[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 108 (Wednesday, July 21, 2010)]
[House]
[Pages H5898-H5899]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MANUFACTURING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2009, the gentleman from California (Mr. Garamendi) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Mr. Speaker, thank you very much.
I want to spend this evening talking about manufacturing.
Manufacturing matters. It is the foundation of any solid economy. It is
the one part of the American economy that is seriously hurting, and
with the great recession, the manufacturing sector in America has even
further weakened.
I would like to start this discussion with just a quick review of
what has happened with regard to jobs over the last 3 years.
If you will look here on this diagram, you will notice that,
beginning in 2007, jobs in America slowed down and began to decline, so
much so that, between 2007 and November of 2009, some 700,000 jobs a
month were being lost in the fall and into the early winter of 2009.
When the Obama administration came in, it was at the lowest possible
point of some nearly 800,000 jobs lost in December and January. As the
administration came in, very strong action was taken--the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act in February, which was an effort to move
the economy and to put people back to work.
{time} 1700
It was a major tax cut in that. The largest middle class tax cut ever
was part of that. There was an effort to build roads and streets and
infrastructure, and money was sent to school districts to continue to
employ teachers and to stabilize the American economy. It worked. It
worked, and slowly we saw a decline in the number of jobs that were
lost. We didn't see an immediate growth in jobs. It didn't happen.
It takes a long time to recover from a very serious recession, in
fact, the worst recession since the 1930s. But over the months that
followed, each month, improvement, improvement, improvement, so that
this year we're beginning to see the effects of the efforts of the
Democratic Congress, some Senate help, and the President in turning
around the economy, so that in 2010, in the most recent months, we're
beginning to see job growth. In fact, we've added nearly 600,000 jobs
this year. No longer a decline; stabilization and now job growth.
So with this background, we can begin to understand the efforts that
are being made here in Congress by the Democratic Party and by the
President.
An historic piece of legislation was signed today that deals with the
underlying collapse and the reasons for the collapse of the American
economy and, indeed, the economy of the entire world. Today, around
11:30 today, President Obama signed the Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, a very important law--clearly, the most important
financial regulation law since the 1930s--designed specifically to deal
with the underlying problems that led to the collapse of Wall Street.
Many parts of it, the kinds of excesses and gambling with our money
that took place are going to be history. They're not going to be
allowed under the new law. A consumer protection agency has been put in
place to provide consumers with a place to go with their complaint and
to protect them.
Now, I know about this. I did this for two terms as the insurance
commissioner in California. I know the importance of a consumer
protection agency. We will soon have such an agency in the United
States to help us, as consumers, to make sure that those mortgages are
no longer subprime and hidden costs with hidden resets. All of that is
in law now, as a result of what this Democratic Caucus did, and with
the help of just three Republicans over in the Senate passing the Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
Now, what has been done is good, and I'll talk about some other bills
as we go through this afternoon, but I want also to make it clear that
it is not enough.
[[Page H5899]]
Manufacturing matters. We need to rebuild the manufacturing base of
America. We need to make it in America, and we can. I don't think
there's a person on this floor that doesn't want to walk into a Target
store and find ``Made in America'' labels on everything. We're not
going to get there immediately, but we can sure get there much, much
faster if we pass the correct laws.
Joining me today in this discussion are several of my colleagues from
around the Nation who are going to tell their story and what's
happening in their community. I'd like to start on the far east coast.
Now, I'm a west coast person. I'm from California, but there is another
side to the continent. They'd like to say it's the right side, and
sometimes they call California the left side.
But my colleague from the great State of Pennsylvania would like to
inform us about what's going on in Pennsylvania and, more specifically,
in the Philadelphia area.
I yield to the gentleman.
Mr. FATTAH. I want to thank our leader on this effort of focusing in
on what really matters economically in our country, which is
manufacturing-based jobs. You know, in Philadelphia we have some 1,300
manufacturers, and in your package of bills that I'm very happy to be a
cosponsor of, you focus in on a number of issues: closing foreign tax
loopholes, dealing with the question of mass transit, bus, rail, and
also energy systems.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The gentleman will suspend.
____________________