[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 20 (Wednesday, February 9, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H571-H576]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MAKE IT IN AMERICA
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Denham). Under the Speaker's announced
policy of January 5, 2011, the gentleman from California (Mr.
Garamendi) is recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the minority
leader.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Mr. Speaker, today I rise to discuss what's on every
American's mind, and that is a job. My own family, they're thinking
constantly about will they be able to keep their job, what's going to
happen in the school system, are there going to be layoffs?
I know that in the communities I represent that have very high
unemployment, on the minds of every family is, will there be a job for
me?
Over the last more than 2\1/2\ years now, the Democratic majority,
and now the Democratic minority, has focused on this issue. Like a
laser, our focus was on creating jobs in America. Immediately upon
taking office in 2009, President Obama and the Democratic majority here
in this House put forward the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
That law created, by most every economist's estimate, more than 2
million jobs, or maintained more than 2 million jobs in America. It was
an enormous boost to the American economy. That, together with other
programs that were developed during that period of 2009, stabilized the
American economy. It certainly didn't get us out of the recession, but
it prevented the great depression that could have occurred.
We're now, this year, in 2011, once again focusing, like a laser, on
creating jobs in America. It's the President's intent. He spoke to this
issue here when he spoke to us at the State of the Union. He was across
the street from the White House just 2 days ago talking to the Chamber
of Commerce about this issue of creating jobs, jobs in America. And
this is where we're coming from. If America's going to make it, we're
going to have to make it in America. Great examples of this are once
again being seen. I see that my colleague from Detroit is here, and if
he would care to join us in a few moments, we'll be talking about a
very unique advertisement that occurred at the Super Bowl, one in which
Imported from Detroit is now the message across America. It's not that
Chrysler disappeared; it's actually that Chrysler continues to exist,
along with General Motors, because the Obama administration and the
Democrats here in the Congress reached out and gave a boost up for
those two great American corporations. And today they continue, they
continue to produce jobs in America because they are making cars in
America. So our theme is Make It in America. There's a whole series of
policies that are encompassed in this schematic of Make It in America,
so that America can make it.
[[Page H572]]
Trade policies. We're all for trade. We think it's an extremely
important element in growing jobs and growing the economy. But it has
to be fair trade. And when we look to countries such as China, we
question whether indeed it is fair trade.
The Democrats in this House last year--and we will try once again
this year to pass a currency reform piece of legislation that would
force the Department of Commerce to take into account the unfair
currency manipulation that China is engaged in. Economists estimate
that it's perhaps 40 percent undervalued. Who can compete against that?
Not very many. And therefore, we see goods flowing into America and
America cash flowing into China.
Tax policy, extremely important. Last year, without the help of any
of our Republican colleagues, we passed legislation that became law
that ended a $12 billion a year tax break for American corporations
that are shipping jobs offshore. What was that all about? You mean to
tell me that American corporations actually got a reduction in their
taxes when they shipped jobs offshore? Yes, they did. But not anymore,
because of the Democratic determination to keep jobs in America.
Energy policy, labor policy, education policy, intellectual property,
infrastructure. All of these elements, all seven of these elements, are
key ingredients in creating jobs in America.
You can hear some people say, well, it's all about the private
sector; just let the private sector go and there will be plenty of
jobs. It doesn't happen, never happened. You can go back into the
history of this Nation, and it's always been solid, good public policy
connected to the private sector that created the great surges in the
American economy.
Take, for example, the railroads in America in the 19th century. In
the mid-1800s, during the great Civil War, a bill was passed here in
Congress signed by President Abraham Lincoln that did two things. That
piece of legislation created the intercontinental rail system by giving
government land to the rail companies so that they would be encouraged
to build those intercontinental railroads.
The second bill that was passed created the research, and that's the
intellectual side of this, and that's the land grant institutions. We
must continue that long history of America, private sector working in
concert with public policy to create jobs in America. And that's what
we want to do with our Make It in America program that creates strong
middle class jobs.
I'd like now to turn to my colleague from the great state of Ohio,
Marcy Kaptur. If you would join us and tell us what's happening in the
great industrial belt of America that we intend to rebuild.
Ms. KAPTUR. Congressman Garamendi, I want to thank you for your
leadership. You are such an addition to this Congress. The people of
California certainly made the right decision in sending you here.
And you know, this happens to be the week of the Super Bowl. And as
we think about America as a super Nation, with made in America at the
heart of our economic prowess, the big winner in the Super Bowl this
year was actually the commercial by Chrysler Corporation for its
innovative 2-minute spot featuring the Chrysler 200, to the soundtrack
of Detroiter and rap artist Eminem. The commercial is really a
celebration of the greatness of Detroit and the resilience of this
incredible, incredible city.
{time} 1420
Mr. GARAMENDI. If you would be so kind as to yield. I notice that
Representative Clarke just arrived, new to Congress, not new to
Detroit. And what's going on in Detroit? Should I import my car from
Tokyo or from Detroit?
Mr. CLARKE of Michigan. Absolutely not from Tokyo, definitely from
Detroit. I want to thank you so much, Representative Garamendi, for
making it a priority that we make it in America.
Yesterday I did talk about the great TV ad that was aired during the
Super Bowl where the rapper Eminem highlighted the grittiness and
ingenuity of Detroiters that have given us the ability to make some of
the finest vehicles in the world. And I also mentioned how that spirit
of Detroit is really rooted in American values, those values that
cherish our God-given rights, to life, to liberty, to the pursuit of
happiness.
I'm not just bringing these up as a constitutional exercise or as a
discussion of American history. If you don't mind, I would like to
share with you; this is really about my dad. My dad would be 100 years
old if he were living today.
Back during the 1930s, during the Great Depression, he risked
everything to emigrate to the U.S. from India. He risked everything to
come over here, and he was attracted to Detroit so he could get a
chance to build cars in the Ford foundry.
The heart that he brought to his job was the same heart that
transformed the city of Detroit into the arsenal of democracy that
helped save this country and save this world from fascism. And as I
mentioned, it's that same heart that I believe will restore financial
prosperity to our country and financial security to American families
if we make it in America, because we've got the insight, we've got the
hard work, we have the research and the capability to build those cars
that are going to be powered by electricity, to help build those homes
and those buildings that will be heated by the sun, and to manufacture
the best products in the world that will provide economic stability to
our country but also provide prosperity to the world.
There are many people here watching us whose family came here to this
country because they had a dream. There are others, like my mother's
people, who came to this country against their will. But either way,
when you come to America, you have the right to have an opportunity to
pursue happiness, whether it's happiness of having the peace of mind of
being comfortable here or enjoying the excitement of pursuing your own
personal ambition.
The pursuit of happiness in this country means that all of us have
the opportunity to live our life as full as we choose it. And, you see,
that opportunity to really use our intellect, our mind, our body and
our spirit, that's what makes American manufacturing the most
extraordinary achievement of modern civilization, because American
manufacturing is not just about cheapening costs or taking someone's
technology. It's about harnessing the genius that's within all of us.
It's about unleashing the ingenuity that's inherent in humankind.
So that's why I urge this Congress, when we consider these policies
right here on the board, whether it's who to trade with, who to train,
how to tax, that we do all of this to focus on making it in America.
Because when we do that, we can truly have enduring prosperity for all
Americans and American families, and right now, our families are
feeling so insecure. The answer is in our roots. It's in American
manufacturing.
When we make it in Detroit, we make it in America.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Thank you very much, Representative Clarke. Your
passion for this issue was well displayed in that Detroit Chrysler
advertisement.
And I would just point out, before I turn back to Ms. Kaptur, that
Chrysler and General Motors were saved as an American manufacturing
icon by policies of President Barack Obama. It was his policies,
supported by the Democrats in the House and the Senate, that allowed
for the support that those two corporations needed to reinvent
themselves so that there could be jobs in America.
Now, Ms. Kaptur, you come from an area where manufacturing has been,
really, the essence of the economy for a long time, and you have been
supporting legislation and introducing legislation. Could you share
with us those things that you are working on now and the legislation
that you are pushing through this House?
Ms. KAPTUR. Yes.
First of all, let me just say, Congressman Garamendi, it is such a
joy to have Congressman Clarke here from the wonderful city of Detroit.
I really loved that commercial because I think it captured the struggle
of our country through the lens of Detroit and, I might say, Toledo,
just a few minutes south of Detroit. It talked about how the city had
been to hell and back, and the trials and tribulations that
manufacturing in our region has really experienced over the last
quarter century.
[[Page H573]]
There is, without a doubt, as Congressman Clarke says, that Detroit
was the arsenal of democracy, and it still is. All along I-75, from
Detroit down through Toledo, that as you take it down through Ohio and
into the areas south, the automobiles, the tanks, all of our overland
vehicles, the expeditionary fighting vehicle for the Marine Corps, all
of that, the Warren Tank Command, is all along that region.
In Toledo, I have to brag a little bit, my hometown, that toddlin'
town, still is, for all intents and purposes, home to the Jeep, the
general purpose vehicle for which General Marshall ordered production
for our troops in the European and Pacific theaters and we won the war.
Rosie the Riveter, she had presence in Toledo, Ohio, at places like
Champion Spark Plug where our mom worked, or at then Kaiser Jeep
Corporation from which our father retired.
One of the most important challenges we have in this Congress is to
have patriotic capitalism, to reward investment in America through our
tax code. Not to let outsourcing win, but to let insourcing win, in the
way we look at the books here at the national level.
In addition to that, I have a bill to renegotiate NAFTA; because back
in 1993, NAFTA gave the green light to globalization and outsourcing,
and every other trade agreement that has come down the pike has
outsourced more jobs than insourced jobs for us. We got away from
making it in America, and in sector after sector, closed markets in
Japan, in China, in South Korea snuffed out production here as their
production grew. But it has reached a breaking point. It has reached a
breaking point in our country.
We have had to, through defense legislation we passed, saved the
strategic metals industry, beryllium, titanium, magnesium, all of these
important metals, both in defense as well as in the commercial
industrial sector we could lose to other places. Our ability to do
machine tooling, that was one of the first fights I had in here in the
President's investment tax credit for investment in the United States
to save the tooling, which is located within 300 miles of Detroit and
Toledo. That's what America has. Is it any wonder that unemployment is
9 percent when you have these wacko trade deals that outsource more
jobs?
The one bill I haven't mentioned, which is short-term, but we have so
many people who are long-term unemployed.
This morning I asked Chairman Bernanke from the Federal Reserve, what
do we do with people that want to work in Detroit, in Toledo, in places
across this country? And he basically answered the question. I said,
``Please give us your suggestions.'' And he said, ``Well, you know, we
ought to tie unemployment compensation to somehow job training so
people can be retooled back into the workforce in a very productive
way, because I think we could lose the value of the work ethic
itself.''
So the issue of training, the issue of education is a very important
one, Congressman Garamendi, that you have well outlined there.
Mr. GARAMENDI. If I might interrupt for just a second and pick up on
that subject of education. We are now, in this Chamber on this floor in
Congress and the Senate, engaging in a debate about how the Federal
Government can support these critical educational investments. The
proposal that we anticipate being made tomorrow by our Republican
colleagues would significantly reduce the funding for the workforce
investment boards across the Nation. These are local organizations put
together in counties and cities to support reeducating workers who have
been laid off from jobs that have gone offshore. Those educational
programs, career educational, vocational education programs are crucial
to upgrade the skills of our current workforce and the workforce of
tomorrow.
So as we go through this debate about deficits versus taxes versus
cuts, we need to keep in mind the critical investments that are made
every year, and have been for decades, by the Federal Government to
support things like education.
{time} 1430
Without education, which is the most crucial of all investments, this
Nation cannot compete. So the point you brought up, Ms. Kaptur, is so
critically important that the reeducation, the upgrading of skills and
the support, I would add, from the Federal Government is going to be
debated here.
So watch carefully, America. Watch carefully what is happening here
in Congress, and make sure that you participate in this debate. It is
not just about balancing the budget; it is about giving Americans the
opportunity to get a job, in this case education.
Thank you for allowing me to interrupt.
Ms. KAPTUR. Oh, it is my privilege. I wanted to reinforce what you
were saying about education and the Workforce Investment Act. In the
counties that I represent, whether it is the Source in Lucas County or
One Shop Stopping in Ottawa County, every single county has workforce
investment boards that try to connect to our community colleges and
institutions beyond high school in order to help people transition into
education, as well as those who fall out of the workforce and have to
retool.
I was shocked to hear today that on the other side of the aisle, they
can't bring up a bill to extend trade adjustment assistance to workers
who have been booted out of their jobs because their companies moved to
Mexico or to Korea or to China and workers are thrown out of work. That
program expires February 13, and they were not able to bring up a bill
to extend that for the millions of people across our country who have
lost their jobs in manufacturing because they moved abroad. I just
think that that is simply unconscionable.
I say to the gentleman that the important issue of linking our
community colleges, our apprenticeship programs, our university
programs, our GED programs to help people move into, and, frankly, many
of our small business programs, to help people move into the private
sector is something that is so vitally needed and cannot be done in
this economy in areas of high unemployment without the Federal
Government partnering with them.
Mr. GARAMENDI. I know that you have spent much time on energy policy
issues. It is a critical issue for the Nation's security. It is an
issue that really speaks not only to climate change, which some people
believe isn't real, but I happen to think it is a fundamental problem
facing us and future generations.
But even if you are not into climate change, you have to be aware
that we have a very serious energy security issue in the United States,
one that really puts our Nation at risk. At any moment we could see the
shutdown of the flow of oil from one or another part of the world and,
bam, we have got a crisis in America.
We also know that we are shipping off to countries, many of whom are
not our friends, $1 billion a day; $1 billion a day of hard-earned
American money is flowing offshore as oil from the petro-dictators of
the world flows into our country.
So the American energy policy is of profound importance; and all
across this Nation, and you have spoken to this also in the past, all
across this Nation people are saying, we need an American energy policy
that brings our energy sources onshore and gives us the opportunity to
capture the green technologies of the future. Solar, solar-wind, solar-
photovoltaic, solar-thermal systems, nuclear, all of these potential
energy sources, biofuels, are out there in the future for us if we
aggressively put in place the public policies that support the creation
of these new technologies and the production of those machines, of
those solar systems, of those wind turbines, of those advanced
biofuels, produce them, manufacture them in America.
Now, I think you were telling me that in your area there is an effort
to build some of these pieces of equipment. Could you share with us
what is happening in Ohio?
Ms. KAPTUR. For 25 years we have been trying to give birth to the
solar sector, and the Toledo region, northern Ohio, is home to one of
the three solar platforms on the continent.
People go, well, but you don't live in California. I said, no, but I
historically represent the glass industry, which advanced into the
photovoltaic industry. So the hottest act on Wall Street a couple of
years ago was First Solar. A
[[Page H574]]
company called Xunlight is about to send out its first shipment to
Italy this spring. We have other companies, like Kelsey-Hayes, that are
in the process of bringing up their factory floors. There is
Nextronics, one of the solar inverter companies that is hiring and
looking for financing to expand their operation. There are many
companies that didn't exist 25 years ago when we started. So I actually
have seen what is happening.
But my fear, my fear is that the intellectual property will be
stolen; that it will be no different than the automotive industry; that
you can't staple it down; that we have to have a balanced trade policy
and very tough intellectual property protections. I see your
intellectual property proposal up there. I completely agree with that,
because if they take our property, our intellectual property, we lose
our ability to continue to manufacture and be suppliers globally.
So I wanted to say, Congressman Garamendi, you referenced oil. People
say, well, why should we incentivize solar and hydrogen and biofuels
and all these sectors, as if we weren't subsidizing the petroleum
industry by allowing them to book their royalties or not book their
royalties and be charged taxes, as though our entire military
establishment wasn't deployed around the globe in order to protect
those sea lanes so that petroleum can get in here for refining.
We have to realize we are already subsidizing a sector that is going
to be more diminished as this 21st century moves forward. So either you
live in the shell of the past, or you break out of it and create a
whole new independent America, again, from an energy standpoint; and
that is why we need to move.
Mr. GARAMENDI. But let me just add a couple of things. You hit one of
my hot buttons there. I am on the House Armed Services Committee, and I
asked, how much money do we spend protecting the flow of oil? Well, the
Department of Defense didn't come up with an answer, but Rand
Corporation, one of the consulting firms, said, I think we can do that.
They came back with a number that is about 15 percent of the total
defense budget. So we are talking over $100 billion a year to protect
the flow of oil. That is in addition to the $1 billion a day, which is
almost what, $365 billion, that we are also sending overseas. So we are
looking at somewhere near half a trillion dollars a year because we
are, as you said, stuck in the last two centuries' energy policy.
Now, here in this Chamber just a couple of weeks ago standing behind
me was the President of the United States; and when he said we should
end the subsidies we are giving to oil companies and transfer those
subsidies to the energy of the future, the green technologies, I stood
up and cheered. My friend, I guess it was my date for the night, is
that the word, my date for the night, a good Republican, kind of stood
up and clapped his hands, because he is a moderate Republican.
But, nonetheless, it is really true. It is billions and billions of
dollars a year that we are subsidizing a very successful industry. We
don't need to do that. They don't need our subsidy. They are the
richest industry in the world. Fine, end the subsidies, bring that
money back and put it into the green energy so that in your area your
solar voltaic manufacturers will have the opportunity.
I am going to add just one thing here and keep this microphone for a
second. At this moment, tomorrow the House Republicans will put forth
their budget which calls for, we anticipate, I hope I am wrong, I will
be happy to apologize tomorrow if I am wrong, but it is anticipated
that their proposal will terminate many of the tax breaks that are
given to encourage solar, wind, photovoltaic, advanced biofuels, all of
those new green energy technologies. I hope I am wrong. I really hope I
am wrong, because how else can we build our future energy security
unless we create the new energy sources? And if we fail, those jobs
will be created overseas and we will import.
{time} 1440
Ms. KAPTUR. Will the gentleman be kind enough to yield?
Mr. GARAMENDI. I yield to the gentlewoman from Ohio.
Ms. KAPTUR. You know, there are some people that live in the past and
there are others that are involved in inventing the future. And when
you have the major trade deficit category ``imported petroleum,'' and
you have marines and soldiers dying all over the world to protect that,
pretty soon you begin to think, You know what? This picture has to
change.
Every time our country's gas prices go up over $4 a gallon, we go
into deep, deep recession. We are trying to crawl out of one just now.
And in 2007-2008, gas prices went over $4 a gallon. People forget that.
The mortgage foreclosure crisis followed that. But the point was it
happened to us again. How many times do our people have to suffer
before we realize the source of the problem?
And I had a great experience. I had to go back to the University of
Wisconsin, my alma mater, and I gave a commencement address a few weeks
ago. It was not a bad speech. It was a pretty good speech. But one of
the lines I used was: And America just simply must grasp the future and
restore our energy independence. That was the loudest applause I got in
this massive audience. And I thought, The American people know it. They
know it. We have to do it. We have to make it happen.
Mr. GARAMENDI. The people of America understand that our future lies
in a secure energy source.
I'm carrying two bills this year that I actually introduced last
year.
I'm going to say good-bye to my good friend from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur).
Thank you so very much for joining us.
I introduced two bills last year that deal with this issue. Our tax
money has, in the past, been used to buy photovoltaic cell systems for
houses and businesses, wind turbines, and other green energy equipment
that is manufactured offshore so that our tax money is actually used to
subsidize businesses and manufacturing that is in other parts of the
world. And I'm going, What sense is that? Let's use our tax money to
help American businesses who manufacture wind turbines here in America.
In my own district we have two major wind farms, huge operations,
producing enormous amounts of power. However, many of those turbines in
recent years--and great steel towers, 400 feet high--are made overseas.
And yet our tax money subsidizes the importation of the steel towers,
the importation of the turbines, and all of the equipment that goes
with it. And I say, Time out. Time out. This makes no sense at all.
So, one of the bills that I've introduce simply says that if you want
to take advantage of a Federal tax subsidy--which I hope will continue
in the future--to put a photovoltaic system on your roof, to install a
wind turbine, to do advanced biofuels, or to build a solar thermal
system out in the deserts in the West, then it must be American-made
equipment. No more buying offshore equipment using our tax dollars.
Now, you want to use your own money? I don't care where you get that
photovoltaic system or that wind turbine. But if you're using American
tax dollars, it must be made in America.
The other piece of legislation is similar. In my own district, one of
the transit districts that buys buses and moves people around decided
that they needed new buses. Well and good. They're using the local tax
dollars. They're using some Federal tax dollars from the gasoline and
diesel tax, excise tax that all of us pay when we buy a gallon of gas.
It's 18.4 cents. If you're buying diesel, it's 24.4 cents for every
gallon you buy. Much of that money goes into building and maintaining
our roads. Good. About $3 billion of it a year goes into buying buses
and trains and supporting public transportation. Good.
I asked him, Where's the bus being made? Oh, we got a wonderful bus
built in Belgium. And I go, No. Don't you understand that in the San
Francisco Bay area, one of the very few bus manufacturing areas left in
your own area, people who commute on your buses work in that factory,
and you're buying a bus from Belgium rather than buying a locally made
bus that is just as good?
They said, Well, we like the size of the back window.
There ought to be a law. There ought to be a law that if it's our tax
dollars that are being used to buy equipment--buses, trains, planes,
whatever--it must be made in America. After all, how can we create and
reestablish the great manufacturing sector of America if we simply
export our dollars and get
[[Page H575]]
a bus--good bus, no doubt about it, has a nice back window--but it's
not made in America?
I am very thankful that this Congress, in passing the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act, known as the stimulus bill, put in a
provision concerning high-speed rail. Since 1988, when I was in the
California Legislature, and together with my colleague here, Jim Costa,
we offered legislation then that established the High-Speed Rail
Commission in California. We're patient people. It was 23 years ago.
But in the Recovery Act there's money for high-speed rail and a
provision that says that this money can only be spent on equipment
manufactured in America. Good. Wonderful. That's the kind of law we
need. We need to support American manufacturers.
Now, they don't build high-speed rail systems in America. They're
built in China. They're built in Japan. They're built in the European
countries. Good for them. But if they want part of this action, if they
want to build the train sets or other pieces of the equipment, then
establish your manufacturing plant in America. Come to America.
And I'll note--and I've seen it in the full-page advertisements in
Roll Call and Politico--some of these companies are advertising, We'll
make it in America. Excellent. Here's where public policy intersects
with the private sector to create good middle class manufacturing jobs
in America. It's the public policy that sets the stage. Let the
businesses go out and build it; but remember, it's public policy.
I'm looking for one of my friends who's supposed to join us here from
Iowa, and he may show up, but I want to go back through this again.
These are critical public policies that affect the manufacturing sector
in America. Trade policies. Fair trade, free trade. There's a
difference. It's easy to harm--and Ms. Kaptur talked about this
earlier--to harm American workers with trade policies that allow jobs
to be shipped offshore without an opportunity for American
manufacturers to participate here at home.
Also, this is an issue of currency policy. China. Many people,
including me, believe--and economists believe--that China's currency is
undervalued by as much as 40 percent. Who's going to be able to compete
with China when that kind of currency policy is in place? So we passed
a bill here--it didn't pass the Senate; it's being reintroduced and
hopefully will go to the Senate and to the President--that forces the
Department of Commerce to institute a tariff when these kinds of
currency policies persist.
Taxes. We talked earlier about the tax policy of ending tax subsidies
for American corporations that ship jobs offshore. That's done. In the
tax bill of last year was another incentive for big businesses and
small businesses to invest in capital equipment now. It's the law.
Capital equipment purchased by a business this year and the last 3
months of 2010 can be written off against profits in the first year;
that is, the year in which it is invested. An enormous encouragement to
businesses in America to invest in American capital equipment that
creates jobs down the way.
I just heard from some farmers in my district that they're out buying
irrigation systems, replacing pumps, irrigation pipe, and other kinds
of systems because they want to take advantage of that tax law. And so
they are encouraging the production of those facilities. We just talked
about energy policy at length here, and there's much more to discuss on
energy.
The labor issues. We must have a well-educated labor force, and that
ties into education. The most fundamental of all investments is
education. If we don't have a well-educated workforce, one that's
prepared to compete in every sector, this Nation will not be able to
compete. So if we want to make it in America, we have got to make sure
that our current labor force is trained and retrained to take the new
jobs that are going to be created; and for tomorrow's labor force, the
men and women that are in school today, that they have the very best
education.
It's not happening. This is a great tragedy in America. We are not
adequately educating our children. It is a very serious problem. It's
pervasive. And in the discussions in this House, in the committees over
the next month and a half, this issue is going to come back many, many
times as the effort to cut the Federal budget in education goes
forward.
I will add that, in the education sector, for those that are in
higher education, a very, very important bill passed the Congress,
again, without Republican support, signed into law by the President,
that would end the subsidy given to private banks to run the student
loan programs.
{time} 1450
Those subsidies are over. The money is plowed back into the student
loans, increasing the availability of student loans and decreasing the
interest rates on student loans--a wise policy that creates a much more
efficient Student Loan Program for kids that are in the higher
education system.
Discussed by my colleague Marcy Kaptur was intellectual property,
which is critically important in California with the high-tech
industries--the computer industry and the like.
Then this last one down here, infrastructure, is profoundly
important. America moves on infrastructure. It moves on streets and
highways, on rails and airlines, and in airports. All of those
infrastructure systems are financed, in part, by local governments, by
State governments, and by the Federal Government.
One of the very first actions taken in the new 112th Congress was a
rule from the Rules Committee that would significantly reduce the
availability of money for infrastructure. Once again, as we begin to
debate the expenditure, tax and deficit issue, this issue will come
back.
So, for Americans, please listen. Listen to what is happening in
Washington with regard to the budget issues.
It's not just cut and slash and burn. It's what is the money being
used for. What are we using the money for? Are we using it to build our
roads, to build our transportation, to build our infrastructure, our
water systems, our levee protection/flood protection systems, or are we
using it in some wasteful way?
If it's wasteful, don't do it. But if it's a critical investment,
what happens if we don't make that investment? What happens if we don't
educate our kids? What happens if we don't build the water system or
the sanitation system? We have to think about what happens if we don't
make these investments.
We also have to think about what happens when we invest over $100
billion a year to fight a war in Afghanistan. Do you want to make a
cut? I'll tell you where I'll cut. I'll cut right there. Over $100
billion. What if we took that money, left some in Afghanistan for
economic/social development, focused like a laser on the terrorist
organizations--some there, some in Pakistan, some in Yemen, some in
Somalia, and some in America--but got our military out of Afghanistan
and brought that money home and invested in our own infrastructure.
Personally, for me, I live in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta. We
are dependent upon the levees for flood protection, so we go to the
Army Corps of Engineers and say, We need to have these systems
designed.
Well, we can't do it right now.
Why can't you do it right now?
We don't have the personnel.
Where are the personnel?
Well, they're building things in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Okay, life's about choices.
On this floor, this Congress is going to make some really serious
choices in the weeks ahead. Those choices are going to be before us. As
this issue of the deficit and as this issue of budget cuts come into
focus, what will be cut?
Pay attention to this: When we do a tax policy that gives a $750
billion tax break to the wealthiest 1 percent of Americans, don't come
back to this floor and tell me that that's a good thing but a bad thing
to educate our children. When we are on this floor and we want to spend
$100 billion or more fighting what will ultimately be an unsuccessful
war in Afghanistan but then tell me that we cannot build our
infrastructure to protect our people from floods or that we cannot
build our transportation system, it's about choices.
It's about choices, and we're going to make those choices here on
this floor.
Over the next several weeks and months ahead, I can guarantee you
that the Democratic minority in this
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House will be talking about this issue of Make It In America, because
if America is going to make it, we have to once again make it in
America. We have to make sure that General Motors and Ford--the great
manufacturing sector of America--is strong and vibrant and that it has
the support it needs, that it has the Federal policies in place that
support those manufacturing jobs so that it no longer puts American
manufacturing at a disadvantage.
So stay tuned. This is going to be a constant thematic that we will
be carrying in the weeks ahead because we are determined that the
Federal policies will support making it in America.
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