[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 166 (Wednesday, December 15, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S10274-S10275]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OMNIBUS APPROPRIATIONS
Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, I know the START treaty is going to be
before us soon. I realize we had a motion to proceed to that today. I
think I have indicated a willingness to support the treaty if all the
t's are crossed and the i's are dotted on modernization. I know there
are a number of commitments that are forthcoming from the White House
and other places regarding modernization.
My hope is the same on missile defense. I am very concerned we are
doing this in the middle of an omnibus, which is a 1,924-page omnibus.
I am very concerned about a treaty of this substance, this seriousness,
dealing with nuclear arms, being taken up in such a disconcerted way.
I voted against the motion to proceed. I do hope, as the leaders
indicated, all of those who wish to offer amendments--and I know there
will be a number of serious and thoughtful amendments that matter--will
be heard. I am still skeptical that can be done in an appropriate way.
Again, I think this treaty, with the t's crossed and i's dotted, with
the appropriate time allotted, whether it is now or it ends up being in
February, and if the resolution is not weakened in any way, is still
something I will plan to support. But I am very skeptical we can do
that appropriately during this lameduck session, with this omnibus
before us.
Let me turn to the omnibus because that is what the American people
are most focused on today. I cannot tell you how disappointed I am that
an appropriations bill of this size--one that has an increase in
spending and over 6,000 earmarks--as a matter of fact, I know the Chair
is aware of this because we had a great conversation this morning about
spending. We had a large number of people on the Senate floor yesterday
talking about our concern for fiscal issues. But the bill is 1,924
pages long. These are just the earmarks. These are just the earmarks,
not the bill itself I am holding.
I am stunned that, after the message that was sent during this last
election, Congress will basically say--or many Members--to the American
people: We understand you are very upset and that you have concerns
that are true concerns about the country's fiscal condition. Yet we
don't really care.
Mr. President, it is my hope that what will happen is that saner
heads will prevail and that what we will do is pass a short-term CR--a
continuing resolution, for those who may be listening in and don't know
what that is. That would give us the ability to operate the government
through February or March so that people such as the Presiding Officer,
who was just elected, and myself and others who care so deeply about
the fiscal issues of our country would have the ability to put spending
constraints in place.
I think everyone knows our country faces--and these are not
rhetorical issues--a crisis as it relates to these issues. The world
markets are watching us. I think we have seen our interest rates on our
bonds rise pretty dramatically even since the tax bill came out. And
that was a tough vote for me because, again, in order to create
certainty and to ensure that the economic prosperity of this country
resumed and that we continue on the pace we are on today, I felt it was
important to go ahead and get that behind us.
But I always thought and I hoped--and still do--that what we would
move to very quickly is really driving down spending in relation to our
country's gross domestic output. I have offered an amendment to do just
that, as I did that on the tax bill. I plan to offer the same on this
particular discussion we are having now. But I am unbelievably
disappointed that we would even consider punting the spending issue for
a year. That is what we would be doing. In essence, if this omnibus
bill were to pass, we would be passing a huge spending bill.
Again, let me go back. Typically, appropriations are handled one bill
at a time. There are typically 12 appropriations bills. What happens
when we do that is we are able to pick out wasteful programs here on
the floor and maybe defund those, and we are able to really scrutinize
all of the programs of government, which is what the American people
want us to do. Instead of that--especially in a climate where the
American people almost revolted at the polls, and I know you know this
very well--instead of carefully considering our spending, what we are
being asked to do is to vote on 1 bill that has all 12 of those
appropriations bills packed into it, again with 6,000 earmarks, and we
are asked to vote on that here in the next few days. I think it is
reprehensible, and I say that respectfully.
I know people on our Appropriations Committee have worked together in
a very serious way over the last year. I know they have. And I know the
Appropriations Committee is a committee that probably has the most
bipartisan spirit of any committee in the Senate. So I can understand
their desire to want to finish their work. But it is being done
inappropriately. This is not the way serious people conduct their
business. They take up these bills one at a time. Sometimes there are
two or three, when they are very small appropriations bills, that are
banded together. That is called a ``minibus,'' if you will. But to do
this all at once flies in the face of everything we know to be good
government. All of us know this is not the right way to fund
government.
A much better way for us would be to pass a short-term continuing
resolution bill, as I just mentioned, to kick this down to February or
March and allow us to look at something like the amendment I have
offered where we take spending that is at an alltime high of 24 percent
of our gross domestic product today and over the next 10 years take it
down to our 40-year average of 20.6 percent. Claire McCaskill and I are
cosponsoring, in a bipartisan way, a bill or an amendment--depending on
how it is offered--to do just that, and there may be other things.
We know the deficit reduction commission just spent a tremendous
amount of time--and I know the Presiding Officer has talked personally
to leaders multiple times--they spent a tremendous amount of time this
year looking at what we as a government need to do to be responsible;
to make sure people around the world view our credit as something in
which they are willing to invest; to really make sure that, for these
pages who sit in front of me and who work so hard here, we are not, in
essence, living a life and layering debt upon debt on top of the
balance sheet they will have to deal with.
I cannot believe that, in the atmosphere of just having that report
come forward, having us look at how Draconian the problem is and some
of the tough decisions a courageous Congress would need to make to put
our country back on the right path, we would even consider passing this
massive piece of legislation that, in essence, would kick the can down
the road for a year and basically let the wind out of this momentum
that has been building for us to actually do the right thing. I can't
imagine we would do that.
I know the Chair knows our debt ceiling vote is going to be coming up
soon. It is going to happen sometime in April, maybe May. Maybe it will
drag out as long as the first week in June. That is a vote where we
vote to raise the amount of debt this country can enter into. I know a
lot of people say it is irresponsible not to vote for a debt ceiling
increase because we have already spent the money. It would be like
going out and running up a credit card bill and then not paying it. But
I think it is irresponsible not to act responsibly prior to taking that
vote.
What I am so disappointed in is that a vote on this omnibus bill
before us probably prevents us from going ahead and doing some things
this spring that we know are responsible and will really drive down the
cost of government to an appropriate level.
So I know there is a lot of pressure, probably, in the caucuses--
maybe the caucus on the other side of the aisle that meets at lunch; I
know there is a meeting again tomorrow--I know there is a lot of
pressure to get this out of the way. But I know with every cell of my
body that passing this omnibus right now is absolutely the wrong thing
to do for the country from the
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standpoint of good government, and I absolutely know it is the wrong
thing to do to all of those citizens across this country who became
involved in this.
I know there are people on both sides of the aisle who care deeply
about the future of this country, and I know there are people on both
sides of the aisle who have some commonality as to what the path
forward is in making sure this country lives up to its obligations to
the American citizens, that we don't just live for today. That is what,
by the way, we would be doing by passing this--living for today and
passing on those obligations to the future.
I hope that by the time we take the vote on this bill, it will be
defeated and that people who deeply care about the future of this
country will come together, pass a short-term continuing resolution--
which I think most of us in this body know is the responsible thing to
do--and that we will begin to work after the first of next year, when
this lameduck session ends, doing the things this country needs most,
and that is all of us having the courage to make those cuts and do what
is necessary to get our country back on a sound footing.
Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I thank the Chair for the time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from California.
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