[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 45 (Thursday, March 31, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H2112]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Vermont (Mr. Welch) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WELCH. Madam Speaker, today, I intend to use my 5 minutes to talk
about the budget crisis that is before Congress. We have to make a
decision whether to continue the operations of government. That's the
debate that is now under way with the continuing resolution, and we
soon face the question of whether or not Congress will extend the debt
limit.
Now, let me start by acknowledging the obvious. America has to get
its fiscal house in order. How we got here is debated, but certain
things are indisputable. We have two wars that have been paid for on
the credit card. We had tax cuts that went to the high-income Americans
that are on the credit card. We recently extended them at the cost of
$700 billion to the deficit. We had irresponsible behavior on the part
of Wall Street that required rescuing the financial system in America
so that Main Street could fight and survive another day. And then that
led to a collapse in the economy and 10 percent unemployment that
required governmental action in order to try the stabilize the economy.
We have a long way to go in restoring the economy, but that has to be
our first mission.
The Republican proposal on how to address this budget in these
continuing resolutions will fail. The reason it will fail is because it
fails to do what must obviously be done if we're going to have long-
term fiscal stability, and that is put everything on the table. The
cuts that are proposed by the Republican majority, unwise as they are,
cannot do the job.
The total focus of the Republican effort in its budget plan to
restore fiscal balance is to attack 12\1/2\ percent of the budget, the
non-defense discretionary portion of the budget. It happens to be
programs that are benefiting Americans in many cases, but leaving aside
the debate about whether we should cut low-income heating assistance
for the most vulnerable Americans or cut Pell scholarships that allow
aspiring young people to enter the middle class, we could cut the
entire non-defense discretionary portion of the budget and we could
continue to have an annual deficit of $1 trillion.
So, if we're going to get to budget balance and fiscal stability,
which we can do, we have to put everything on the table, and that means
tax expenditures. The tax breaks that have been written into the Tax
Code over the years by Republicans and Democrats alike actually cost
taxpayers more than the entire appropriations budget, and many of us
are asking the question: Why is it that we are going to be continuing
$5 billion in tax breaks to very profitable oil companies when oil is
now selling at $106 a barrel? Why are we allowing that but at the same
time cutting low-income heating assistance and turning down the
thermostat of cold Vermonters and cold Americans?
{time} 1010
Why is it that hedge fund millionaires and billionaires literally pay
a lower tax rate than their chauffeurs, their drivers, their cooks,
their secretaries?
We have got to put tax expenditures on the table. We have to put the
defense budget on the table. How is it that America is spending over
$700 billion a year? How is it that we are putting two wars on the
credit card and not facing the fiscal responsibility to tell Americans
how we are going to pay for that but are simply putting that burden on
generations of Americans that will come after us?
We have to reform health care. The first act of this Congress was to
repeal the health care bill. And debate as we might about what's the
best way forward on health care, no one can dispute that our first goal
has to be to bring down the cost of health care; because whatever kind
of system we have, if the cost is increasing two and three and four
times the rate of inflation, job growth, and profits, it's not
sustainable. And the health care bill that has been repealed by this
Congress, this House of Representatives, that is going to add over $200
billion to the deficit over 10 years.
So we have to put everything on the table. That's defense. That's tax
expenditures. That's entitlements and how we can reform them so we can
maintain benefits, not slash benefits. And Democrats have to be willing
to come to the table on the traditional line items in the
appropriations bill where we have to kick the tires and find ways to be
responsible. If we do that by putting everything on the table, we have
a chance to be successful and be on a path to fiscal stability and
solvency. Refusing to put everything on the table guarantees failure.
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