. It is a travesty what is happening there, and it
certainly is devastating a way of life and so many small business
owners. So that is another dimension and component we will have to
incorporate in our calculations for the future. Certainly, that will
have an impact on the bottom line with respect to job creation and our
ability to see the kind of growth we require in order to reverse the
declining growth in America.
We certainly have our work cut out for us. That is what makes me
wonder exactly what world we are living in here in Congress as we pay
lip service to job creation, when in reality we are instead on a
glidepath toward higher taxes on America's job generators and at
precisely a moment in time when we should be providing the kind of
relief I have been advocating for through small business legislation. I
have been championing it for 6 months now--6 long months. I started in
January. I thought it was going to be on the front burner. It is still
languishing on the back burner. So much for jobs being a priority. So
much for depending on small businesses to create those jobs. So we have
paid no deference to the greatest issue that is facing America today,
and that is job creation and the economy. That is the No. 1 priority of
the American people. But here we are approaching July and it is yet to
be on the legislative calendar, even though I have been promised. I
know the Presiding Officer, who serves on the Small Business Committee,
has been a great advocate and a champion for small business tax relief
and creating jobs and how vital it is. We have had numerous hearings on
that question before our committee which underscores the imperative of
passing a small business tax relief program so they can generate jobs
because they are the one entity that creates jobs in America. But we
have yet to consider the small business tax relief jobs package. It is
approaching July. I had a package prepared in mid-March and I was asked
to defer because we were promised that we will be considering a small
business jobs package before the April recess. Well, April has come and
gone. May has come and gone. June has come and gone. Obviously, July
will come and go, before it becomes law--so it is regrettable.
It is a red herring to suggest that a potential $12 billion small
business jobs bill might mitigate the damage of some of the initiatives
that are incorporated in this tax extenders bill that is now pending
before the Senate and that we will vote on shortly with respect to
cloture. That is my point here today. Because when we do consider a
small business jobs relief package, and we provide the billions of
dollars that are necessary to jump-start our economy to small
businesses with tax relief, at the same time we are imposing additional
taxes on small businesses in the tax extenders package, that will not
neutralize the circumstances for small businesses. It only makes it
worse. So on one hand we could provide some benefits and on the other
hand we take them away.
Let us remember that those increases will be in addition to the tax
increases on the small business flow-through income that is expected to
increase from the current rate of 35 percent to 39.6 percent, as well
as a tax on capital gains that is scheduled to rise from 15 percent to
20 percent at the end of this year. Astoundingly, the tax rate on
dividends 6 months from now will rise from 15 percent to as high as
39.6 percent, which is a 264-percent increase. That is not even taking
into account some of the marginal tax effects such as the phaseout of
itemized deductions that will raise the rate even higher, or the tidal
wave of uncertainty headed toward the business community as they
evaluate and grapple with, as I said earlier, the health mandates
resulting from the legislation that was passed in December. It doesn't
even incorporate the Medicare payroll taxes that were imposed on small
business in the health care reform law: $210 billion worth of taxes
that were inserted in the health care legislation that became law in
December, that imposes a payroll tax on small businesses. It also taxes
unearned income and investments for the purposes of the Medicare
payroll tax that also will affect small businesses to the point that
there will be a net increase of 67 percent in capital gains on small
businesses as a result of that legislation that became law in December.
So the cumulative effect of all of these tax increases is going to be
pronounced on the ability of small business to create jobs, let alone
make investments in equipment that is so essential to expanding and to
growing.
As my colleagues see on this chart I have on display that was issued
in May of 2010 by the National Federation of Independent Business, the
foremost organization that represents small businesses in America,
small business optimism at an unprecedented low. It is not surprising,
given the status of the economy today. In fact, there is virtually no
economic growth occurring, because we don't have a growth strategy. We
have a tax strategy, we have a spending strategy, but we don't have a
growth strategy. The administration doesn't have a growth strategy.
Congress doesn't have a growth strategy. There has been no regard or
deference to a growth strategy that ultimately would encourage small
businesses, or any size business in America today, to take the risks to
make those investments, because there is too much uncertainty, in
addition to all of the potential tax increases that will occur at the
end of this year, not to mention those that have already occurred and
the ones that are pending in this tax extenders legislation we will be
voting on shortly with respect to cloture.
In the tax extenders bill, we are imposing a $9 billion tax on small
businesses and $13 billion of retroactive new taxes on global
businesses. On
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companies that do business abroad, there are retroactive taxes as well.
Retroactive tax increases are a bad habit. It is a bad practice. It is
bad policy to reach back and now tell businesses: Oh, by the way, we
have changed our mind. Let's reach back and tax you. You might ask:
Well, how far back? Because that is the question I have asked. How far
back do you tax? Well, guess what. Back to the first event that
represents a capital gains event, as far back as it goes because we
have changed our mind.
Well, it is very difficult, when you have to meet a bottom line--
which is anathema to Congress because we don't have to meet a bottom
line. We don't have to balance our budgets. We don't have to worry
about how much we spend and how much we tax, because we don't have to
balance it out, but businesses do, in a very challenging and fragile
economy. Yet we are suggesting, oh, by the way, let's have retroactive
tax increases.
It is regrettable that we have to go that far, exhibiting a total
disregard for the effect it is going to have ultimately on the average
person in America who is seeking to get a job and can't find one
because businesses aren't hiring. They are virtually at a standstill,
and rightfully so, in their hesitancy and their reluctance, because
they don't know what is coming next out of Congress. We don't even
know, because a lot of these provisions were sort of dumped in there
that we didn't have hearings about. So by the way, we have changed our
mind and we are going to reach back and tax you. Maybe it is a year,
maybe it is 2 years. Whenever you have that first event that is taxable
under this provision, we will reach back and we will tax you.
The tax offsets in this bill are worse than the lack of an extension
of the existing policy. That is why the provisions in the bill are too
high a price for any major business or organization, from the Chamber
to NFIB to Business Roundtable, to support it in its current form.
It didn't have to be this way. I certainly laid out a blueprint. I
want to be very clear about this. I laid out a blueprint of how we
could proceed to a consensus solution to passing a responsible tax
extenders package. I worked diligently. I answered every call. I went
to every meeting for the last few weeks since this became an issue, in
good faith, to attempt to extend the unemployment benefits that I think
people rightfully deserve, as well as to help with the reimbursement
for doctors that, by the way, we have known has been a problem for more
than a year. I know I stood on this floor last fall, during the time we
were considering the health care bill that was pending before the
Senate, and after which $210 billion worth of Medicare taxes were
inserted in the health care bill--$210 billion that was a tax on small
businesses.
I said: If you are going to take that route, if that is the policy
you are going to embrace, then why not defer it and pay for the doctors
reimbursement to avert the 21-percent reduction. Why not use it for
that purpose? If you are going to raise Medicare payroll taxes, at
least use the revenues from Medicare, within the Medicare system--
knowing this was a serious problem.
With a 21-percent reduction in doctors reimbursements in the Medicare
Program that was scheduled for January, we knew we had a problem. Yet,
on one hand, we raised Medicare taxes on small businesses, and we used
it for other purposes--to expand other programs--rather than targeting
it to the very problem and issue that existed in the Medicare Program
that we knew about. How practical is that? Of course, it is not
practical.
We knew with that $210 billion we could have arrived at a permanent
solution at least for 10 years on the doctors reimbursements--for 10
years. We would have had a decade solution, rather than this ad hoc
approach, where we are reconsidering it every 6 months or every year
and putting the patients as well as the doctors through this endless
cycle, which has almost become perpetual, as to whether we are going to
provide for the reimbursements or allow the cuts to go forward. It
becomes gamesmanship that is, unfortunately, at the expense of Medicare
patients, because they hear from the doctors: We don't know what we are
going to be able to do. We hear it from the providers who are
challenged, because Medicare rates are hardly reflective of the true
cost of delivering that care. My State has the second lowest rate of
Medicare reimbursements in the country. We know doctors are dropping
Medicare patients. So it has a pernicious effect. We could have taken
care of that proactively and done something reasonable and pragmatic.
We could have funded a 10-year solution that we knew was in the area of
$200 billion, because we had another bill on the floor that said let's
do the doctor fix but let's not pay for it. It was in the approximately
$200 billion range. But that wasn't to be. It certainly didn't have to
be this way.
I have sought to balance the necessities by identifying tax offsets,
urging that the stimulus money be reprogrammed so these funds are spent
in a timely manner, as was the intention when this body passed the
stimulus bill.
With respect to the unemployment benefits extension in this
legislation, I have long advocated for this, and I voted for them in
the past, obviously. I think we have a responsibility to pass
extensions until the economy improves and until we can demonstrate that
the economy can create jobs. I understand and appreciate some of my
colleagues who believe these extensions should be fully offset. I just
don't happen to be in that category, until we can turn the economy
around and produce jobs--particularly at this time of high
unemployment, which is at the rate of 9.7 percent, and that has been
the status quo with minimal changes. That means Congress has to enact
economic policy to foster job creation. I would not impede unemployment
benefits by insisting they are not emergency spending and should be
fully paid for. I believe there is a majority that supports that
policy.
I recommended, why not separate the unemployment benefits and move
that along? Why put people at risk who are unemployed? We could have
done that and separated this out several weeks ago, which I proposed
and recommended, and we could have separated the doctor fix and paid
for it. Actually, we ended up doing that. That is what we did 2 weeks
later. We could have done the same with unemployment benefits--
separated it and moved it along, assuming that, of course, we had
unanimous support on the majority side for that. We could have done
that. I certainly would have supported that.
It is important so that people aren't kept in turmoil, wondering
whether they are going to have additional benefits. I thought we should
have addressed it as a separate matter, rather than entangle it with
other muddled policies being swallowed up in this legislative morass
pending today.
I supported State aid for Medicaid. As I said, this program should be
offset by unobligated stimulus funds. In the stimulus bill, we provided
for additional funding for Medicaid. Had we known then what we know
now, we could have provided an additional year, instead of lower
priority, longer term, less effective spending. After all, stimulus is
supposed to be timely, targeted, and temporary. If the money hasn't
been obligated, obviously, it is none of those things at this point. So
why not redirect it for more stimulative purposes? And certainly doing
it for the Medicaid Program is highly stimulative, along with
unemployment benefits. That is the maximum stimulus you can provide in
the economy today. I said let's redirect those funds and spend them on
FMAP.
In the substitute extenders package proposed last night there was a
breakthrough on that issue that became a consensus item for a brief and
shining moment. Apparently, some on the other side objected to the
overall package on several of the other issues I will get to in a
moment. I have had some serious concerns with some of the proposals
that small businesses in this legislation have, particularly when it
comes to subchapter S corporations. There was an indication that, as I
was told last week, those new taxes would be removed because of the
punitive effect they would have primarily on small businesses, again,
the group we are depending on to create jobs. Yet, last night, the tide
turned again, and I was informed that they would in fact remain in the
tax extenders legislation.
These revenue provisions that have never been the subject of
hearings,
[[Page S5417]]
have never been seen by the public, would significantly damage the
business environment for businesses both large and small, just at a
time we should be creating businesses, not curtailing them. The
egregious provision regarding subchapter S corporations would harm
millions of small businesses in their ability to create those jobs.
Under section 413, a new burdensome payroll tax of 15.3 percent is
imposed on subchapter S corporations on the dividend distributions paid
to employee owners, to family members, who are shareholders or
partners, and unbelievably, retained earnings in the business when
distributions are kept in the business for reinvestment. At a time of
festering high unemployment, this is exactly the wrong prescription for
job creation.
The provision is aimed, as I have been told, at a specific abuse of
the S corporations wrapped in a partnership, which is a business format
that allows a business owner to inappropriately divert more money than
is justified to nonsalary distributions that are not subject to payroll
taxes. Unfortunately, in order to prevent this specific abuse, the
authors had to write a very expansive anti-abuse provision causing
collateral damage to taxpayers who are not abusing the system and
imposing payroll taxes on retained earnings on small businesses. This
is a job killer, because retained earnings are the most reliable form
of capital available to small businesses. While there have been clear
abuses of existing law regarding reasonable compensation, it should be
noted that the IRS successfully prosecutes cases where business owners
inappropriately divert salary income to dividend distribution.
In fact, the ruling as recent as May 27 of this year in David E.
Watson PC v. United States proves that the ``reasonable compensation''
standard can be workable. Yet, it is not a clear bright line test that
is either easy for the IRS to enforce or for taxpayers to understand.
That is why I worked diligently, along with my staff, to find a way
to address this abuse and agree that if we could find a way to improve
upon and make clearer the ``reasonable compensation'' standard, we
should do so. In fact, my staff, last week, was at Joint Tax to do just
that. Then I was informed that the subchapter S provision would be
removed in its entirety from the tax extenders bill, so we didn't
proceed any further, because I was told it was not going to be in this
legislation. Obviously, that all changed last night when it summarily
was reinstated.
Unfortunately, the new regime that would be created in this
legislation is less effective for either compliance by taxpayers or
enforcement by the IRS; it is the current reasonable compensation
standard.
One week ago, the majority leader offered to remove the provision
from the bill and I accepted this. Unfortunately, negotiations must not
have been as clear, because last night that offer to drop that
provision was fully rescinded. The provision in S. 4213 replaces 20
years of law with wholly untested, expensive, very difficult to
administer new standards that attempt to address situations that, under
current law and practices, are already not permitted. Specifically,
this provision would impose Medicare and Social Security taxes at a
rate of 15.3 percent on the first $106,800 of both wages and dividends,
as well as 2.9 percent on amounts retained in the business, even when
distributions are kept in the business for reinvestment. Retained
earnings are the most reliable form of capital for a small business
because the owner doesn't need to go to a bank to apply for a loan or
to investors to seek infusion of equity.
This tax would appreciably reduce that capital at a time when other
sources remain exceedingly difficult to access. At a time of high
unemployment, this is exactly the wrong direction for job creation. In
fact, this new levy would kill jobs and discourage hiring throughout
the economy.
While I commend the authors of the bill for attempting to rein in the
game playing that can take place, this bill is extraordinarily more
broad than addressing just that problem. Unfortunately, in their
critique of my efforts to address these problems, neither the
Washington Post nor the New York Times editorial pages have taken into
account anything but a pithy one-line description of the effects of
these provisions. It is unfortunate because this new tax on small
businesses and medium-size businesses is a broadside attack on what has
been for decades a job-creating engine of the economy.
The substitute pending before the Senate would create vague new terms
and tests for the IRS interpretation and taxpayer confusion as to
whether payroll taxes are owed. These new terms and tests would replace
the reasonable compensation standard for a list of specific service-
based businesses. The new test would impose payroll taxes on certain
professional service businesses, if 80 percent of the income of the
business is attributable to three or fewer shareholders of the firm.
While these terms are certainly less onerous than an earlier version of
the substitute, each of these new terms will be subject to IRS rulings
and inevitable litigation.
I will start outlining my concerns with the ``attributable'' to
shareholders'' concepts. This standard is no easier for the IRS to
inform or taxpayers to understand than is the current ``reasonable
compensation'' standard. Does ``attributable'' mean that if a law firm
partner brings another partner and an associate to meet with a
prospective client, that the income generated is ``attributable'' three
ways? Or does it depend on who performs the most billable hours? If the
associate performs the majority of billable hours with only sign-off
from the partner, to whom is this income ``attributable''?
Frankly, this new proposed standard is no clearer than the current
``reasonable compensation'' standard that is also very dependent upon
specific ``facts and circumstances.'' Why would we replace one standard
with something no more enforceable by the IRS and is just a trap for
taxpayers?
Another component of the bill that is no clearer than ``reasonable
compensation'' is the test of ``substantially all of the activities''
of the firm. Two issues arise with respect to this phrase. First, this
is clearly not an objective revenue test; it is a subjective
``activity'' test, meaning that these employers would now be required
to keep timesheets of all their employees, even if a firm or profession
doesn't currently track billable hours. This would create a whole new
expensive paperwork morass with no point other than compliance with
mindless tax rules.
Further, whether ``substantially all'' means more than half, three-
quarters, or 90 percent of ``activities'' is not defined in the
statute. We simply do not know the definition of ``substantially all.''
Neither would the IRS or the business owners. This doesn't advance
compliance or enforcement to a level any better than the existing
``reasonable compensation'' standard.
Turning now to the additional provisions, I want to point out that
the list of ``professional service businesses'' in the legislation is
at best obtuse, and at worst, it is simply a quagmire for litigation.
Professions targeted for this tax include services ``in the fields of:
health, law, lobbying, engineering, architecture, accounting, actuarial
science, performing arts, consulting, athletics, investment advice or
management, or brokerage services.''
While it is sometimes clear which businesses are included, for other
businesses and professions the new definition is not so clear-cut. We
can only assume that with the expansive regulatory authority granted in
this bill that other service providers would be ensnared. Years of
regulatory effort and litigation will eventually sort out whether the
following would be subject to this provision: Web designers, who are
not software ``engineers;'' interior designers, who are not
``architects;'' tax preparers, who are not ``accountants;'' real estate
or insurance agents, who are not ``brokers;'' writers, who are not
``performers;'' beauticians, who are not in ``health.''
Then there are other service providers who would be ensnared the next
time Congress is seeking additional revenues, including plumbers,
electricians, hairdressers, construction contractors, heating oil
distributors, car mechanics, recruiting and staffing firms, and
professional fundraisers, just to name a few.
Every day this provision has been public--and that is a total of only
1 month 4 days--we seem to find another
[[Page S5418]]
unintended consequence of the provision. Five days from now, we are
likely to find five more unintended consequences.
I wish to specifically raise two additional unintended consequences
that have been brought to my attention. The first of these, of which my
colleagues may be unaware, is that this provision would reduce the
Social Security benefits of early retirees who invest in a family
member's business. This issue was raised by the American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants and results because the shareholder would
be deemed to have additional wages through the proposal's family
attribution rules, which then reduces Social Security early retirement
benefits. I am disappointed that the sponsors of this provision have
not addressed this problem despite having known about it for at least
two iterations of their bill.
If a parent invests as a shareholder in the business being set up by
their adult child, then this legislation would count the dividend
distributions as earned income subject to a payroll tax, which reduces
the early retirement benefit of the parent. This tax would either be a
shock to investors who had no idea about this complication or
invariably, to the extent it is known, it would reduce investment by
family members in entrepreneurial businesses. Of course, this would
reduce a critical form of capital for startup businesses. Why does the
majority feel the need to starve young entrepreneurs of the ability to
get startup capital from their parents?
A second specific unintended consequence concerns the complex web of
anti-abuse rules that is created to prevent ``leakage'' from the S corp
shareholder provision. It ensnares limited partners of partnerships.
The bill imposes payroll taxes on the limited partnership income of
employees for whom these limited partnership shares are like an
employee stock purchase plan. Employees are not subject to payroll
taxes on stock purchase plans distributions. Further, limited partners
are not subject to payroll taxes because this is investment income. But
to combine the two and for some reason to impose a 15.3-percent payroll
tax on the investments of middle-income employees is inexplicable.
Despite this known problem, it was not addressed even in the version of
the bill that was released last night and pending before the Senate.
I want to be clearly understood that this provision was publicly
released on May 20 and was adopted by the other body on May 28 with
virtually no debate on an $11 billion tax hike. There have been no
hearings on this proposal in either the House or the Senate. While the
chairman has modified his initial proposal and it is now a $9 billion
tax, significant concerns remain. Notably, the number of groups that
are supporting my amendment to strike this provision sent a letter to
both the chairman of the committee and the ranking member about that
earlier version, emphasizing that ``this new tax is an excellent
example of what happens when the legislative process is short
circuited.''
This chart is an illustration of the number of organizations that
have written letters to Chairman Baucus and Ranking Member Grassley of
the Senate Finance Committee about this legislation. It says new taxes
would hurt job creation, would reduce the capital these employers have
to create jobs and invest in their businesses--an excellent example of
what would happen when you short-circuit the legislative process.
That is exactly the end result of this legislation. It is ill-timed,
and it is poorly targeted. I appreciate the support from Senators Enzi
and Ensign, who joined me in offering an amendment--unfortunately, we
have not had the ability to offer it--to strike it in its entirety so
we can take a step back and address only the abusive situations without
capturing everybody else. That is going to affect job creation in small
businesses and entrepreneurs in America at a time when we desperately
need them.
We are now making a broadside attack on job generators. Regrettably,
this will affect small and medium-size businesses. They are not in a
position to shoulder this enormous burden as we look to them to create
the jobs our economy so desperately requires right now.
I have been asking for months on end, as I said earlier in my
statement, for a small business tax relief and jobs package that is so
central to what we require in our economy today because of virtually no
economic growth, no job creation. We are nearly into July, so 6 months
into this legislative calendar and there is no legislative package on
small businesses yet. What are we doing? More taxes and more spending--
that is exactly what is represented in the tax extenders bill.
I attempted to address these issues over the last few weeks and to
reach a consensus and solution. As I said, removing the doctor fix and
paying for it separately--eventually that happened, and that was
important; removing unemployment benefits to move that along so people
can get their unemployment benefits without having them lapse and
expire during this challenging economy; and then, of course, address
all the other issues to make sure we are getting it right. That is what
it is all about.
It is a matter of practicality and reasonableness that we get it
right and not force more taxes on the very entities we depend on to
create the jobs people deserve in America today to go back to work and
to support their foundation of financial security rather than removing
it.
At a time when we should be encouraging and nurturing small
businesses, we are stifling the entrepreneurial spirit by adding $9
billion more in taxes with an ill-conceived provision that has had no
hearings, no examination, no evaluation. It is a terrifying template
for additional taxes on small businesses when they are already facing
more taxes as a result of the health care bill. No wonder small
businesses are bewildered and are unwilling to hire new employees.
In the final analysis, America's small businesses would benefit
greatly from the extension of myriad tax provisions, but they do not
want this bill at any cost, not when they are going to have to be
paying some very onerous and punitive taxes under this legislation.
Because it will be virtually all small businesses that are going to
face and bear the brunt of the consequences of this legislation and the
taxes it represents. It is going to continue the stagnation with
respect to job creation. It is going to further that and the
deteriorating trend within our economy with respect to job creation and
with the lagging economic growth that is reflected in today's economic
environment.
For all those reasons, I will not be voting for the tax extenders
package. I regret it because I thought we had reached a consensus.
Obviously, that was not to be. Hopefully, we can continue our
discussions at a time when we can reach a consensus.
But I think it is important in the final analysis to state the fact
that these impasses and the stalemate and the deadlock that result time
and time again that require cloture votes are really not necessary if
we are willing to listen to one another, to reach across the political
aisle, and to build a consensus on the issues that are so important to
America and so crucial to reversing the economic direction of our
country, where more than 70 percent of the American people believe
America is moving in the wrong direction with respect to the economy
and yet we have failed to address it satisfactorily because we are not
willing to listen, not willing to work, not willing to do the things
necessary to create the right kind of legislation.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, I have a unanimous consent request which
the Senator from Arizona will appreciate. I ask unanimous consent that
the cloture vote on the Reid motion to concur in the House amendment to
the Senate amendment to H.R. 4213 with the Baucus amendment No. 4386
occur at 5:14 p.m. today, with Senator Kyl recognized to speak for up
to 2 minutes and Senator Baucus recognized to speak for up to 2 minutes
prior to the vote.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from Arizona.
Mr. KYL. Madam President, I will not take 2 minutes.
First let me say that I associate myself fully with the remarks of my
colleague, the senior Senator from Maine.
[[Page S5419]]
Her analysis and criticism of the so-called S corp provision and
retroactive tax provisions should be heeded by all of us.
I thank my colleague from Maine for her indefatigable work on this
bill and her leadership to reduce its costs and fix its bad policy. She
has spent countless hours working in a bipartisan way to develop an
approach that will extend unemployment benefits, ensure physicians are
paid properly for caring for Medicare patients, and reduce the fiscal
impact of the bill. It is certainly through no fault of her own that
the product before us remains unsupportable. No one has fought harder
to support the small businesses that create jobs in America than
Senator Snowe.
We need to extend the tax provisions in this bill and achieve its
other objectives. Like my colleague, I hope we can reach the right
result, one that responds to our constituents' pleas that we stop
spending and taxing and focus on job creation and economic growth.
The other side has offered several versions of the so-called tax
extenders legislation. Unfortunately, each version has had at least two
things in common with the previous versions--an increase in taxes and
spending that leads to increased deficits. The provisions raising taxes
are permanent changes even though they are being used to offset short-
term tax cuts. I would like to focus on one of these tax increases that
will be particularly harmful to many of our Nation's small businesses,
which are incorporated as S corporations.
Currently, limited partners pay payroll and other employment taxes on
payments received for the services that they provide. Partners in small
businesses organized as S corporations pay employment taxes on their
compensation even if the earnings are not distributed. The Baucus
substitute filed last night would essentially require partners
providing ``professional services'' to pay payroll taxes on their
investment income as well.
The intent of the provision is to prevent cases of abuse as when
former Senator John Edwards used the organization of an S corporation
to avoid paying the 2.9 percent Medicare tax he owed as a lawyer on his
wages. Edwards earned $26.9 million during the late 1990s while only
reporting $360,000 in salary.
However, the IRS has the ability to go after firms and individuals
who do not pay themselves a reasonable wage using the reasonable
compensation test. The service has already successfully litigated cases
where compensation was considered less than reasonable. A few examples
are Radtke v. US, 712 F.Supp. 143 (7th Cir., 1990) and Spicer
Accounting v. US, 918 F.2d 90 (9th Cir., 1990).
Furthermore, Congress just gave the IRS another anti-abuse tool when
it codified the economic substance doctrine as part of the healthcare
bill. Consequently, if the structure of the business is designed solely
with the intent of avoiding the Medicare payroll tax, it would lack
economic substance and the IRS could disallow it.
Not only does the IRS already have the ability to go after those who
try to avoid paying taxes through S corporation revenue abuse, but the
provision as it is currently drafted will create uncertainty, cause
additional compliance problems and unfairly hit those it is not
intended to impact.
One problem with the current proposal is that it will be very
difficult to trace the hours of work for certain shareholders and link
it back to the firm's revenues. Lawyers and CPAs can track their hours
because that is how their businesses operate, but other service
professionals such as engineers and architects do not.
As such, this will be especially burdensome for a number of the
covered businesses at a time when we are counting on these same small
businesses to generate jobs.
The provision also does not define what amount of participation in
professional services activities determines if one must pay the new
tax. The House version says ``substantially all.'' The Senate version
seems to suggest that even very limited participation in any of the
activities listed under the new definition of professional services
would be subjected to the tax. Is that the intention?
Finally, the family attribution rules would appear to hit inactive
family members who are solely shareholders and do not actively
participate in the day-to-day operations of the business by subjecting
their investment income to payroll taxes.
The bottom line is that this provision unnecessarily treats the
income of 4 million small businesses organized as S corps all as wages,
which undermines the entire rationale for having flow-through entities:
to avoid the double taxation of entrepreneur's income. How are small
businesses suppose to grow and hire more workers to get us out of this
recession if we keep creating impediments to expanding investment
opportunities?
The most galling aspect of this debate is that if the extenders bill
passes with this roughly $10 billion tax increase on small business,
the next tax bill we expect to consider is a bill to help small
businesses with just $5 billion in tax relief. So the net effect of
these two bills would amount to a $5 billion tax increase on small
business. I just don't understand the logic. Of course, the real logic
is simple: Supporters of the bill need more offsets to pay for the
increased spending. I support the efforts of the senior Senator from
Maine to strike this tax on small businesses, and I commend her for
leading the effort to solve this problem.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, let us remember what this bill is all
about. This bill will help American families face this great recession.
This bill works to strengthen our economy and put Americans back to
work. This bill would create jobs. That is what people want. It would
cut taxes for businesses. That is what people want. It would facilitate
small business loans. It would foster investment in highways and other
infrastructure. This bill would cut taxes for families paying for
college. It would cut taxes for teachers. It would cut taxes for
Americans paying property taxes and sales taxes. It would extend
unemployment insurance, health care tax credits, housing assistance for
people who have lost their jobs. It would help States cover the cost of
low-income health care programs.
This week, 900,000 out-of-work Americans have stopped receiving
unemployment insurance benefits. Why? Because Congress has failed to
enact this bill.
This has been a difficult fight, but it does not have to be
difficult. In previous recessions, in previous Congresses, it was not
this hard. But for months now, we have addressed Senators' concerns.
Senators expressed concern about the size of the bill. So we cut the
total size from $200 billion, then down to $140 billion, then down to
$118 billion, now less than $110 billion. We cut spending on health
care benefits to unemployed workers under COBRA. We cut spending on the
$25 bonus payments to recipients of unemployment insurance. We cut
spending on the relief to doctors in Medicare and TRICARE. We cut
spending on help to States for Medicaid by one-third. Senators asked
for more spending cuts. We came forward with more spending cuts. Since
the first time the Senate passed this bill, we found $77 billion in new
offsets. This bill is now 70 percent paid for.
I just want to say that there is a great need for this bill.
Americans want this bill passed, and, frankly, I very much hope this
bill does pass. We do need the 60 votes.
We do not need the 60 votes; the American people want us to pass this
legislation.
I yield back the remainder of my time.
Cloture Motion
The PRESIDING OFFICER. By unanimous consent, pursuant to rule XXII,
the Chair lays before the Senate the pending cloture motion, which the
clerk will report.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Cloture Motion
We, the undersigned Senators, in accordance with the
provisions of rule XXII of the Standing Rules of the Senate,
hereby move to bring to a close debate on the motion to
concur in the House amendment to the Senate amendment to H.R.
4213, the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act, with a
Baucus amendment No. 4386.
Harry Reid, Max Baucus, Patrick J. Leahy, Al Franken,
Patty Murray, Richard J. Durbin, Sheldon Whitehouse,
Roland W. Burris, Kent Conrad, Daniel K. Akaka, Robert
P.
[[Page S5420]]
Casey, Jr., Jeanne Shaheen, Edward E. Kaufman, Jeff
Merkley, Jeff Bingaman, Mark L. Pryor, Sherrod Brown,
Carl Levin.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. By unanimous consent, the mandatory quorum
call has been waived.
The question is, Is it the sense of the Senate that debate on the
motion to concur with amendment No. 4386 in the House amendment to the
Senate amendment to H.R. 4213, the American Workers, State, and
Business Relief Act of 2010, shall be brought to a close? The yeas and
nays are mandatory under the rule.
The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from West Virginia (Mr. Byrd)
is necessarily absent.
Mr. KYL. The following Senator is necessarily absent: the Senator
from Alaska (Ms. Murkowski).
Further, if present and voting, the Senator from Alaska (Ms.
Murkowski) would have voted ``nay.''
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber
desiring to vote?
The yeas and nays resulted--yeas 57, nays 41, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 200 Leg.]
YEAS--57
Akaka
Baucus
Bayh
Begich
Bennet
Bingaman
Boxer
Brown (OH)
Burris
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Conrad
Dodd
Dorgan
Durbin
Feingold
Feinstein
Franken
Gillibrand
Hagan
Harkin
Inouye
Johnson
Kaufman
Kerry
Klobuchar
Kohl
Landrieu
Lautenberg
Leahy
Levin
Lieberman
Lincoln
McCaskill
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Murray
Nelson (FL)
Pryor
Reed
Reid
Rockefeller
Sanders
Schumer
Shaheen
Specter
Stabenow
Tester
Udall (CO)
Udall (NM)
Warner
Webb
Whitehouse
Wyden
NAYS--41
Alexander
Barrasso
Bennett
Bond
Brown (MA)
Brownback
Bunning
Burr
Chambliss
Coburn
Cochran
Collins
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
DeMint
Ensign
Enzi
Graham
Grassley
Gregg
Hatch
Hutchison
Inhofe
Isakson
Johanns
Kyl
LeMieux
Lugar
McCain
McConnell
Nelson (NE)
Risch
Roberts
Sessions
Shelby
Snowe
Thune
Vitter
Voinovich
Wicker
NOT VOTING--2
Byrd
Murkowski
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote the yeas are 57, the nays are 41.
Three-fifths of the Senators duly chosen and sworn not having voted in
the affirmative, the motion is rejected.
The Republican leader.
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I indicated to my friends on the
other side of the aisle I would be propounding a consent agreement. Let
me make a few brief observations and then I will do precisely that.
The majority wants to make this debate about Republicans opposing
something. Let me be perfectly clear: The only things Republicans have
opposed in this debate are job-killing taxes and adding to the national
debt. We have offered ways of paying for these programs and we have
been eager to approve them.
What we are not willing to do is to use worthwhile programs as an
excuse to burden our children and our grandchildren with an even bigger
national debt than we already have. So the biggest reason the cloture
vote we just had failed is because Democrats simply refused to pass a
bill that does not add to the debt. That is the principle we are
fighting for in this debate, and let me suggest that I can prove it. In
a moment I will offer a 1-month extension of the expired unemployment
insurance benefits, COBRA subsidy, flood insurance program, small
business lending program, and the 2009 poverty guidelines. This
extension would be fully paid for using the very same stimulus funds
that our friends on the other side just voted--almost unanimously--to
redirect for these purposes. Let me repeat that. We would pay for the
extension with a Democratically approved stimulus offset.
If the Democrats object to extending these programs using their own
stimulus offset to pay for them, then they will be saying loudly and
clearly that their commitment to deficit spending trumps their desire
to help the unemployed.
Let's be clear about the principle that is at stake here. Are our
friends on the other side willing to extend these programs without
adding to the debt? That is the real question in this debate.
So, in that regard, I ask consent that the Senate proceed to the
immediate consideration of H.R. 4853; that all after the enacting
clause be stricken and the McConnell amendment at the desk be agreed
to; that the bill as amended be read a third time and passed and the
motion to reconsider be laid upon the table.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Mr. DURBIN. Reserving the right to object, Madam President, for 8
weeks Senator Baucus and Senator Reid have negotiated with Republicans
in an attempt to pass this important jobs bill. They have been asked to
make the package smaller, which they did. They have been asked to pay
for portions of the package, which they did. And still Republicans
continue to filibuster and stop this bill.
What the Senator from Kentucky wants to do would be virtually
unprecedented, that we would pay for the emergency spending for
unemployment compensation by removing money from our jobs program, the
stimulus program. So he is going to kill jobs on one side to pay for
the unemployed on the other side. It makes no sense economically and it
is certainly not within the tradition of the Senate, and I object.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The objection is heard.
Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I would only briefly offer that the
offset I offered was one that the majority just voted for. Obviously
they did not find it offensive in the context of the measure that was
defeated.
We will continue to work on this in the hopes that we can pass this
worthwhile measure without adding to the national debt.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
Mr. DURBIN. The filibuster that has been waged by the Republicans in
the Senate has gone on now for 2 months to stop unemployment benefits.
What the minority leader just offered was a 1-month extension. We have
been limping and dragging our way from one short extension to another,
and that is not fair.
It is not fair to 80,000 people in Illinois, unemployed, who just
lost their unemployment benefits because of the Republican filibuster.
Why do the Republicans oppose this bill? Well, the good reason they say
is the deficit. But let me tell you the real reason. The real reason is
because this bill pays for virtually all of the programs except
unemployment by making changes in the Tax Code, changes to which the
Republicans object.
Let me give you an example. One of the changes would eliminate the
loopholes in the Tax Code which allow American businesses to relocate
American jobs overseas. We know what that means to manufacturing in
this country. We are losing good-paying jobs right and left, and the
Tax Code rewards the companies that make those bad decisions. We want
to eliminate that, and the Republicans want to protect it.
Secondly, this bill provides help to small businesses across America,
and we pay for it. Third, this bill will provide money to governments
so we would not have to lay off teachers, policemen, firefighters, and
nurses. That is going to happen. We are trying to send emergency money
back to the States to avoid that.
The Republicans continue to filibuster it and to say no--no to
plugging up the loopholes so jobs will not move overseas, no to the
assistance for small businesses so they can create jobs, and, no, so
that we can help to protect the jobs of the people who protect us in
our homes and communities and schools.
I do not understand the Republican sentiment. There used to be a
bipartisan sentiment that when America faced a disaster, we would pull
together, whether it was the flooding and hurricanes in Louisiana or
the disastrous situation in the Gulf of Mexico. We have a national
emergency with this recession and 14 million Americans out of work.
We are asking only--only--to extend them an unemployment check so
they can feed their families--literally feed their families for the
next few months. The Republicans continue to filibuster and continue to
say no.
[[Page S5421]]
The record is clear. It is a party of no which is hoping the voters
will vote yes in November. I hope they will remember that the
Republicans had no alternative when it came to this disastrous economic
situation, and we are doing our best to create jobs and help those who
have lost their jobs through no fault of their own.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Florida.
Gulf Oil spill
Mr. NELSON of Florida. Madam President, I want to show the Senate
Pensacola Beach yesterday. It has hit us full force. That white is the
natural sugary sand of the northwest Florida beaches. You can see as
far as the eye can see down to the beach. It is covered with this black
tar-like sludge.
This was yesterday. More rolled in last night. There have been
attempts to get out and scoop this up. This, as you can see, is not the
tar balls, the little quarter-sized or dime-sized tar balls that have
hit the beaches before. No. What this is showing is when you have
60,000 barrels a day gushing into the Gulf of Mexico now for more than
2 months, and that very likely will continue to gush for the rest of
the summer--that is another 2\1/2\ months. It shows you what is the
potential that is being portended.
Another picture here from yesterday, Pensacola Beach. This is where
the pier is. Here is the gulf. Here are the waves crashing in. This is
far over this sugary white sand that you can see how much oil has
collected.
In the middle of the day when the Sun is beating down, it stays
almost fluid like this. As the Sun goes down and it cools, this will
start to become a more viscous consistency. As much as we want the
people to come and enjoy our beaches--and this is the height of the
season on the world's most beautiful beaches--is this going to be an
incentive for them to come? You can imagine the lost income from the
hotels, the restaurants, and all of the ancillary businesses.
So this is a saddening reality, but it is a glimpse of what it is yet
to become with that much oil out there in the Gulf of Mexico.
Let me just give you a couple of iterations. They have said by
putting this top hat--that is like a funnel to siphon off a lot of it
until they can finally kill the well. They are saying it is going to be
the end of August, the first part of September before they can get down
to the bottom, the 18,000 feet below the seabed, intercept the well
pipe, and then put cement down in it to kill the well.
Until that point, they are trying to siphon it off at the well head,
which is where the blowout preventer failed. Remember, they went in
with one of those big shears and they clamped off the pipe called the
riser pipe, and they put this kind of funnel over it called a top hat,
and they are siphoning off.
They said they have been able to siphon off 25,000 barrels a day.
Well, that is very good, except 60,000 barrels a day are gushing. So as
much as they can continue to siphon that off, at least maybe, certainly
not half but at least some is being siphoned off and taken up to a
tanker on the surface 5,000 feet above the seabed.
But you know, check the Weather Channel. There is a tropical wave
that is now developing in the South Caribbean. If you look at the
National Weather Service projection of where it is going to go, it is
going to intensify. It is going to become a tropical depression. Then
it is going to likely become a tropical storm. Who knows, it may be a
hurricane. And its projected path is to go right up in the Gulf of
Mexico toward this damaged well. What happens? The ships cannot stay
out there if a hurricane is coming. They have to go in and find safe
port. So some 5 days before the arrival of the hurricane, the ships
would have to decouple, stop the siphoning off of the 25,000 barrels,
and, therefore, the entire 60,000 barrels a day would be gushing.
Well, for how long? It would be 5 days before the hurricane and
another 5 days after the hurricane passes before they can get back out
there, reposition their ships, reattach the top hat. We are talking
about a total of 10 days with no siphoning that 60,000 barrels a day
and 600,000 barrels will have gushed into the gulf. That is three times
the amount of oil that was spilled by the Exxon Valdez just in that 10-
day period.
So, of course, what I am asking is that the U.S. Navy preposition
ships so we can have a surge of ships to come to the site after a
hurricane has passed, so that extra 600,000 barrels of oil that has
gushed from when they had to shut down would be skimmed.
Now, let me tell you about the skimmers. Still today there is not a
sufficient command-and-control structure as much as this Senator has
continued to ask the incident command and the unified command: How many
ships do you have out there? What kind are they? What are their
positions? I still cannot get a straight answer to that. What is more
is that the Navy has a series of smaller boats that are skimmers in
port. That is pursuant to the law. Where you have a port, under the
Clean Water Act and under the Oil Spill Act, and all of those existing
laws, you have to have the capability, if there is a spill in port, to
go in and clean it up. The Navy has some 45 vessels that can do that.
Out of those, only six have been deployed to the gulf. These are
boats that are basically 30 feet long. We cannot use them out in the
gulf, but we can sure use them in the bays. When the oil goes through
the pass or the inlet into the bays, we can have those additional
smaller boats that skim up the oil before it gets into the bays.
Out of those 40 boats, the Navy has identified another 27. Would you
believe that until 2 days ago they still had not approved getting those
27 boats which the Navy has identified that they can put on trailers
and bring to the gulf coast to preposition them in those bays to
protect the estuaries?
This Senator has called the head of the EPA, Lisa Jackson.
Fortunately, on that very afternoon, she had approved the EPA signing
off with a waiver for those boats, to allow those boats to leave those
ports to get to the place where the big oilspill is. It has only been
going on for over 2 months now. But at least that approval is in.
But as of this afternoon--that was over 2 days ago. But as of this
afternoon, this Senator cannot get those boats on trailers and on their
way.
Let me give an example. All along this beautiful beach there are
several passes. Others call them inlets. At the State line, the
Alabama-Florida State line, is Perdido Pass. That goes into Perdido
Bay. That is shared by Alabama and Florida.
Further to the east is Pensacola Pass. That goes into Pensacola Bay,
the cradle of Naval aviation, at Pensacola Naval Air Station. It is
right there on Pensacola Bay. That is where 2\1/2\ years ago, in a Fish
and Wildlife boat in Pensacola Bay, that orange mousse that looked so
awful was flowing in and flowing right toward downtown Pensacola. We
gave a longitude and latitude position, and I think somebody got it
before it got downtown. That is where the smaller boats can help and
need to be prepositioned.
Go further east. We have an interesting different kind of pass. It is
called Destin Pass. It is the only inlet going into a huge bay that
borders Eglin Air Force Base, called Choctawhatchee Bay. It is huge,
with a lot of wetlands.
This pass, unlike Pensacola Pass, is shallow. But because it is
shallow, the incoming tide rushes through. You can imagine the force of
that current, that once the oil gets to that point it is going to carry
it into the bay. It is all the more reason we need the small Navy boats
in the bays to skim it up before it gets into the wetlands.
Because of all of the booming we have done--and I was just there
Monday inspecting the booming--when that tide comes rushing in, a lot
of those booms are not going to hold it. They even have sophisticated
systems that we are trying to get. Since it is a shallow pass, you put
on the bottom a pipe that shoots air up and therefore would get oil
suspended below the surface, shoot it to the surface so you could
collect it with booms, if the booms will hold in that onrushing high
tide.
Go further to the east, it is the pass going into Panama City, St.
Andrews Bay, again, a deepwater pass, a similar situation. We need the
skimmers in there. And then go further to the east, to a place where my
grandfather came on a boat, my great-great-grandfather, 181 years ago,
when my family came to Florida in 1829 to Port St. Joe, inside a
natural bay that is created because of the arm of a cape called Cape
San Blas.
[[Page S5422]]
From the tip of that cape to the mainland is only about a mile and a
half. It is hard to boom that. There, again, is why we need additional
skimmers in that bay. If the skimmers out in the gulf can't get it
all--and with so much oil in the gulf, that is going to be a chore--
then at least we have a fighting chance of getting it in the bay.
It is with a heavy heart that I show a picture from yesterday in
Pensacola Beach. It is a fact. This isn't the only time. We are going
to be faced with this for months, indeed, probably for years. It is not
only going to be the gulf coast, because when this oil shifts to the
south and gets in a current called the Loop Current, that will carry it
south to the Florida Keys, which becomes the gulf stream, which will
take it up the east coast of not only Florida but the eastern seaboard
of the United States.
I remember after Hurricane Andrew that valiant emergency operations
center director who said, when there was no Federal resources coming
in: Where is the cavalry?
I am asking now: Where is the cavalry? The cavalry is all these extra
skimmers for the bays. The cavalry is the extra surge capacity of
additional skimming, when a hurricane comes through and all that extra
oil is gushed out. I am asking for the cavalry.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Burris). The Senator from Florida is
recognized.
Mr. LeMIEUX. Mr. President, I thank my colleague, the senior Senator
from Florida, for his comments, bringing the proper focus to the issue
of skimmers. It is something I have been talking about for weeks. I
have been coming to the floor for the past week to talk about the lack
of response from the Federal Government in keeping oil off our beaches,
out of our intercoastal waterways, out of our estuaries in Florida. I
said earlier this week that I would come to the floor every day until
we had good answers as to where the skimmers are. It makes absolutely
no sense that we do not have a more robust effort from the Federal
Government to keep the oil from coming onshore. Right now we have not
only tar balls on our beaches, we have large swathes of brown oily slop
that have come ashore in Pensacola. It breaks one's heart to see it.
When I was there last week meeting with the President, I talked to a
woman who was working at the dock, right on the pier. She is a woman
who sells food to folks coming to the pier. I asked her: Are people
coming out since we have had the oilspill to see the beach?
She said: Yes. The folks who are coming haven't seen the beach in a
long time. They are coming to see the beach one last time, as if they
are visiting a family member who is on his or her deathbed.
We know BP is responsible. We know they cut corners. We know they are
responsible for ultimately paying for all of the economic damages. But
there is another part of this equation, and that is the Federal
Government. The Federal Government is here to do what local and State
governments cannot do at a time of disaster, and that is to marshal
unbelievable resources to prevent harm to the people, to the
environment, and to the economy.
As I have come to the floor over the past week, I have talked about
the fact that we can't get a straight answer as to how many skimmers
are actually off the coast of Florida. These are ships that suck the
oil off of the water and keep the oil from coming onshore. Today we
still don't have a straight answer. The Federal Government tells us in
their shore operations report from the National Incident Command that
there are 118 skimmers. But yesterday they told us these reports are
not accurate and that there are, in fact, 86 skimmers. So we have the
number 118 and we have the number 86. We have a number from the State
of Florida that is different. The number from the State of Florida was
31, 25 plus 6 additional skimmers that the State of Florida had to go
out on their own and get. They took the initiative to get the skimmers
on their own because they were not getting them from the Federal
Government.
Today the report is different. It is shown in a different way. When
we called to ask the State of Florida, they couldn't tell us how many
skimmers there were. Yesterday it was 31. The Fed said 118. But then
they say the number is really 86. Whether it is 31, 86, or 118, it is
not enough.
Why is it not enough? There is a huge area between Pensacola and
Panama City that needs to be treated by the skimmers, let alone the
rest of the area that goes all the way over to Louisiana. We know there
are about 400 skimmers in the Gulf of Mexico, but there are 2,000
skimmers in the United States.
Before I talk about domestic skimmers, I want to talk about the
offers of assistance that have been made by foreign countries to help
us. We are the greatest country in the world. When there are disasters,
whether they be in Southeast Asia with the tsunami or Haiti with an
earthquake or Central or South America with an earthquake, we send
resources, volunteers, teams of people, aid. We are there to help them.
The world community has been offering us assistance--some of it free,
some of it they want paid for, but assistance nonetheless. We are
coming to find out that we are not responding to their offers of help.
The State Department has reported as of last week that we had 56 offers
of assistance from 28 countries or international groups. But we have
only accepted 5 of these offers, 5 offers of assistance out of 56. We
have a lot of great skimmers that are working in the Gulf of Mexico,
but some of them are pretty small, to be honest. We are happy they are
there. A small skimmer is better than no skimmer.
But let me show a skimmer that was offered to the United States that
is not a small skimmer. In fact, it is a huge vessel. This was offered
to us by a Dutch company called Dockwise. This ship is called the Swan.
It could be outfitted with skimming arms. It was available to go to the
gulf. The U.S. Government didn't return the call. It was offered on May
6. Now some 50 days later, it still has not been responded to. It is
still under consideration. This ship is able to take up 20,000 tons of
material, whether it be oil, or an oil/water mixture, 20,000 tons. This
is not some skimmer that can go on the back of a train or on a boat or
an airplane and be flown down to the gulf or trucked or trained down to
the gulf. We are happy to get those too. This is a serious piece of
ship equipment. We haven't called them back.
Guess what. This is no longer available. Instead it was replaced by a
ship with one-twentieth of the capacity, a U.S. ship. I am all for
America first. I am all for using U.S. assets. But this is not an
either/or situation. We should be using American ships and
international ships. We gave up a ship with 20 times the capability
that could be out there in the gulf sucking up this oil, perhaps
keeping it off the beaches of my State, off the beaches of Pensacola,
and we didn't return the phone call. Nor did we return the phone call
to the other 51 offers of assistance. It is beyond belief.
Let me go back a second and talk about the domestic skimmers. This
map I have in the Chamber is going to be a little hard for you to see,
but I want to walk through it. This shows different parts of the
country, broken up by districts. In each of these districts, there are
skimmers.
Where did we get this information? We got this information from the
U.S. Government, from the Coast Guard because Admiral Allen said, a
week ago, there are 2,000 skimmers in the United States.
Why are not the vast majority of those skimmers in the gulf right
now? What is the holdup? We hear about legal entanglements. Is it the
Jones Act, is it Federal law, is it local law, is it EPA restrictions
that are keeping skimmers in different parts of the country in case
there is an oilspill?
I asked the President of the United States about this last week in
Pensacola, and he said: Well, we are trying to get all the skimmers we
can. Obviously, Admiral Allen wants to get all the skimmers we can, but
some of those skimmers need to stay in place in case there is an
oilspill.
Well, Mr. President, there is an oilspill. It is in the Gulf of
Mexico. And saying we are not going to bring skimmers because of legal
entanglements or constraints from other parts of the country because
there might be an oilspill there is like me saying we are not going to
send the fire engine to your house that is on fire because there might
be another fire someplace else.
[[Page S5423]]
This is the worst environmental disaster in the history of this country
and every available resource should be used.
As shown on the map, this is district 8 right here, which is the
Texas area. This is district 7, which is Florida, Georgia, South
Carolina. The number of skimmers in the Texas area is 599. The number
of skimmers in the Florida district is 251. So between these two areas,
850 skimmers, just between Texas and all the way up to South Carolina.
How can it be that there are 850 skimmers in, basically, the Gulf of
Mexico States--with the exception of going around to South Carolina;
but we are talking about Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi,
Louisiana, Texas--how can there be this many skimmers--850--but we only
have 400 in the gulf right now, if that number is correct? How can that
be? How can we be 65-plus days into this and not have those skimmers in
the Gulf of Mexico, when they are virtually there anyway, according to
this report, or right next door?
Beyond this 850 in the district that encompasses all the way from
North Carolina up to the mid-Atlantic, we have another 157 skimmers. Up
here, in the New England area, there are another 160 skimmers. Up near
Michigan, there are 72 skimmers. If you go over to California--and we
can bring these things through the Panama Canal or, if they are
smaller, they can be flown in--in this California district, there are
227.
So we are literally talking about more than 1,000 skimmers that are
available, but we only have 400, if this number is correct, at work. It
is hard to believe the response is this anemic. It is hard to believe
there is this lack of urgency or sense of purpose in getting this done.
I see my colleague from Louisiana is in the Chamber. Her State has
been impacted worse than any other so far, and I know she wants every
available resource off the coast of Louisiana to stop this oil from
coming ashore, just as our friends in Mississippi, in Alabama do, and
just as we do in Florida.
This is not a partisan issue. I want the President to succeed. I want
the Coast Guard to succeed. But right now it is not just oil washing up
on the shore of Florida, it is failure. We have to do more. We have to
get focused and get passionate and get something done about this issue.
I will keep coming to the floor to talk about this issue as long as
it is a problem, as long as we keep refusing foreign help, as long as
we have thousands of available skimmers in this country to do the job
that should be done. I should look off the coast of Pensacola and see
an armada of skimmers doing the job that needs to be done to keep this
oil off our beaches, out of our waterways, and out of our estuaries. So
I promise to be back until the problem is solved. I hope I do not have
to come back because I hope I can report in a positive way that the
Federal Government has gone into action and we are doing what we should
be doing for our people and for our environment.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Ms. LANDRIEU. Mr. President, before I speak briefly about the subject
I came to the floor to speak about, which is small business--I am chair
of the Small Business Committee--I want to thank our colleague from
Florida for his advocacy for the gulf coast, as we struggle as to how
to stop this gusher in the gulf and to clean up what has been done.
We have recently seen some terrible photographs from the beaches of
Florida. We have photographs equally as troubling from the marshes of
Louisiana. I want to thank the Senator for his leadership, and we are
all going to double our efforts to get this job done, and to do it in a
balanced way.
As upsetting as this oil is, in trying to clean it up, and keep it
from our shores--both the beaches and the marshes--we also have to find
a balance as to how to let this industry at some point move forward
with these 33 rigs or we are going to lose the entire deepwater gulf
drilling, which will put thousands--tens of thousands--of people out of
work, some of whom live in Florida; and some of the businesses benefit,
as well as so many in Louisiana.
But I thank my colleague for his continued effort, and we will look
into some of the issues he has raised and push as hard as we can from
Louisiana as well.
Mr. President, I know my colleagues are on the floor to speak about
job creation. That is why I am here as the chair of the Small Business
Committee.
I say to the Presiding Officer, you have had a great deal of
experience in your own role, before being a Senator, as a bank
president and as a lender for small business. You know how important it
is.
I start by sharing this graph I have in the Chamber that shows that
from 1993 to 2009, 65 percent of the net new jobs created were created
by small firms with 1 to 500 employees--65 percent of the jobs. Large
firms created 35 percent of the jobs. So I suggest this is a very
important topic for us to be discussing, and I am very pleased the
leader wants to bring this small business bill to the floor next week.
We have been--many of us--clamoring to get to this debate, and I want
to see this bill move forward if we can work out a few minor
differences. This package has been put together with very good
bipartisan cooperation, from my view as the chair of the Small Business
Committee, both from our committee and then the Finance Committee has
done its part as well. But there are a few items I wish to highlight
because there are some agreements that must be reached and some points
I wish to make briefly.
First of all, let me briefly describe the small business provisions.
One is the increase in 7(a) loans from $2 million to $5 million; 504
loans from $1.5 million to $5.5 million; and microloans from $35,000 to
$50,000. If I could, I would lay an amendment down to raise that to
$100,000.
We have had testimony from business advocates--from conservative to
moderate to liberal advocates--saying this is one of the most important
things we need to do to stimulate lending to small businesses through
the Small Business Administration, to give capital, to give credit to
these small businesses that can create the jobs I am talking about. We
must get credit into the hands of small businesses from Maine to
California to Texas to Louisiana to Washington State, and these small
businesses, if we can strengthen the SBA programs, can, in fact, begin
to turn this recession into a job creation era and opportunity. That is
in the bill. It passed our committee 17 to 1--a great bipartisan vote.
The Small Business Export Enhancement and International Trade Act,
which Senator Snowe has worked so hard on--and I want to commend her
for her work; and I have worked with her on this as well--this is a
challenge for us. Less than 1 percent of small businesses in America
are exporting. I want to say that again. Less than 1 percent of
America's small businesses are exporting.
The market is overseas. The population growth is overseas. If we do
not help our small businesses with technical assistance and support to
be able to allow them to position to market, particularly with the
ability of the Internet today--an extraordinarily exciting tool--with
broadband, high-speed Internet, there are opportunities for a person,
whether they are in Chicago, IL, or in New Orleans, LA. If they have a
product, they can go on the Internet, show the product, and it can be
shipped to China or India or any other country in the world, and the
profits can come home right here and jobs can be created. That is in
this bill, and it is extremely important we move to it and figure out
the few problems we have with it.
There is the Small Business Contracting Improvement Act that has not
been completely worked out, but I want to take a moment to speak about
it. The Federal Government is one of the largest purchasers of goods
and services in the world. If we are going to try to help businesses,
we most certainly, in my view, should strengthen the opportunity to
contract with small businesses so the Federal Government can purchase
goods and services. We want to allow small businesses to do that. There
is a problem we are trying to work out that Senator Thune has raised,
and I look forward to working with him over the weekend to work through
that.
[[Page S5424]]
The fourth section of the bill is the Small Business Community
Partner Relief Act. This would allow SBA, upon request by a woman
business center or a microloan intermediary, to waive or reduce the
non-Federal share. Why is this important? We have also added $50
million to the small business development centers. Small businesses
cannot necessarily create the jobs they want to create without help and
support. We have a great network. We have a great backbone, a great
reach through women business centers, through university-based centers,
and this bill we are going to bring to the floor next week has support
for them so they can then reach out and help small businesses on Main
Street.
This bill is not about Wall Street. I have heard as much about Wall
Street as I want to hear and so have the people in my State. We want to
start hearing about Main Street at home, businesses that are struggling
and need our support and our help.
We also have some additional sections for the 8(a) improvements, and
I have offered a section of the bill that I think is very important to
help the 11,700 businesses that, unfortunately, on the gulf coast are
still paying off loans from the last disasters 5 years ago, Hurricanes
Katrina and Rita.
As you heard Senator LeMieux from Florida and as you have heard
Senator Nelson from Florida, now we have another catastrophe along the
gulf. I have asked, in this bill, for some interest relief for these
businesses. Some of these businesses are paying $1,000 a month--$700 in
interest, $300 on principal. And that is the example that Jaimie
Bergeron of Fleur de Lis Car Care in New Orleans presented to our
committee. This bill would allow the owners, the Bergerons, right now--
where their sales are down; the region is threatened--to go from paying
$1,100 a month down to $300 or $400 a month.
We can afford to do this now. We have to be able to give these small
businesses some relief. There is some opposition to this provision. I
hope people will think about how important this is for these gulf coast
businesses. We have had support not only from our local newspaper, the
Times-Picayune, but even the New York Times has said the people of the
gulf coast deserve a break. We need a little help, and we need it now.
Giving these small businesses some interest relief would be a great
help.
Finally, in this bill, the White House has put forward, and I
support, $30 billion for small business lending. We have the estate
small business credit initiative developed by Senator Warner, Senator
Levin, and others. We have $1 billion going to community development
finance institutions that are not banks but lend money to neighborhood-
based, grassroots organizations that then turn around and lend money to
small businesses. So there are some great provisions to include in this
bill.
We have a few things to work out over the weekend with my colleagues
from the other side. I just want to say that no one could be working
harder than our committee, both Democrats and Republicans, to try to
bring a consensus to this floor.
In good faith, I come to ask my ranking member, Senator Snowe, please
let's work hard over the weekend to work these final provisions out so
we can provide to the American people not only a bill that works for
them--and Senator Stabenow helps us grow small business--but a bill we
can actually enthusiastically support in a bipartisan way. I think the
American people deserve our best efforts. I am going to work double-
time over the weekend, even doing some other things I need to do in my
home State to get this work done, and I look forward to being here on
Monday to see if we have been able to achieve that.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, would my friend be willing to yield for
a question?
Ms. LANDRIEU. Yes.
Ms. STABENOW. First, if I might, I wish to take a moment to say thank
you to the senior Senator from Louisiana for her leadership on small
business. Her efforts in terms of job creation and availability of
capital and so on is right on point.
My question would be, is it the Senator's desire to have this done by
the end of next week so we can move this forward and hopefully have
these benefits take place as quickly as possible for our small
businesses?
Ms. LANDRIEU. Absolutely. It is my desire to have many conversations
over the weekend. There are just a few points that need to be worked
out. The Finance Committee has done its portion of the work, and I
thank Senator Baucus and Senator Grassley. Senator Snowe and I have a
few other things to work out.
The Senator from Michigan is correct. This effort on the part of the
Small Business Administration is crucial to change these programs, to
lift their limits, provide some support for them to be able to help
reach out and support our small business growth throughout the country.
The White House has worked very hard on this $30 billion capital
infusion to the banks. The Independent Bankers of America supports the
$30 billion in additional capital that would be available to them,
again, not for lending on Wall Street or Fancy Street but on Main
Street where the Senator from Michigan and I come from, to get money
into the hands of small businesses. It is imperative particularly for
women-owned and minority-owned businesses that have been particularly
hard hit by this recession. Some of the provisions reach right to those
disadvantaged neighborhoods in our country that need the most help
right now in creating jobs for people of every different walk of life.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I wish to thank the Senator from
Louisiana again because she is focusing on jobs. That is what we are
focusing on every day here, with every bill: jobs, putting people to
work, supporting small businesses, supporting manufacturers, and
getting this economy going. So I thank her for her leadership.
AUTHORITY TO SIGN ENROLLED BILLS AND JOINT RESOLUTIONS
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the
majority leader be authorized to sign any duly enrolled bills and joint
resolutions on today, June 24.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, this evening we had a vote that I find
to be extremely concerning. Once again, after 8 weeks of trying to work
out some kind of an agreement with our colleagues on the other side of
the aisle to overcome a Republican filibuster--changing our jobs bill
over and over and over again, and every time there was a change, then
there was something else and something else--we finally hit a brick
wall tonight, when we didn't know what else to do. Once again, we did
not have one Republican colleague willing to vote with us to overcome a
filibuster. We have the votes on the floor to pass this jobs bill,
which includes incredibly important benefits for people who are
currently out of work, to extend unemployment benefits.
People who have worked hard all of their lives, through no fault of
their own, find themselves in this situation, and they are asking us to
simply help them be able to keep a roof over their head and food on the
table for their families and maybe a little bit of gas in the car so
they can go look for work, while we can continue to focus on creating
jobs in what has been a terrible economic crisis for our country.
We have the votes. If we were doing a majority vote, we would have
the votes. We have more than enough votes, but what we don't have is
enough votes to overcome a filibuster. That takes at least one
Republican colleague, and we don't have that. We don't have any at this
point. So, therefore, it is estimated that by the end of this month,
over 87,000 people in my great State of Michigan will lose their
unemployment benefits, the little bit of help they get to be able to
help them keep going. A lot of people are going back to school, but
unemployment benefits are paying for the rent or food. People are
trying desperately not to lose their houses on top of losing their
jobs. This is a desperate situation for almost 1 million people across
this country.
All we get over and over again is, no. We are creating jobs in this
bill, putting money and partnerships in with manufacturers to create
capital for manufacturers, and all we hear is no; capital for small
businesses to be able to invest and grow their businesses and hire
people, and all we are getting is no; the ability for States and local
governments to keep police officers and
[[Page S5425]]
teachers and firefighters on the job, and all we hear is no.
The resounding no has been to help anyone who currently finds
themselves out of work because of no fault of their own and needs to
count on the ability for us to have unemployment benefits. This is an
outrageous situation.
Before turning it over to my colleague from Ohio, who I know shares
my deep concern about what has been happening, let me remind people
that despite the fact that we are beginning to grow the economy, we
have turned the corner. When President Obama came into office, we were
losing 750,000 jobs a month. With the Recovery Act, we got that down to
zero. We are turning the corner, but we still have five people out of
work for every one job opening. What happens to them, while we are
working as hard as possible to turn this economy around? What happens
to them? Those are the people we are fighting for every single day.
They are the people we care about here on the floor of the Senate, and
we are going to keep coming back and fighting because they deserve to
know there are people here who understand what they are going through.
I will now turn it over to my colleague from Ohio for a few moments.
Then I will make a few more comments.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Michigan.
I think the Senator said it exactly right. She talks about statistics
and so many people being laid off. Yes, 750,000 people a month were
losing their jobs when President Obama started in office. We are seeing
job growth now but not as much as we would like.
In Ohio, in April, we had the largest job growth in the country, with
37,000, which is not great, but it is better than when President Obama
inherited this economy from President Bush. I think when you speak to
individual people, you understand it.
I want to share a handful of letters from constituents. I know
Senator Stabenow gets letters like this from Lansing, Grand Rapids, all
over Detroit, and everywhere in her State, from people who have been
affected by the failure of the Republicans to want to extend
unemployment benefits.
It seems to me that our Republican colleagues--the people who
consistently voted no on something as simple as extending unemployment
benefits--some of them view unemployment as welfare, when it is called
unemployment insurance not unemployment welfare. When you have a job,
whether you live in Detroit or Columbus or whether you live in Dayton
or Toledo, you pay into the unemployment insurance fund when you are
working, and you get assistance when you are not. That is the whole
point of unemployment insurance. You hope you never need it, like you
hope you never need your car insurance, to cash in your car insurance,
or you hope you don't need your health insurance. You want it to
protect yourself. That is what unemployment insurance is. I think some
of my colleagues, who are so ultra conservative, think it is welfare. I
don't understand that because very few people in the public think that.
Too many colleagues--the people who vote no on extending unemployment
insurance--don't know anybody who lost their job or they don't know
anybody who has lost her insurance or anybody who has lost their home.
Senator Stabenow is out all the time in Michigan. She is all over the
State. I will be in Columbus tomorrow, and I will also be in Lorraine
and Cleveland tomorrow. I think a lot of colleagues who vote no on
extending unemployment insurance simply don't meet with people who
might have lost their job. They hang around with other Senators and
with people who are pretty privileged. Do they look somebody in the eye
and say: What is it like to lose your insurance or your home?
Try to imagine somebody--a parent or a husband and wife or a mother
and father--who lost their job and lost their health insurance and are
about to lose their home, and they have to explain to their 12- or 13-
year-old child: We are going to have to move and don't know where we
will be living, and I don't know what school district we will be in
yet. Just think of the uncertainty and sadness of that. I don't think
they think about that.
Maybe we can help by sharing a few real letters from people in Akron
and Lima and Cleveland and Urbana, around Ohio. I will share these.
Ellen from Summit County, in Akron, writes:
I am writing to make you aware of my situation, which I
fear is very similar to that of many other people.
If an unemployment insurance extension is not passed, it
will in essence destroy my family. We are struggling to keep
our bills paid and have come to the point of alternating
months on paying our mortgage and utility bills.
Think of that--one month you pay your mortgage and the next month you
pay your utility bills, hoping that neither will your utilities be cut
off nor your home foreclosed on.
We need this extension. Until my husband lost his job, he
worked over 20 years in the banking industry--he has more
than paid into the system to receive his fair share of
compensation.
We are nine years into our 30-year mortgage and are at risk
of losing our home. We are fighting just to stay above water.
A UI extension will in no way guarantee our future, but it
will at least give us a chance.
Like most people who have worked for years, people don't ever choose
to lose their jobs. They are not getting rich on unemployment. It is a
bridge until they find a job. As you know, unemployment insurance
allows you to receive the benefits you need to keep looking for work.
You send in resumes. I get letters from people all the time saying: I
drive in a five-county area looking for a job, I apply more, and I send
in resumes and nobody answers half the time because they are buried
with resumes.
Aaron, from Allen County, near the Indiana border in Lima, writes:
I worked at a company for 19 years before it was closed and
moved to Mexico.
Since then, I went back to college to earn a mechanical
engineering degree, while working part-time.
But I recently lost my unemployment benefits, which means I
won't be able to support my family.
There are so many people in my situation. If unemployment
benefits are extended, it would help thousands of dislocated
workers and their families.
Mr. President, it is not just the individual help for these families,
it is their next-door neighbor because if Aaron's house is foreclosed
on, the next-door neighbor's home drops in value. If he gets his
unemployment, the local hardware store will get some of that money, as
will the local clothing store and the local restaurant or grocery store
where they are spending this money. The unemployment insurance that
people receive--according to former Presidential candidate, John McCain
and one of his top economic advisers--has the biggest multiplier effect
of any stimulus. It doesn't stay in the pockets of the unemployed
workers very long. It immediately goes into the community and is spent
and respent.
Here are the last two letters I will read. This is from Elizabeth
from Cuyahoga County, the Cleveland area:
I turned 60 this year and have spent the last 30 years as a
computer programmer. Since losing my job, I have tried to
learn new programming skills to make me a stronger applicant.
In the meantime, I apply for every single job that I can
possibly perform. I have hoped beyond hope for jobs at
grocery stores, home health care agencies, and retail stores.
I am now at the end of my rope. I don't have any other
ideas of what to do. I have worked for 42 years, since high
school, and even full-time while attending college.
Those who are not unemployed or have no one in their family
who is unemployed, don't understand what it feels like. I
have other friends who are losing their unemployment benefits
now and in the coming weeks. I am not out here by myself.
I simply cannot imagine someone voting against extending unemployment
to Elizabeth or Aaron or Ellen or if they know people who have lost
their benefits, who have lost their jobs, their health care, or their
homes. I cannot imagine anybody standing on the floor of the Senate,
when their names are called, saying Mr. Burris, Ms. Stabenow, or Mr.
Brown, and saying no.
Lastly, Jane, from Champaigne County, west of Columbus near Dayton,
in Urbana:
I am an unemployed mother of two children. I will lose my
unemployment benefits by the end of the month.
I go above and beyond the minimum requirements to receive
unemployment benefits. I apply to 4 to 10 jobs per week.
It's not that I don't want to work, as some people are
implying. I worked in the same job for ten years, since I was
19 years old.
[[Page S5426]]
I lost that job through no fault of my own, which is the
story of most unemployed Americans today.
I have lost my house and my car. My family's American dream
has been crushed. If this bill doesn't pass, my family's
nightmare will be just the beginning.
Please do whatever you can to urge your fellow Senators
that this extension is needed. This vote shouldn't be about
anything else except the American people.
Mr. President, they could not have said it better. I can read their
letters and meet with people like this, but I cannot understand because
that has never happened to me. I wish my colleagues--those people who
walk down in this well when their name is called and vote no on
extending unemployment benefits to these workers--these people live in
every State and, frankly, they should be ashamed of themselves for
voting no.
I yield the floor.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I thank my friend from Ohio. There are
many things we share in common: a love of the Great Lakes, and we have
a rivalry in football and baseball and our great universities, and so
on. But we also share a tremendous passion for what is happening to our
people. I thank Senator Brown for his fight on behalf of manufacturers
and the people who, in fact, need a voice. I thank him very much for
that.
It is so hard to know what to say when you read these letters or e-
mails or take phone calls. Most people cannot understand what in the
world is going on around here. But what is going on? Don't we get it?
What is going on here?
Unfortunately, I think the Senator from Ohio, when he says that maybe
it is that folks have never met someone who lost their job or had it
happen in their families--it has happened in my family. About half of
the families in Michigan have somebody who has lost their job. We
certainly get it, and we understand what is going on now. We know
people are lining up for work. Whenever there is an announcement for
jobs, 50 jobs are hiring at a business or 100 jobs, literally I have
seen people lined up around the block--hundreds and thousands of
people--because people want to work.
The people who are out of work now are people who have worked all
their lives. They have played by the rules. They are now trying to
figure out what happens and how they can turn it around for their
families and keep going.
The bill in front of us, like many things we have put forward in the
Senate this year, has been all about jobs. That is where we are. It is
not a slogan to say jobs, jobs, jobs. That is what we are focused on.
Next week, we are going to focus on small business jobs. We will see
what happens in the Senate.
The jobs bill that we have been focused on for 8 weeks has major
provisions to help manufacturers. I was pleased to include provisions
that helped manufacturers be able to get some refunds on their taxes if
they put it back into equipment and hiring people, and there are other
provisions in the bill. It is about jobs.
Frankly, we have two different views of the world, two different
beliefs that I think are reflected in what has happened to our country.
I look back only because we are debating the same values, the same
choices that got us where we were and where we are today. Those are the
same kinds of choices that our friends on the other side of the aisle
are suggesting we make for the future.
It is important to look at what has worked and what has not worked.
Under the previous administration, they looked at the world very
differently. They said: All right, we are going to stimulate the
economy and keep things going by focusing on the wealthiest Americans.
We are going to give them big tax cuts and it will trickle down and
everyone will benefit and there will be jobs.
Well, it didn't work. It didn't work. If it had worked, I would be
celebrating because an awful lot of people in my State would be doing
much better than they are today. What we saw was an economic policy
that said we are going to focus on the privileged few, and then it will
help everybody else; it is going to trickle down.
What we saw was--these are job loss numbers--down, down, down under
that policy.
I will also say those job numbers come from the fact that the same
people said: You know what. We believe corporations, corporate
interests can police themselves. So we are going to back up. We are
going to let Wall Street go to town. They are going to make a lot of
money, and it is going to be good for the economy.
They backed up. They let Wall Street police itself. They let mining
firms police themselves and oil companies police themselves. We lost
lives. We lost 8 million jobs because of what happened on Wall Street.
People lost their savings, 401(k)s, their pensions because of a set of
ideas, because of what they believed. They believed that by backing up,
corporate America would police itself and everything would be OK: Let's
give to those at the top. It will trickle down, and we will get jobs.
Those two things combined to create the largest number of crises that
I certainly have seen in my lifetime that have brought down the middle
class of this country. We saw jobs go down, down, more and more job
loss. When President Obama came into office, about 750,000 jobs a month
were being lost. It was an economic tsunami. If that is not a crisis
and an emergency, I don't know what is. If over 15 million people being
out of work right now is not an emergency, I don't know what is.
We went to work and we focused on a different set of ideas, a
different approach. Where they were focusing on the privileged few, we
said we are going to focus on middle-class Americans, on working
people, on investing in manufacturing jobs.
I am very pleased to say we are beginning to feel that in Michigan.
Sixteen companies have benefited from the battery manufacturing money
we put into the Recovery Act, the stimulus. I was at an opening on
Monday in Midland, MI, a new manufacturing facility, that is going to
put 1,000 people to work in construction and 800 people to work at the
facility. That is a different approach. We said: We are going to invest
in America, invest in the American people. We are going to invest in
opportunity, and we are going to help the people who are out of work
because we know we are not talking about people who are lazy. We are
talking about people who lost their jobs, a lot of them because of
either lack of accountability and oversight of what was going on on
Wall Street or people not paying attention when our jobs were going
overseas.
Through no fault of their own, people were caught in this economy. We
decided on a different approach. President Obama came in and the
numbers began to change. I would prefer they were much faster, but they
are moving in the right direction. We have gone to zero job loss into
the positive column. We are gaining jobs every month.
Our colleagues on the other side of the aisle are saying: Wait, stop,
stop. I know if things are going to turn around, maybe in an election
year people do not like that and they want to be sure things continue
to be bad, that somehow it benefits them. That is a pretty cynical
view.
These folks who are gaining jobs, as well as the people who lost
jobs, are Republicans, Democrats, and Independents. This is not a
partisan issue. We ought to be rooting for America and rooting for what
is getting people back to work instead of fighting along partisan
lines. The policies we put in place are beginning to do that. They are
not done. They are beginning to do that. We are putting back the
oversight and the accountability and commonsense regulation on Wall
Street and on the oil companies and the miners. We are putting back in
place middle-class tax cuts instead of just the privileged few. We are
focusing on jobs, investing in private sector jobs, partnering with the
private sector, with businesses to help create investment in
innovation, and we are beginning to turn things around.
The problem we have is, we still have too many people caught because
the changes we have been able to make have not caught up to them, and
there is much more to do.
The bill that was on the Senate floor, the bill we are going to
continue, we are going to put it aside. We are going to be ready if one
or two Republican colleagues say: Yes, we want to stop a Republican
filibuster. We can come back to it and get this done.
But what we have seen is a continual effort for 8 weeks to block us
from the
[[Page S5427]]
next step in the recovery, from investing in jobs, from keeping people
employed--police officers, firefighters, teachers--and from focusing on
those who have lost their jobs, to be able to help them keep a roof
over their heads and food on their tables until they can get that next
job.
I see my friend from Rhode Island on the Senate floor, and I will
turn to him in a moment. He has been a real champion and fighter on
this issue. We should also know that in this bill there are some
important provisions that have been opposed by the other side of the
aisle to make sure wealthy investors actually pay their fair share--not
somebody who is middle class but wealthy investors pay their fair
share.
We also put in place provisions to take away incentives for shipping
our jobs overseas. I could go on for an awful long time about why we
have lost a lot of jobs in Michigan because of unfair trade practices
and losing our jobs overseas. This bill takes away incentives to ship
our jobs overseas.
This bill also added a few more cents to an oilspill trust fund to
make sure the oil companies are actually paying for the cleanup in the
gulf.
On one side we have jobs, investing in jobs and partnering with
manufacturers and small businesses and helping people who are out of
work to keep things going. That is our side. On the other side we have
wealthy investors who do not like this, and oil companies that do not
like another 41 cents on every barrel of oil to be put toward the
cleanup. We have people who ship jobs overseas who do not want us to
close those loopholes. That is on the other side.
Which side did our Republican colleagues pick? They picked the
wealthy investors, the oil companies, and the people who ship jobs
overseas.
The American people are counting on us to understand what is going on
in their lives, to get it, to be willing, as in any other time in our
history--Republican or Democratic President, any other time in our
history when unemployment has been this high; this Congress has stepped
forward to extend unemployment benefits for people who were temporarily
out of work, Democratic or Republican Presidents. Now we have a
situation where after 8 weeks, we cannot get even one of our colleagues
from the other side of the aisle to come forward and help us break this
filibuster.
I don't know what to say beyond the fact that we are going to keep
fighting. We are going to keep doing everything we can to get through
this logjam. We are going to keep doing everything we can to keep this
economy recovering and keep creating jobs. But there is something wrong
with the system right now that has gotten so divided, so warped, so
partisan that we cannot come together on behalf of almost 1 million
people in this country who are counting on us right now because they
may have no other option for themselves and their families.
There is one job for every five people who are unemployed. Prior to
the Recovery Act, that number was six people. It is a little bit
better. There is a lot more to do, but we cannot just say to somebody:
Why don't you get a job, when there are five people out there for every
one job opening.
I see my friends on the floor. I see my partner from Michigan on the
floor. I will turn to him if he wishes to say a few words because he
and I understand what we have been through in Michigan. We have been
hit harder, longer, and deeper than anyplace else in this country. When
we look at the fact that over 87,000 people in Michigan will lose their
unemployment insurance benefits by the end of this month because of
what has happened--inaction, the constant naysayers blocking,
obstructing, saying no--it is more than I can tolerate.
I yield to my friend from Michigan.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan is recognized.
Mr. LEVIN. Mr. President, first, I thank Senator Stabenow for her
tenacity and her efforts. I join them with a full heart at a very sad
moment when we see an unconscionable Republican filibuster succeed
again today against the extension of unemployment benefits and the
other parts of this American jobs bill.
I asked Senator Whitehouse if he would yield to me for a moment. He
was on the floor before me. I will not take advantage of his good
nature and good grace other than to say we are not going to abandon
this effort. We are going to proceed with every tool we have at our
disposal to make sure people who desperately need the extension of
these benefits are protected, as intended by this program.
The financial crisis and resulting recession that continue to trouble
our Nation have called for sustained action on the part of the
Congress. From passage of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act to
the Hiring Incentives to Restore Employment Act to the Wall Street
reform legislation now taking its final shape, we have sought to reduce
the harm this recession has caused our fellow citizens. Passage of the
legislation that we were denied the chance to consider today would have
been another significant step in fulfilling that task.
The legislation we failed to take up would extend unemployment
benefits through November of this year. For the more than half a
million residents of my State who are receiving unemployment benefits,
and millions more across the country, this extension is crucial. For
many families, these benefits are all that is keeping food on the table
and a roof over their head. The income they provide is important not
only to families receiving the benefits, but to the communities in
which they live and to the businesses for whom those families are
customers.
But now opponents of extending unemployment insurance are, once
again, filibustering this legislation. So under Senate rules, 60 votes
are required to invoke cloture and bring an end to debate.
The opponents of this extension say they are concerned about deficit
spending. This would be more convincing if not for two factors. First,
many of these same opponents were in favor of massive, unpaid-for tax
cuts benefiting the wealthiest Americans, tax cuts which, according to
independent analysts, made a far greater contribution to our deficit
than any of the measures we have taken to address the financial crisis
and recession.
Second, concern about long-term deficits in the middle of a continued
recession is the equivalent of pulling out fire hoses in the middle of
a flood. The catastrophe we face today is that millions of Americans
are without work and will not be able to find work until we can
generate real growth in our economy. The danger to them and to our
economy today is not deficit spending; it is recession. It is the fact
that factory floors remain silent, that shops lack shoppers, that
businesses are without customers. Failure to pass this measure does
nothing to address that shortfall.
Surely my colleagues understand that assistance to families in need
is not just an aid to those families. It helps all of us by helping us
pull out of the recession. Direct assistance to Americans in need is
the single most effective tool we have in boosting our economy. Aid
such as unemployment assistance has a greater bang for the buck than
any other stimulus effort we can make. If we abandon the drive to
extend these benefits, we abandon a key effort to strengthen our
economy.
The stakes are enormous. The people who need these benefits are not
abstractions. They are real people, flesh and blood, who are paying the
price, who have been paying the price for months and months, for a
crisis bred on Wall Street. More than half a million of them live in my
State, which was suffering in recession even before the crisis hit.
These are people who desperately want to work, who want to provide for
their families, who want to give a better life to their children. They
have done so in the past. They want to do so again. What they ask from
us is a small measure of assistance so they can continue to feed and
shelter their families while they search for work.
Literally thousands of emails and letters have flowed into my office
from people asking us to extend these benefits. One from Waterford, MI,
from a worker whose benefits expired in April, reads: ``Our life
savings are gone! At some point we will be homeless, no doubt about it.
We need help from Washington.'' Another, from Burton, MI, wrote to me:
``I know things will get better but we need help to make ends meet
until then.''
Those stories, those pleas, have come in by letter and email by the
thousands. The many months of on-again,
[[Page S5428]]
off-again extensions of unemployment benefits have added painful
anxiety and uncertainty to what is already a tragedy for hundreds of
thousands of Michigan families. Time and again, we have delayed and
debated on whether to extend these benefits. On more than one occasion,
a single Senator--just one--has obstructed our consideration of
legislation to extend them. Now it appears that our colleagues across
the aisle, despite enormous effort by the majority leader and Senator
Baucus and others, have decided they simply will not allow an up-or-
down vote on the extension.
We will have failed a basic responsibility to our constituents if we
abandon the effort to approve an extension of unemployment benefits.
Millions of Americans ask only that their government provide the safety
net that keeps them from falling deeper into tragic uncertainty and
debt. The Republican filibuster of that help is unconscionable. It
leaves millions of families all across this country without help in
their hour of need.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island is recognized.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, we lost this important vote today 57
to 41. For people who are watching who may not be familiar with the
peculiarities of the Senate, you might think to yourself: How on Earth
did you lose 57 to 41? It sounds to the ordinary person like you won by
16. What do you mean you lost 57 to 41? How could that have happened?
That happened because the other party, as it has done throughout the
Obama administration, has used an arcane Senate procedure called the
filibuster more times than ever in the history of this country to block
progress for this administration.
The rule requires that the majority get to 60 when the minority so
demands, and they have been demanding that 60 on everything over and
over. There have been years when it was almost never used. There have
been years when it was used two or three times. In really bad years, it
might have been used 14, 15 times. This group of Republican colleagues
has set the record. They use it on everything.
I think we are over 100 acts of obstruction and delay around this
filibuster rule as a result. If one is wondering why we lost 57 to 41--
if that sounds strange--we got the 57 votes, they got the 41, and we
lost--it is because they are pulling out of the rule book this
procedural trick so that the majority does not rule, so they can block
progress.
They are doing it for what they claim is concern about deficits. I
have to say, being lectured by our Republican colleagues about deficits
and debt is like being lectured by Evel Knievel about safe driving.
They should have a little sense of, at minimum, irony about that.
They say the past is prologue. Let me review a little bit of the
past.
When George Bush took office, President Clinton, a Democrat, and the
Democratic Congress at the time had left an annual budget that was in
surplus. It was returning more money to the Federal Government than we
were spending. It was an annual budget in surplus. We had a national
debt at the time, but with the annual budget in surplus, our
Congressional Budget Office--the nonpartisan, not Republican, not
Democratic, professional Congressional Budget Office--had estimated
that, when George Bush took office, we would be a debt-free nation by
2009. We would be a debt-free nation by 2009. That was the trajectory
that Democratic President Bill Clinton and the Democratic Congress
left, along with those annual budget surpluses, when George Bush and
the Republicans took office.
So 2009 came and went. How did we do? Did we get to a debt-free
nation? Are we at zero debt? No. Something changed when the Republicans
took power, and when the Bush administration left, it left $9 trillion
in debt--not a debt-free nation but $9 trillion in debt and an economy
in which Americans were losing 700,000 jobs a month. They left $9
trillion in debt and families losing 700,000 jobs a month. That is the
situation President Obama inherited--a little different from what
President Bush inherited.
So have we spent since then? Yes, because every economist worth their
salt knows that when family spending is contracting, when business
spending is contracting, when municipal and State spending is
contracting, the entire economy can contract to the point that it
seizes up unless the Federal Government does what an economist would
call countercyclical spending. If the economy is dying for lack of
spending, if it is seizing up, the Federal Government can put money
back into it to try to bring it back to life. As Senator Stabenow's
graph has shown, it has brought it back to life. We have gone from
losing 700,000-plus jobs a month to losing no jobs a month--actually
gaining a few. So it worked.
In that context, to say to the people who are still out of work--the
ones who lost their jobs back when 700,000 jobs a month were out the
window and going overseas; the Bush legacy--to say that we can't help
those people any longer, to say that we are cutting off their
unemployment insurance, their lifeline, because we are concerned about
the debt, I have to ask: Where was the concern about the debt when they
were taking a trajectory toward a debt-free America and turning it into
a $9 trillion debt? Where was the concern then? Where was the concern
when it was tax breaks for billionaires?
We just had our first billion-plus-dollar estate pass under the Bush
tax cuts, where the estate tax was eliminated. As a result, a $9
billion estate of a Texas tycoon went to his heirs tax free. How much
tax? Zero dollars. Zero dollars. At the prevailing tax rate that has
stood for most of this time, you would have paid $4 billion in estate
taxes and your heirs would have had to suffer through with only $5
billion to divide amongst themselves. That $4 billion in lost revenue
added to our debt and deficit doesn't bother our friends on the other
side at all. They couldn't be happier. That is their plan. Those are
the Bush tax cuts. America loses $4 billion, and they smile. It is
their plan. But when we are talking about people who lost their jobs
because of those very policies, because of letting Wall Street run
unregulated and having that financial meltdown, and now regular
families across this country who got hit by that tsunami of misery are
out of work, now they are concerned about the debt. Now they are
concerned about the deficit. They were OK with the billion-dollar
family passing its estate tax free, but they can't have ordinary
working Americans keep that unemployment insurance lifeline.
I think those are backward policies. I think those are upside-down
policies, and they hit very hard in my home State. My home is Rhode
Island. For over a year, we have had double-digit unemployment. We have
been in the top three or four States every month for unemployment. I
know Michigan has suffered immensely, and that is why Senator Stabenow
and Senator Levin were here. But I have to say that my small State of
Rhode Island, with only 1 million people, is not far behind. We have
70,000 families out of work, and because it has been a long recession
in Rhode Island, those families--all their assets, everything they had
salted away, they have gone through that. What is left is the
unemployment insurance lifeline. It is the basic lifeline. To cut that
off, frankly, I think it is disgraceful.
This is a low moment in this body--70,000 families missing a
paycheck, 70,000 families with a provider who is out of work, 70,000
families with kids wondering where the income for mom and dad is coming
from. This money would go right into the economy. It would be spent
instantly. It would be spent on shoes. It would be spent on food. It
would be spent on paying the electric bill. It would be spent on
putting some gas in the car to get out to the job interviews. It would
have been spent immediately on the necessities of life.
But that is not good enough. That is not good enough. Those are the
families in the toughest circumstances whom our friends want to cut off
because of the debt, because of the deficit. The billionaires can go
untaxed, but the working families who have lost jobs through no fault
of their own are the ones who have to bear the brunt of this. And it
hits home to real people, real families, with real fears, who, late at
night, sitting at the kitchen table, with the bills laid out in front
of them and the kids asleep upstairs, are adding them up--adding up
what they have and what is coming in--and realizing
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they are not going to make it that month, that something is going to
have to go. That is a cold and lonely moment for a family. When
families are having that cold and lonely moment, that late night at the
kitchen table with the bills they can't pay, that is the time when we
are supposed to provide the insurance to protect them against
unemployment. That is the policy of this Nation.
It is discouraging. It is discouraging to Dan, a Rhode Islander, in
East Greenwich. He has worked in sales. He has been unemployed since
April of 2009. His wife is disabled. He is looking for work, but in
Rhode Island, as in Michigan, people can look as hard as they like and
they are lucky to find a job because there are more people looking than
there are jobs. The jobs just aren't there, and Dan has not been able
to find one. Without unemployment insurance, he has let my office know
that he and his wife are likely to be evicted from their apartment.
That is the human consequence of today's decision for one person in
Rhode Island--Dan.
Bill, from North Kingstown, contacted us. He is 56 years old. He has
been unemployed for a while now--since January of 2009. This has been a
persistent recession in Rhode Island. He used to work in the
engineering field. He is a talented man, but he has been twice faced
with eviction as his unemployment insurance has been put at risk. He
received only $200 over the last 3-week period, as his benefits have
expired. He is in that first leading group for whom the benefits have
expired. He has lost his COBRA benefits. He needs heart medication.
Without COBRA benefits, how can he pay for his health insurance that
will provide the heart medication? The real cost of today's shameful
decision comes home hard to somebody like Bill.
Nancy, in Portsmouth, RI, is 59 years old. She has been unemployed
for a while, too--21 months. She has been looking for work for 21
months, looking through the classifieds, going online, reaching out to
all her friends and contacts to try to find somebody who has a job for
her. She has a bachelor's degree, she has several different industry
certifications, and she has an extensive background in sales and
marketing. She is somebody who, in an ordinary economy, would have no
trouble finding a job. But after the Wall Street meltdown sent that
tsunami of misery across our country, she got caught in it. For 15
years, she worked in the insurance industry, and now she can't find a
job. She will soon lose her unemployment benefits if we don't continue
to fight for it.
So behind all the big brave talk about how we have to fight the
deficits--ironic talk coming from the people who were responsible for
virtually all of these debts and deficits--are the human stories that
are just being ignored here, and it is wrong. We have to change our
direction and start putting people first instead of the big
corporations.
Let me mention one other topic. There were winners today and there
were losers today. The people who lost today were Dan and Bill and
Nancy and many, many others like them in Rhode Island and across the
country. The people who won today--among them--were the big Wall Street
financiers, the hedge fund hotshots, the ones who have been earning
millions of dollars every year and through clever legal tricks have got
their million-plus-dollar salaries treated as if they were capital
gains. So the hedge fund superstar out there in his private jet,
getting ready to fly down for a weekend in the Caribbean in the private
jet, looking out the window at the fellow stuffing his luggage into the
hold of the private jet, the guy in the jet is paying a lower tax rate
than the guy outside with the earmuffs on and the jumpsuit stuffing the
luggage in the hold. The guy in the private jet is paying a lower tax
rate than the guy outside working day-to-day and putting his luggage in
the hold. The guy being driven around in his car is paying a lower tax
rate than the man behind the wheel who is driving him around.
Who is the biggest, best, most prominent capitalist in America? I
would submit that it is Warren Buffett. Warren Buffett is a legendary
investor, a spectacular investor. He is one of the great success
stories of American capitalism. He has come to lobby us about this
issue. He has come to lobby us about the fact that he pays a lower tax
rate than his secretary. He has come to lobby us about it because it is
wrong, because he finds it embarrassing that, in a country like ours,
somebody who has been as successful as he has, who has received such
remarkable benefit from his talent and his energy, ends up paying a
lower tax rate than the secretary who does his mail and takes his phone
calls. He knows that is wrong and we should know that is wrong.
We could have corrected that. That was one of the ways that the
benefits for regular working folks in this bill could have been paid
for.
That is who won and that is who lost: Dan and Bill and Nancy lost.
Tonight when they get word about this they are going to sit in their
homes and they are going to worry. They are going to be anxious. They
are going to be heartsick. They are going to be looking at a future
that is filled with uncertainty.
Our friends on the other side will say no, once they get off
unemployment insurance that is just a spur, that is an incentive to get
out and find a job; get off the dole and get back out in the workforce.
Not in Rhode Island, not with a 12.3-percent unemployment rate. At a
rate like that Dan, Bill, Nancy--the three of them might go out looking
for a job, but there will only be one for the three. These are people
who have been looking for work for over a year. These are people who
have had a lifetime of work experience. These are people who want to be
back to work. Their character, their sense of self is that they are
people who work and support themselves. They want to be back to work.
The argument that they are going to fritter away their time on
unemployment insurance until it ends and then they will get serious and
get back to work is nonsense. It is nonsense. The suffering they are
going to face as a result of this is real.
Those are the people in the column who lost today. In the column of
the people who won is Warren Buffett. Based on what he said when he has
come here to lobby us, I will bet you dollars against Dunkin' Donuts
that he is embarrassed to be in the winners column. But he knows that
it is not right, in this great country of ours, for the people who have
been most successful, who have earned financial rewards beyond what
ordinary people can dream of, to be able to pay a lower tax rate than
the regular working people who come to their offices everyday and serve
in their businesses. It is wrong. It is topsy-turvy.
I cannot tell you how discouraging a day it is. First in the real
regular world you would have thought we had won today, 57 votes to 41.
But, no, there is this procedural trick. So because we did not get to
60, we lost. Because we lost, Dan and Bill and Nancy lost. And the
wealthiest people in our country won in a way that embarrasses probably
America's greatest capitalist, Warren Buffett.
I see the majority leader is on the floor. I will inquire to see if
the majority leader desires the floor? If so, I will gladly yield.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader is recognized.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, before the Senator leaves the floor, I so
appreciate his advocacy for the people of Rhode Island, but in speaking
for the people of Rhode Island he is speaking for the people of this
country. We are United States Senators. The States of Rhode Island and
Nevada are having a very difficult time.
As I heard my friend say when manipulation of Wall Street finally
caught up with them, it wrecked our two economies. I have so admired my
friend and his colleague, the other Reed in the Senate, Jack Reed, and
their wonderful presentations explaining that these are not just
numbers that we talk about. These are people who have no jobs.
I was looking at the headlines from the Boston newspaper a few
minutes ago in the cloakroom, after this failed vote. One man said: I
hope politicians understand what I'm going through. My unemployment
benefits will run out in 2 weeks. I have a wife who is working part
time. I have two children. I lost my job 2 years ago.
These are not deadbeats out there looking for a handout. These are
people who are desperate, looking for a job. So I do say to my friend,
I appreciate his speaking--I repeat, not only for the
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people of Rhode Island but for the people of Nevada and the rest of the
country.
Mr. President, I was going to ask consent that we proceed to the
Small Business Lending Fund Program but I have been told by my friends
on the other side of the aisle are not here and they would object
anyway, so there is no need that I propound that request.
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