[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 49 (Wednesday, April 6, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2181-S2182]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GOOD FAITH NEGOTIATIONS
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I wish to spend a moment or two talking
about how devastating it would be for our country and for the people of
our country if, in fact, we have a government shutdown.
I represent Maryland, and there are a lot of Federal workers in
Maryland. They are very concerned because it will affect them. A
government shutdown will affect everyone in this country. It will
affect people who depend upon their government being there to serve
them.
If you are depending upon a timely IRS refund check and the
government is shut down and you need that money and are counting on
it--it is your money--you may find out, if the government is shut down,
there is no one to talk to and that check will be delayed.
If you are a person who is entitled to Social Security disability
payments and you have a case that is pending, there will not be people
there to resolve that case and you will have to wait. That could also
very well affect your ability to literally pay your bills.
If you are doing research at NIH--cutting-edge research--which
depends upon the continuity of the work in order to discover the
answers to many of the problems we face in health care, that will be
disrupted if we have a shutdown of the government.
The bottom line is, everyone loses if we have a shutdown of our
governmental body. The taxpayers lose. Study after study shows that a
shutdown of the government will actually cost the taxpayers more money.
It makes no sense at all. Yet there are some in the House who say:
Look, bring on a shutdown. They are not negotiating in good faith. They
are saying it is our way or the highway. Basically, they want to shut
down the government.
We need to negotiate in good faith. It is not going to be what the
Democrats or the Republicans want. That is how the system works. You
have to negotiate in good faith. I know our leaders are doing that. I
urge all of us to understand the consequences of a shutdown and make
sure we take steps to negotiate in good faith and have a budget
agreement completed by Friday of this week.
I want my colleagues to understand why people in my State should be
very concerned about the budget that passed the House of
Representatives--the Republican budget. It would hurt children
[[Page S2182]]
on Head Start. In Maryland, 1,795 children who are on Head Start would
lose their ability to go to that program. You know how important that
is. For students in Maryland, they would find that their Pell grants
would be reduced by almost $700. Women would be hurt by the loss of
essential preventive health services. Families would be at risk with
the lack of enforcement of our regulatory bills that protect us on
public health issues. The list goes on.
It has been estimated that 700,000 jobs would be lost if the House
budget became real. That would jeopardize our recovery. As you know, we
are just starting to see job growth. We certainly don't want to take
counterproductive steps in that recovery.
As we pointed out many times, the budget the House sent over is
concentrating on 12 percent of Federal spending. We need to broaden
this discussion, and we all understand that. It starts with allowing
the political system to work and for us to get together and reach an
agreement for the budget that is already 6 months--we are talking about
the last 6 month's budget.
In Maryland, if the House budget were to pass, Metro would lose $150
million. This is the Nation's transit system. People would find that if
the transit system can't operate, the roads will be more congested and
it will take a lot longer to commute.
My point is this: The House budget--the Republican budget--is not
going to become law. It is not what the Republicans want or what the
Democrats want. We have to come together, and we are doing that. But
let's not allow a minority in the House to tell us we are not going to
let the system work for the best interests of the American people.
I think, though, we should be very concerned about whether this is
part of a plan with the Republicans, when we look at their budget for
next year, the 2012 budget, which was released this week. There are
disturbing signs as to what their intentions are. We saw it with the
budget for this year and now we see that continued for their budget for
next year. They literally want to turn the Medicare system into a
voucher program, where seniors have to rely on private insurance
companies. We tried that before Medicare. In the early 1960s, the
number of seniors who could not get health care insurance was
staggering. Why? Because private insurance companies are not interested
in insuring people who make claims. The older you are, the more you
will make claims on our health care system. If seniors are at the mercy
of private insurance companies, it will be much more expensive for
them, and they will not get adequate protection.
We should all be concerned about the budget that was brought out this
week. The Medicaid system that protects our most vulnerable, our
seniors, who rely, in large part, on the Medicare system to deal with
long-term care and nursing care--the Republican budget would transfer
that to the States with a block grant, making it unlikely to see the
continuation of the program that is critically important, not just to
people who are vulnerable, but if they have to rely on the use of
emergency rooms to get care, it will be more expensive for all of us.
These short-term so-called budget savings will turn into long-term
costs for our country. The Republican budget continues to do these
domestic discretionary cuts--well beyond what we need as a nation to
grow--taking, again, our most vulnerable, those who depend on
government, making a college education more expensive and denying young
people the opportunities they need.
Guess what is missing in the Republican budget. There is no effort to
deal with the revenue problems of America. I say there is a better way
to do this, and there are 64 Senators who have come together and said:
Look, we have to deal with our national debt with a credible budget
plan--a credible budget plan that starts with discretionary spending
cuts, and we all agree to that. We have to reduce military spending and
deal with mandatory spending, but we have to also deal with the revenue
side. Thirty-two Democrats and 32 Republican Senators said that.
The Republican budget in the House doesn't take us down that path. It
is not a credible plan for dealing with the budget deficit that can
pass and be enacted and give confidence not only to the financial
markets in America but around the world and tell the American people it
puts their interests first.
I want my colleagues to understand we don't want to jeopardize the
recovery. We want to get our budget into balance, and we have to get
this year's budget behind us. We have to deal with that. President
Obama is right when he said in the State of the Union Address that we
have to beat our competition. We have to outeducate, outinnovate and
outbuild them and we have to do it in a fiscally responsible way. We
can do that now if we work together and deal with the budget we are
currently in, which ends September 30 of this year, in a fiscally
responsible way. Let's get this done and move on and work together for
the sake of our Nation.
I am convinced that if we work together, we can have a responsible
plan and we certainly should not allow a minority in the House to block
a budget resolution for this year, causing the government shutdown.
That is the worst case for the American people.
I urge my colleagues to continue to work together so we can keep the
government operating, reduce the deficit, and allow America to grow and
compete and meet the challenges of the future.
With that, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. LANDRIEU. 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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