[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 49 (Wednesday, April 6, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S2181]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUDGET NEGOTIATIONS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, this budget we have spent so much time
talking about is really about making tough choices, hard choices,
difficult choices. The American people understand this. They understand
tough choices. They have to make them every day, especially now with
the economy being in the shape it is in. So should their
representatives in Congress make tough choices.
We are being honest with ourselves over here. We know we can't get
100 percent of what we want. That is what this negotiation is all
about. That is why this is a negotiation. It is not a winner-take-all
situation.
Democrats have made tough choices because we want to get this
agreement finished. We want it completed. We want to keep the country
running and keep the momentum in the economy that is now creating jobs.
We want to avoid a shutdown and the terrible consequences that would
follow.
The only thing Republicans are trying to avoid is making the tough
choices we need to make. We have been more than reasonable. We have
been more than fair. We meet them halfway, and they say no. We meet
them more than halfway, and they still say no. We meet them all the
way, and they still say no. If Republicans were serious about keeping
the country running, all they would have to do is say yes.
Now we learn House Republicans are going to make another excuse,
create another diversion, and avoid another tough choice. Instead of
solving the crisis the way we should, instead of saying yes, they say,
in fact, what they are going to do is pass what they will call another
short-term stopgap measure. They will say it is short term, but what
that really means is it is a short cut--a short cut around doing our
jobs. Instead of solving problems, they are stalling. They are
procrastinating. That is not just bad policy, it is a fantasy.
We all heard the President of the United States say yesterday that he
won't accept anything short of a full solution. And why should he? We
are 6 months into the fiscal year now. President Obama is right. We
can't keep funding our great country with one stopgap after another.
The United States of America, this great country of ours, shouldn't
have to live paycheck to paycheck. We are not going to give up. We are
going to keep talking and keep trying to find middle ground. The
Speaker and I will go back to the White House tonight in 2 hours and 20
minutes to meet with him again to continue the conversation we have
been having for weeks with this administration.
We know the Republicans are afraid of the tea party. That has been
established. Now it looks as though they are also afraid of making the
tough choices we have to make. But tough choices are what governing is
all about. They are what leadership is all about. It is time for my
friends in the House of Representatives to stop campaigning and start
governing.
And remember what one of the greatest Speakers of all time said. In
fact, he was Speaker three times. He was from the State of Kentucky.
Henry Clay. He was known as the ``great compromiser.'' He said that all
legislation is based on mutual consensus. That is what this is all
about. But remember, let's focus on the word ``mutual.'' It takes both
of us.
Mr. President, it is time to lead.
I note the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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