[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 47 (Monday, April 4, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H2289]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                                FAIR TAX

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Renacci). Under the Speaker's announced 
policy of January 5, 2011, the gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Woodall) is 
recognized for 30 minutes.
  Mr. WOODALL. I thank the Speaker.
  I'm glad I was able to get in on the tail end of that previous 
Special Order. As a proud resident of the State of Georgia, of course 
we have the King Center open to folks each and every day of the week. 
And if folks have not had a chance to go by and see that, it is really 
a fantastic testimony to the life and times of a gentleman whose true 
impact on this country we may not know for generations and generations 
to come. I could not be prouder to have that in Georgia, so I very much 
appreciate being able to listen in.
  I, too, am down here to talk about opportunity tonight. It is April 
4, it's tax season, and the Fair Tax is a proposal that is near and 
dear to my heart and a proposal that I believe has its time coming in 
opportunity.
  The largest tax that 80 percent of American families pay, Mr. 
Speaker, is the payroll tax. That's the FICA tax that our teenagers 
begin to see when they take on their part-time jobs. Eighty percent of 
American families pay more in that FICA tax than they do in income 
taxes or any other tax on their ledger, and yet we spend all of our 
time talking about income taxes.

  We rarely take a look at the payroll tax. We'll spend hours on the 
House floor talking about tax credits and tax deductions and tax 
expenditures and tax exemptions. We'll talk about lobbyists and the tax 
opportunities that they're looking for for their big business clients. 
We'll talk about loopholes and all of the unfairness of the United 
States Tax Code, but we rarely talk about the payroll tax.
  It has been my commitment here in this month of April--which is one 
of the few times during the year that everyone is willing to focus on 
taxes for an extended period of time--to come down here and implore my 
colleagues to take a look at the Fair Tax and join us in our fight to 
repeal the income tax--both the personal income tax and the corporate 
income tax--the payroll tax, the capital gains tax, the gift tax, 
dividend tax, estate tax, self-employment tax, and on and on, to 
replace them all with a single-rate personal consumption tax, the Fair 
Tax.
  I was talking with a CEO in my district while I was home who said, 
Rob, we're trying to leave America just as fast as we can. You've 
passed some laws recently that make it a littler harder for us to do 
that, it's going to take us some time, but we're leaving as fast as we 
can because America is just not a climate to do business in anymore.
  We heard my colleagues who spoke previously say that our unemployment 
isn't because people are being fired; it's because new people are not 
being hired, and the folks who generate those jobs are the small 
businesses in this country. How do you generate those jobs when you 
have the highest corporate tax rate in the world, when you have some of 
the highest self-employment taxes in the world, and on and on and on?
  We can do a lot in this country to destroy success. We can't do a lot 
to create success. We have a platform here in this country already on 
which anyone, by the sweat of their brow, can make something of 
themselves. And yet one of the founders of Home Depot--a very proud 
company from the great State of Georgia--wrote in The Wall Street 
Journal last year that if he and his three colleagues got together 
today to try to start that company they would fail, that they could not 
succeed in starting a company in today's business environment, the 
regulatory environment, the labor environment, and the tax environment.
  Here in April I'll be returning to the floor each and every day 
through April 15 to talk about one little part of the Fair Tax. We 
talked a little bit last Friday about how it does away with every 
single corporate exemption on the books--every loophole, every credit, 
every favor, absolutely every one. It's the only bill in Congress that 
does that, Mr. Speaker. It eliminates every single corporate loophole 
in the Tax Code because we know that businesses don't pay taxes anyway. 
We eliminate the corporate income tax, and we allow that to be paid at 
the personal consumer level.
  Tonight, I just want to talk about jobs. I want to talk about that 
jobs don't come from the Federal Government, that jobs don't even come 
from big corporations. Jobs come from small entrepreneurs and risk-
takers.
  The power to tax is the power to destroy, and we have used the power 
to tax income, to tax that productiveness that each and every American 
goes to work for every day. Our Founding Fathers had a different view; 
they taxed consumption. They put tariffs on the goods that they 
imported from overseas under the theory that if you had enough money to 
spend on a silver tea set from England, you had enough money to 
participate in funding your Federal Government.
  That all changed in the early part of the 20th century, and we have 
an opportunity to change it back, H.R. 25, the Fair Tax--the single 
most largely co-sponsored tax bill in either the House or the Senate, 
more cosponsors on that bill than any other piece of fundamental tax 
legislation. We need more help. Today, we have 59 cosponsors of that 
legislation, and we need more help to make the Fair Tax a reality.
  We'll have, over the next 15 days, those opportunities. You can visit 
our Web page at Woodall.house.gov. You can visit the Fair Tax folks' 
Web page at fairtax.org. Come and see what the Fair Tax offers in terms 
of opportunity.
  The current Tax Code brings power to this city. Whether you sit on 
the left or whether you sit on the right, something happens when you 
get to Washington and you suddenly believe you're the smartest person 
in the room, and you begin to find ways to manipulate people's behavior 
in hopes that you can make them happy too.

                              {time}  2120

  Well, I could create a world my father would love and my mother would 
hate.
  We're not in the business of making people happy. We're in the 
business of ensuring opportunity. We can absolutely ensure that 
everyone in this country is poor. We cannot ensure that everyone is 
rich. We can only provide opportunity. The Fair Tax provides that 
opportunity by completely removing the impediments that are there to 
growth today.
  Eighty percent of American families pay more in payroll taxes than 
income taxes. As you fill out your tax forms headed towards April 15, I 
want you to look at that income tax figure. And if you're self-
employed, you'll see the self-employment tax figure there beside it. 
Eighty percent of American families never get touched by a tax bill 
that we do here.
  As we move the Fair Tax forward, we're going to change that, and 
we're going to make America an opportunity society once again.
  With that, Mr. Speaker, I'm grateful to you for indulging me this 
evening to talk a little bit about a passion that's near and dear to my 
heart.
  I yield back the balance of my time.

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