[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 53 (Tuesday, April 12, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2366-S2367]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
A MORAL BUDGET
Mr. REID. Madam President, I am always moved to hear the Pledge of
Allegiance that marks the beginning of a new legislative day in the
Senate. On the 150th anniversary of the beginning of the Civil War, the
words ``one nation, indivisible'' mean more today than most other days.
Along with Chaplain Black's inspired invocation, the pledge motivates
us and reminds us of the true purpose of our work. Together, they
recall our responsibility to our country, to our countrymen, and to our
conscience.
I am particularly pleased to see the Senate open this morning. As we
all know, last week at this time, even as recently as just a few
evenings ago, whether the government would stay open was a very real
question. As I said here late on Friday night, I am pleased we reached
an agreement on a budget in time to keep the country operating.
I am pleased that the budget will make historic cuts, saving the
country money so we can lower our deficit and do a better job of living
within our meanings.
At the beginning of this debate and throughout the last few weeks, I
reminded the Senate that in this negotiation, as in any negotiation,
neither side would get everything they wanted. From the start I also
expressed my firm belief that what we cut would always be more
important than how much. That is because our Nation's budget is a
representation of our values and of what we value. It is one of the
many ways we demonstrate as a Congress and a country what matters most
to us, what is important. This concept is not unique to Democrats.
As the Speaker of the House and the chairman of the House Budget
Committee have both said, our budget is a moral document.
Those following the budget debate have noticed something
unmistakable. While both parties may agree in principle that a budget
is more than simply a collection of numbers, our positions couldn't be
more different. We stayed true to our values. We value the rights of
Americans to afford a healthy life. That is why we passed historic
health reform last year, but Republicans tried to use the budget to
repeal those rights. We stayed true to our values, and we didn't let
them.
We value women's health, but Republicans tried to use the budget to
make it harder for women to get contraception that reduces abortions.
Their budget also tried to make it harder for women to get cancer
screenings, and they even tried to slash funding for cancer research.
We stayed true to our values and we didn't let them.
We also value seniors' ability to support themselves, but Republicans
tried to use the budget to slice the Social Security Administration.
That would have meant delays for seniors and disabled Americans who
count on the benefits they have earned over a lifetime of hard work.
They also tried to use the budget to reopen the doughnut hole which
would have sent seniors' prescription drugs skyrocketing. We stayed
true to our values; we didn't let them.
We value our children's education, but Republicans tried to use the
budget to kick little boys and girls out of prekindergarten programs
and slash Pell grants that help so many students afford college. We
stayed true to our values and we didn't let them.
We value our environment, but Republicans tried to use the budget to
give polluters a free pass to poison the air we breathe. We stayed true
to our values and we didn't let them. We value our economic security,
but Republicans tried to repeal the promise we made to taxpayers that
they will never again be asked to bail out a big bank when the bank
loses its risky bets. They tried to use the budget to reverse rules we
put in place to hold Wall Street accountable. We stayed true to our
values and we didn't let them.
Finally, we value our responsibility to create jobs, but Republicans
also tried to use the budget to reverse the momentum we have seen in
recent months. The policies they tried to jam through the budget would
have cost us
[[Page S2367]]
700,000 jobs and slammed the breaks on our economic growth. We stayed
true to our values and we didn't let them.
There are many more examples in this vast budget, examples of
programs Republicans wanted to destroy but Democrats demanded we
protect. There are many examples where they wanted to cut recklessly
and we insisted on cutting responsibly. Throughout this debate, we
stayed true to our values. The American people noticed, and they are
glad we did. By clear majorities our constituents are glad we stood up
for health reform, women's health, cleaner air, and on and on.
This budget battle has once again illustrated for the American people
the fundamental differences between the two parties. In some cases our
priorities are poles apart. That is obvious to the American people, as
well it should be. They are the ones who will always decide whether the
morals of their representatives more closely match their own.
As we work toward finalizing this year's budget, we start the
conversation about next year's budget, and we engage in the many other
debates before us, Democrats will continue to insist on policies that
reflect and respect our values.
I ask unanimous consent that my time be charged against leader time
and not morning business.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
The Senator from Oregon is recognized.
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