[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 55 (Thursday, April 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H2815-H2851]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2012
The Committee resumed its sitting.
The Acting CHAIR. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Maryland.
[[Page H2816]]
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished ranking member
of the Education and Workforce Committee, the gentleman from California
(Mr. Miller).
(Mr. GEORGE MILLER of California asked and was given permission to
revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. GEORGE MILLER of California. Mr. Chairman, we've been hearing for
days about how the House Republican budget is courageous and bold. But
this budget is neither courageous nor bold. It's not courageous to
throw poor kids out of their Head Start classrooms but continue
subsidies to Big Oil and their record profits.
It's not bold to slash Pell Grant scholarships to millions of
students and to keep the incentives for companies that ship jobs
overseas.
It's not bold nor smart to slash funds for new clean energy research
and make future generations of Americans more dependent, not less, on
dictators and dangerous fossil fuels.
And it's neither bold nor courageous to end Medicare for seniors,
shifting thousands of dollars of costs onto the backs of the elderly to
pay for tax cuts for millionaires and billionaires.
For 45 years, seniors have relied on Medicare to provide health care
during their retirement years. The Republican budget would end that
guarantee. Seniors would no longer be guaranteed the coverage for basic
health services like diabetes and cancer screenings. Instead, seniors
would have to scrounge to find higher cost private health policies.
What insurance company is going to write an individual policy for a 70-
year-old that is even remotely affordable?
Because of these high costs, more and more seniors will go into debt
under this plan. They will be forced to sell their homes and rely on
their children to pay for basic medical costs. That is not a dignified
retirement. That is not America.
Yes, we need to ensure that Medicare is sustainable for seniors and
sustainable for the taxpayers. But one thing is certain--the Republican
budget does not save Medicare; it ends it.
Mr. Chairman, this budget is not bold, and it's not courageous. It
might be easy for the Republicans to make cuts on the backs of those
who can't afford high-priced lobbyists. But it is not easy for the
middle class working people and seniors on whose back the burden is
being placed.
The Democratic budget is a fair and balanced approach, and it asks
all Americans to share in the burdens in reducing the deficit and the
debt and strengthening our economy.
I urge my colleagues to vote down the Republican budget to end
Medicare and to vote for the Democratic budget that is fair and
balanced.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the senior
Member from Indiana (Mr. Pence).
(Mr. PENCE asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. PENCE. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
This country's in a lot of trouble. We're facing a fiscal crisis of
unprecedented proportions. They say the first step toward ending an
addiction is recognizing you're an addict. After spending 10 years here
in Washington, D.C., after witnessing runaway Federal spending by both
political parties, one thing is clear: Washington, D.C., is addicted to
spending.
It's high time for Congress to own up to its spending addiction and
institute long-term, sustainable budget and spending reforms that will
permanently limit the size and scope of the Federal Government.
Happily, the budget resolution today offered by the distinguished
Chairman Paul Ryan of the committee puts our Nation back on a pathway
toward fiscal solvency and prosperity. This Republican budget
represents a bold step toward fiscal responsibility and limited
government. It cuts $6.2 trillion in spending over the next 10 years,
reins in government spending below 20 percent, includes tax reforms to
increase competitiveness for American companies, and ensures that
Medicare will be solvent for future retirees.
It even ends the one-size-fits-all approach to Medicaid, giving
States more flexibility.
It also stands in stark contrast to the President's budget, which
includes a $1.6 trillion tax increase on families, small businesses,
and family farms, and adds $13 trillion to the national debt. This
budget resolution renews our commitment to finally forcing Congress to
live within our means. We must succeed in this cause. Because if we
fail, the American Dream will fail.
We will burden our children and our grandchildren with a mountain
range of debt, robbing opportunities and prosperity, and leaving, for
the first time in American history, the next American generation worse
off than the generation that went before.
This we must not do. I urge my colleagues to offer strong support for
the Ryan budget resolution. Let's put our Nation on a pathway toward
fiscal solvency and prosperity.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, we do need to reduce the deficit in a
predictable, responsible way. That will require spending cuts, and it
will also require shared sacrifice. The reason that the fiscal
commission said that the Republican plan was unbalanced is they try and
do it all one way. History has shown that doesn't work.
I yield 2\1/2\ minutes to the gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Ryan).
{time} 1840
Mr. RYAN of Ohio. Mr. Chairman, we've heard this afternoon our debt
is unsustainable, it's a warning, it's a fiscal crisis of unprecedented
proportions. But heaven forbid to try to solve those great problems
that our country has right now, the problem that we have, we ask the
wealthiest in the country to just pay a few more thousand dollars,
those people who have seen tremendous gains. You know, cry me a river.
Here we have David Stockman, former head of the OMB under Ronald
Reagan, talking about the budget being presented by the Republicans:
``It's simply unrealistic to say that raising revenue isn't part of the
solution. It's a measure of how far off the deep end Republicans have
gone with this religious catechism about taxes.''
We're asking for shared sacrifice. You're getting into Medicaid,
you're getting into Medicare, you're getting into Pell Grants, but the
wealthiest are going to walk away not sacrificing one thing. Three wars
we're in, and we can't ask the wealthiest to pay a few bucks.
This ends Medicare, Mr. Chairman. Let's be honest. It ends Medicare.
These people 55 and under, whose wages have been stagnant for 30 years,
now when they get into the Medicare program, they're going to have a
voucher or premium support that increases by 2.2 percent indexed to
CPI, or 2.5 percent, and the GDP in health care will grow between 4 and
5 percent. So every single year that this person that's 55 is in
Medicare, they will lose 2 to 3 percent ground in being able to pay for
their own health care.
We need to go back and remember why Medicare started in the first
place. It is not a good business proposition to provide health
insurance to older people in the United States of America. You can't
make money off it. So we're going to give these folks a voucher that
doesn't keep up with health care inflation and send them into the
private market and somehow think we're doing them a favor? No shared
sacrifice.
Again, we're putting the burden on the middle class person who has
paid into Medicare, depends on Medicare, has been getting wages that
have been stagnant, probably doesn't have health insurance between 55
and 65. So you want to talk about driving up Medicare costs, now we add
someone who doesn't have health insurance into a market that they won't
be able to afford when they do turn 65.
This budget is wrong. We need balance. We need shared sacrifice. And
we need investments in the United States. This budget comes up short,
and David Stockman says the same thing.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself 1 minute to
simply say there is a new definition, and I want to explain it. Here is
what a tax cut now means. If you're not in favor of the forthcoming tax
increases, you're cutting taxes. That's the new math around here. What
we don't do is we don't sign up for all these new tax increases that
are being proposed by the President in his budget that are coming in
the future. And so by not supporting new taxes, we're all of a sudden
for tax cuts.
Mr. RYAN of Ohio. Will the gentleman yield?
[[Page H2817]]
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. No, I will not yield.
What we are saying is keep the revenues where they are and fix the
Tax Code, clear out the loopholes and the deductions so we can lower
the rates to create jobs and economic growth.
With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to a member of the Budget
Committee, the gentleman from Oklahoma (Mr. Lankford).
Mr. LANKFORD. Mr. Chairman, I would like to also continue on this
same conversation. The central question that we have to answer is do we
have a debt and deficit problem in America or do we have a spending
problem in America? Words like balanced approach, investment in
America's future, and the often quoted ``shared sacrifice'' confuse the
real issue. The focus of the House of Representatives is not about just
reducing the deficit; it is about reducing spending so we can pay off
the debt that we have.
Raising taxes on Americans now would be like the man who ran up a
huge credit card bill and then went to his boss to tell him that he
needed a raise to pay off his bills. His boss would most likely
respond, You don't need a raise. You need to get your family on a
budget and cut your spending to what is essential.
For the past 50 years, the Federal Government has taxed Americans at
around 18.5 percent of GDP, no matter what the rate is. The current
proposal from the President suggests a tax requirement closer to 22
percent of GDP. To close the deficit gap, all income taxes will have to
double or corporate taxes will have to increase five fold. A tax
increase on the wealthy may make some people feel better that they're
sticking it to the man; but, historically, tax increases only lead to
more government spending. And, ultimately, it will not solve the debt
crisis.
Washington likes handing out other people's money for noble causes.
Here is a novel idea: How about dealing with our existential problem?
We spend too much. In 2009, 140,000 new Federal employees were hired.
During the previous 10 years there was no change in employment in the
Federal Government. The number of Federal contractors has increased 25
percent since 2006. In 4 years, discretionary spending has increased 25
percent. In that same 4 years, Medicare and Medicaid spending has
increased by 50 percent. None of that includes the special TARP or
stimulus funding, which would make the cost to the taxpayers even
higher.
We cannot spend our way to prosperity. We have to get back to getting
a handle on our debt and deficit and our basic spending. The reason the
House budget has gained so much traction is that it does what Americans
know in their gut must be done. It cuts spending.
Finally, someone is saying what many have felt. We cannot solve the
budget problems quickly without significant spending changes.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, this is simple mathematics. When you
went from the Clinton rates for the folks at the very top and you
dropped the tax rate, we ended up losing a lot of jobs because of the
economy. You also lose revenue. And when you do that, you shift the
burden onto other people, whether you do it by cutting Medicaid,
whether you do it by terminating the Medicare guarantee, or whether you
do it by cutting education. That's just mathematics.
I yield 30 seconds to the gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Ryan).
Mr. RYAN of Ohio. Mr. Chairman, I would just like to ask a question
of the chairman. Where in this budget is the sacrifice that is being
made by the top 1 percent of the people? On the wealthiest 1 percent.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. RYAN of Ohio. I yield to the gentleman from Wisconsin.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. First of all, we think we should go after
corporate welfare. Let's stop subsidizing wealthy individuals and
corporations with taxpayer dollars.
Mr. RYAN of Ohio. Reclaiming my time, you are lowering the corporate
income tax. What sacrifice is being made?
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Like the fiscal commission, we believe that
it's better for economic growth to broaden the tax base and lower the
tax rate.
If I can continue on the gentleman's time.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr. Chairman, there are two parts to the Tax Code. There is the
corporate Tax Code. We need to clean up the corporate Tax Code. We
agree with the fiscal commission. You've got to get out a lot of
clutter, a lot of the tax breaks. In fact, we don't think you need a
study to decide to get rid of the tax breaks that reward corporations
for shipping American jobs overseas. We don't think you need to study
the question about whether we get rid of big taxpayer subsidies for the
oil companies.
So, yes, we should take a look at the corporate Tax Code. But in the
other part of the Tax Code, the individual Tax Code, what the
Republican plan does is actually give the folks at the very top another
30 percent break. We have been talking about going back to the Clinton
rates. The Republican plan gives you another 30 percent break. You know
what? They say we are going to do this in a revenue-neutral way. Well,
the result is middle income taxpayers are going to pay more to give the
folks at the top another big break.
With that, I yield 2\1/2\ minutes to somebody who knows a lot about
this subject, the ranking member of the Ways and Means Committee, the
gentleman from Michigan (Mr. Levin).
(Mr. LEVIN asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. LEVIN. We do not need to tear up what America has built in the
past in order to build for the future. We should not confront present
and future problems, including the Nation's deficit, as we must, by
repealing America's past. The Republican budget tries to tear up and
repeal 75 years of American experience, and the supreme example is
Medicare. It tears it up. It repeals it. And contrary to what we've
heard today, they would not save Medicare, but end it. They would not
change it, but they would end it. Our Nation would be a different
Nation without it. Millions today would be less healthy without
Medicare.
{time} 1850
One of my constituents wrote to me recently to say Medicare saved her
life and her life savings when she was diagnosed with breast cancer,
and there are tens of thousands of people like her in this country.
What the Republicans want to do is to give seniors a voucher for
health care, an underfunded voucher, for 10 years. It would double
health care costs for seniors, a voucher that in 20 years would pay
only a third of senior health care costs.
There is no place to hide for anyone who votes for the Republican
budget.
And what happens with the savings? Tax cuts for the wealthy. The
average income of the bottom 90 percent of the families in America have
fallen in the last decade.
The opposite is true for the wealthy. The top 1 percent have seen
their incomes climb by more than a quarter of a million dollars.
In my district alone, extending the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest
Americans means giving 182 households that earn more than $1 million
annual tax cuts averaging $103,000. At the same time, future seniors
would be paying $6,000 more in health costs.
If what we have built in our Nation needs to be adjusted, fix it,
don't destroy it. We must address the deficit without deepening
deficits in the availability for our citizens of jobs, health care, and
education.
The choice today could not be more decisive. A vote against the
Republican budget is a vote for basic American values. Vote ``no.''
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to a member of
the Budget and Ways and Means Committees, the gentlelady from Tennessee
(Mrs. Black).
Mrs. BLACK. Mr. Chairman, I stand here today as a proud member of the
Budget Committee supporting our Path to Prosperity budget that was
introduced on time and takes real steps to get the country's finances
back on track focusing on real economic growth and job creation.
Lately we have heard a lot of demagogy and scare tactics about this
budget. First it came from the other side of the aisle, and yesterday
we heard those same remarks by the President.
[[Page H2818]]
But my constituents don't want to hear the same old partisan attacks
and rhetoric. They want Washington to tell them the truth. The truth is
this about our budget:
Number one, it's a jobs budget, and in the first year this budget
creates 1 million new jobs.
Number 2, it cuts $6.2 trillion in government spending.
Number 3, it eliminates duplicative government programs.
Number 4, it preserves Medicare for the next generation.
Number 5, it puts caps on spending for the coming year and the next
decade.
And, number 6, it takes us on a path to pay down our debt.
House Republicans are working to get this country back on track on a
sound financial footing, and I am proud to be here today as part of the
Republican majority that will lead where the President has failed and
restore America's future growth and prosperity.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished
ranking member of the Small Business Committee, the gentlewoman from
New York (Ms. Velazquez).
(Ms. VELAZQUEZ asked and was given permission to revise and extend
her remarks.)
Ms. VELAZQUEZ. I rise in strong opposition to this ill-conceived,
mean-spirited Republican budget.
Mr. Chairman, all of us recognize the need to reduce the deficit, but
it must be done responsibly. This budget fails that test, cutting
services we need in favor of tax breaks for the wealthy.
For New Yorkers, these cuts will be particularly unfair. Ten billion
dollars will be taken from low-income housing programs. Rental
assistance will be reduced, making it harder for New Yorkers to find
affordable apartments. This at a time when we are facing the worst
housing crisis ever.
Housing is just one area where this budget fails our country. With
Medicaid spending reduced by $735 billion, millions of Americans will
find it harder to afford health care. Instead of tackling rising health
care costs, this budget ends Medicare as we know it. Medicare is a
promise to America's seniors. Whether we honor that promise defines us
as a Nation.
Just as seniors will face tough times, this budget will visit
hardship on young people. Head Start, child care and nutritional
assistance for low-income families will be squeezed, and 26,000 college
students from New York's 12th Congressional District will see tuition
assistance reduced, putting college education out of reach.
Beyond slashing social services, this budget undermines our economic
recovery. Small business lending would drop by $3 billion, depriving
5,000 firms of capital they need to create jobs. Is this the way we are
going to create jobs in this country? Twelve thousand entrepreneurs and
9,000 veterans, those coming back from Afghanistan and Iraq, will lose
business counseling services to help them launch or expand their
businesses.
Mr. Chairman, we need a serious, thoughtful discussion about how to
cut spending. Vote ``no'' against this bill.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 1 minute to a member of
the Ways and Means Committee and former member of the Budget Committee,
the gentleman from California (Mr. Nunes).
Mr. NUNES. Mr. Chairman, this budget stops in its tracks the efforts
of Democrat leaders to trap the American people on a high-speed train
trip with the false promise of green jobs. This is a trip, a one-way
ticket to bankruptcy.
However, if you support the Ryan budget, you will help this
government recover from a debilitating and life-threatening illness
that started when our leaders threw out the American way of life in
favor of a left-wing agenda. Let's be clear. We have two choices: we
can look forward and pave a path to economic prosperity, or we can
become the world's most heavily taxed Nation in a dangerous, dangerous
zone of bankruptcy.
Mr. Chairman, throughout modern history, socialists have been
searching for the last exit to Utopia, of Big Government collectivism.
Unfortunately, for the socialist utopians in this town that support
President Obama's spending plan, this last exit to Utopia will remain a
mystery, a relic of 1960s radicals.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, Republicans originally fought the
creation of Medicare on the grounds that it was socialism. Apparently,
they haven't changed their minds about that as they try and terminate
it and put seniors into the private insurance market.
I yield 2 minutes to the gentlelady from Wisconsin (Ms. Moore).
Ms. MOORE. Mr. Chair, health care costs are a crisis in every
American family. Every family is one surgery, one heart attack, one
cancer diagnosis, one aging spouse away from financial ruin. But health
care costs are also a crisis for business, both small and large.
General Motors pays more for health care than for steel. That is why
the Affordable Care Act is needed, to bend the health care cost curve
downward for all American health care consumers.
Americans, including those who are consumers of Medicare and
Medicaid, simply cannot afford the insurance and drug companies'
runaway profits.
These companies are reaping record-breaking profits. In 2009, while
we were debating the bill, the Nation's five largest for-profit health
insurance companies saw a combined profit of $12.2 billion, and that's
just for five companies.
Their executives did well, too. The top execs at these companies
pulled in almost $200 million in compensation. At the same time, there
were double-digit premium increases.
So no matter where you get your health care, through Medicare,
Medicaid, your employers's policy, wherever you get it, you can't
afford that kind of rate increase year after year.
These rates are going up faster than any other part of the family
budget. For many people, these costs are crowding out housing and other
basic needs.
In 2009, the top 10 pharmaceutical companies made over $60 billion in
profits, and the profit margin in this industry is out of control. In
2007, profits ranged as high as 36 percent.
The health care reform law also curbed some of these outrageous
profits of the insurance and pharmaceutical industries. Yes, Medicare
and Medicaid are large portions of our Federal budget, but we can only
rein in their costs if we fully implement the Affordable Care Act and
tackle outrageous profiteering in health care--something the Republican
budget refuses to do.
{time} 1900
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to a member of
the Budget Committee, the gentleman from Indiana (Mr. Young).
Mr. YOUNG of Indiana. Mr. Chairman, the good people of Indiana want
jobs. And we know how to create them. In Indiana, under Governor Mitch
Daniels, we've seen a government that spends less and taxes modestly.
We've seen that that leads to job growth. That's why Indiana, during
these tough economic times, is a national leader in private sector job
growth.
The Budget Committee crafted a budget for our Federal Government
that, like Indiana, spends less and keeps a lid on taxes. The result is
a plan that will help create 2\1/2\ million private sector jobs by the
end of this decade.
Recent economic history isn't good to the big spenders. It shows that
borrowing and spending trillions of dollars that we don't have doesn't
create jobs. And jobs won't be created if we go along with the
President's plan and, seemingly, the plan of sorts from the other side
of the aisle to increase taxes.
It's no great secret that the job creators in this country aren't
hiring because unchecked spending, of course, leads to fears. It leads
to fears that we're going to have to raise taxes in the future. It
leads to fears of future inflation. And we know, of course, that it
leads to fears that interest rates are going to go up.
By calling for a measure of spending discipline as we do, we replace
that fear with hope--hope that we can restore conditions where private
sector job creators can go out and put Americans back to work. That's
what the people of southern Indiana want.
Now, I mentioned Indiana a minute ago and the success we've had in
creating those private sector jobs. We didn't do it all through our
policies
[[Page H2819]]
with respect to spending. Instead, we also looked at tax policy. We
understood that it just didn't make sense to jack up taxes during a
down economy. Instead, we kept them steady and we made our tax code
more efficient, just as some of our neighboring States were doing the
opposite. As a result, many businesses chose to move back to Indiana or
to move to Indiana for the first time.
We see the reverse trend nationally. Unfortunately, many businesses
are leaving this great country or just not getting off the ground
because of our job-destroying Tax Code and because of our punitive
corporate tax rates.
Mr. Chairman, we improve upon those previous policies. We learn from
the errors of the past. I urge my colleagues to help us create jobs by
voting ``yes'' on the Republican budget.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Gonzalez).
(Mr. GONZALEZ asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. GONZALEZ. Mr. Chairman, at the heart of the Republicans' budget
proposal is the thought, ``the number of makers diminishes and the
number of takers grows.'' As a result, our government, economy and
country will collapse. Forget about the impoverished view that this
offers us, a vision of an America that can't be bothered or is unable
to care for anyone who needs help.
So let's have a discussion about who truly would be the ``taker'' and
who truly would be the ``maker.''
People who manipulate an unfair tax system at the expense of millions
of others, makers, when you look at the Republican proposal.
Corporations that don't invest in their own country, paying a lower tax
rate on their profits than their employees would pay on a $40,000
salary, those are makers under the Republican plan. Wall Street firms
that ruined our financial system, then asked working families to bail
them out while they pay billions in bonuses, those are also makers
under the Republican plan.
Yes, that's who the Republicans have identified as the makers, and it
rewards them quite handsomely in their proposal. Their budget would
perpetuate a taxation and employment system that has resulted in
stagnant wages for workers and allows 5 percent of the wealthiest among
us to enjoy 66 percent of all the wealth while 80 percent of Americans
share only less than 13 percent.
Now, who would be the takers under this Republican plan? The 9.4
million students working towards a college degree so they can get a
good job and contribute to this economy, whose Pell Grants would be
slashed; 218,000 low-income kids and families who will be removed from
Head Start, depriving them of a decent education, again, takers under
the Republican plan; 2,400 schools that serve 1 million low-income
students across the country that would have to shut their doors, takers
under the Republican plan; countless seniors who would no longer be
able to remain in nursing homes because of cuts in Medicaid funding.
Those are the takers.
You decide, America, who are the takers and who are the makers? This
is not a Pathway to Prosperity. It's a dead end.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Indiana, a member of the Budget Committee, Mr. Rokita.
Mr. ROKITA. Mr. Chairman, where the President has failed to lead and
be honest with us, we've had the courage to tell the truth about
America's debt crisis. And we've proposed honest solutions required to
fix it.
As a new Member of Congress, I have already learned that the rules in
Washington are stacked in favor of people who want to spend more money.
In contrast, in Indiana, we have a balanced budget, we have a AAA bond
rating, and we have not raised taxes because we know taxes are not the
problem.
The problem is, Mr. Chair, our colleagues who continue to push for
more government spending knowing that our debt is over $14 trillion and
growing. And they haven't offered one alternative except to confiscate
more of the people's money.
They have tried to scare a lot of people. But this time, Mr.
Chairman, I don't think the people are buying it. As you can see from
this chart, our reliance on foreign countries to supply our reckless
spending is growing dramatically over the past decades to where nearly
half of the debt we owe as a country we owe to foreign countries, China
being the best.
In fact, Mr. Chairman, China can buy three Joint Strike Fighters
every week for the money we pay them in interest for the money they
loan us and still have $50 million left over. Eventually, they and
other countries are going to stop loaning us money or make us pay more
to borrow. And as Treasury rates increase, rates on mortgages, credit
cards and car loans are soon going to follow. We are no longer kicking
the can down the road; we're kicking it off a cliff.
This budget addresses the real drivers of our debt: Medicare,
Medicaid, and Social Security. In 1970, these kinds of entitlements
consumed 31 percent of our budget. Today they are nearly 60 percent,
and they continue to grow. In just a few decades when our kids are
raising their children, literally every single dollar this government
takes in revenue will go towards paying these entitlement programs.
This budget makes the changes necessary to save these programs so that
they're around for my kids and your grandchildren.
I know a little about government agencies--I used to run one. One
that had no more employees in 2010 than it did in the early '80s. But,
since the President took office, he has added 155,000 new bureaucrats.
Spending on government agencies has increased 84 percent in just the
last few years.
This budget stops us from spending money we do not have. It brings
spending back to pre-stimulus, pre-bailout levels and shrinks the
federal bureaucrats by 10 percent over the next three years. It also
takes the ideas of the Fiscal Commission and the Government
Accountability Office and eliminates over $100 billion in wasteful
spending on dozens of duplicative federal programs. Money we don't take
from the American people, they will spend much wiser and create jobs
along the way. Americans are finally getting an honest and fact-based
budget that has eluded them for years.
Announcement by the Acting Chair
The Acting CHAIR. Members will refrain from engaging in personalities
toward the President.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, one of the other things that China is
doing is they're investing an awful lot of their resources in clean
energy like solar power and like wind power. The United States should
be winning that battle and not our international competitors. Someone
who knows a whole lot about that is the next speaker, the ranking
member on Natural Resources, Mr. Markey of Massachusetts. I yield the
gentleman 2 minutes.
Mr. MARKEY. I thank the gentleman.
The Republicans are allowing nostalgia for a time before Medicare and
Medicaid were ever on the books to replace the idealism that we need to
have in order to deal with the real challenges of the future. But for
the poor, the sick, the elderly and the disabled, the past is just a
memory and the future is their hard reality. And that's what this
budget will be for those people, a hard reality.
It takes no courage for the Republicans to stand here on the House
floor and to call for an evisceration of the Medicare budget, of the
Medicaid budget and all the other programs for the poor, the sick, the
elderly and the disabled in our country that they opposed ever having
been put on the books in the first place. If you kicked this budget in
the heart, you'd break your toe. GOP used to stand for ``Grand Old
Party.'' Now it stands for ``Get Old People.'' And that's what this
budget is. It is a targeting of the poor, the sick and the elderly in
our country.
Do they ask sacrifice from the defense budget? Do they ask for the
defense budget to go down? No, it just keeps going up year after year.
Do they ask for sacrifice from the wealthy? No, they say tax breaks for
the wealthy year after year after year. Who do they target? They target
Grandma. They don't even have the ability--the courage--to stand up and
say to the oil companies, who at $100 a barrel are making $100 billion
in profits a year, ``We're going to take away your tax breaks.'' No.
Tax breaks for oil companies stay on the books.
What do they do? They say to the clean energy industry, We're cutting
[[Page H2820]]
your tax breaks by 70 percent, but we're leaving the tax breaks for the
oil industry on the books and we are slashing the programs for wind,
for solar and for all those energy technologies that are now the
future.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield the gentleman an additional 30 seconds.
{time} 1910
Mr. MARKEY. I thank the gentleman.
That's your formula. It's a formula of the past. It's a formula for
the nostalgic amongst the Republicans who wish we could go back to a
time before Medicare and Medicaid and wind and solar and new energy
technologies and their taking us on to a future.
Let me tell you something.
Fifty percent of the people who are in nursing homes in our country
have Alzheimer's, and they are on Medicaid. That's how we pay for the
bills. You people slash the budget for those people with Alzheimer's
who are in nursing homes. That's 50 percent. That's grandma, ladies and
gentlemen. You don't touch the wealthy. You don't touch the Defense
Department. This budget is so cruel that, if you kicked it in the
heart, you'd break your toe.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield myself 1 minute to respond to the
warm, even-handed comments of my friend from Massachusetts.
Do you know what's really cruel, Mr. Chairman? It's if we give our
children a lower living standard.
Do you know what's really cruel? It's if we give our children a debt-
ridden Nation. It's if we give our children a debt that they can't
afford.
Do you know what's really cruel? It's if we don't save Medicare. It's
if we don't keep the promises to our current seniors, like we do in
this budget, so that all of these programs they've organized their
lives around, which are going bankrupt, are preserved. Medicare goes
bankrupt in 9 years. We're preserving it for current seniors.
With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from New
Hampshire (Mr. Guinta).
Mr. GUINTA. Mr. Chairman, I rise today to speak in favor of The Path
to Prosperity.
Our budget offers more than a spending blueprint for the next fiscal
year and beyond. It is truly a job creator. The Path to Prosperity
provides a framework for creating nearly 1 million new private sector
jobs next year alone. How does it do this?
It doesn't involve advanced economic theory--just basic math. When
you lower taxes, you put more money into people's hands. They spend it
and it circulates, making businesses prosper and allowing them to hire
new employees. It's just that simple. When I think of the opportunities
that The Path to Prosperity will create, I think of countless small
business owners who will benefit from this plan in my State. Small
businesses are the backbone of New Hampshire's economy, much like they
are across our great Nation.
I think of people like Craig Leonard, who owns Bonsai Craftsmen in
Londonderry, New Hampshire. He remodels houses and kitchens. With the
ongoing fiscal uncertainty, people are keeping their wallets closed
because nobody knows what the next fiscal year will bring. Craig
recently had to lay off three employees, and barely has enough work to
keep himself busy. Without the confidence that can come from passing
The Path to Prosperity, there is no telling when his business will
return to prosperity, itself, and when he can dare to hire again.
I think of people like Charlie and Laura Morgan. They own a storage
company in Manchester, New Hampshire. They've lost tenants in this down
economy, causing them to reduce the rents they charge. This is simply
keeping them from hiring additional employees and creating greater
opportunities for our fellow Granite Staters.
The examples of hard-pressed small business owners I've cited are
located not just in New Hampshire but all over the country. The Path to
Prosperity provides confidence by charting a responsible course so that
creditors can loan with confidence and so that people can borrow money
knowing they'll be able to repay it.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from
Michigan (Mr. Clarke).
Mr. CLARKE of Michigan. Mr. Chairman, I want to talk on behalf of the
people I represent in Michigan.
Many of them have lost their jobs, and when they become seniors,
they're likely going to have to survive on fixed incomes. If they get
Medicare on vouchers, which won't fully cover the costs of their health
services, they're going to have to pay for that out-of-pocket. Do you
know what? Folks on fixed incomes, they don't have the money to pay for
these services out-of-pocket. They will likely end up bankrupt.
The other issue is that a lot of the folks I represent have got
multiple health conditions: heart disease, diabetes, arthritis. They
all go to different doctors, and very few of the providers actually
talk to each other. They also don't coordinate with hospitals or with
other long-term health care providers. All of these services by the
Medicare providers will be coordinated under our new Affordable Care
Act. That's why we need those provisions in place--to better coordinate
health care.
I urge my colleagues to table putting Medicare on the voucher. Let's
keep our Affordable Care Act. That's the best way our seniors on fixed
incomes can get the best health care possible.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Gingrey).
Mr. GINGREY of Georgia. I thank the chairman of the Budget Committee
for yielding to me.
Mr. Chairman, I was listening to my colleagues on the other side of
the aisle. The ranking member of the Budget Committee, our friend from
Maryland, talked about the fact that, according to his poster, the Bush
tax cuts in the years 2000 to 2006 caused the loss of an untold number
of jobs. I have my own statistics which basically show, during that
period of time and despite those tax cuts, we had an increased revenue
of something like $700 billion.
Now, I'll check my facts with his facts later on, Mr. Chairman, but
how in the world could you produce $700 billion of additional revenue
when you lose jobs? It's not possible. The fact is that those tax cuts
created a broader base, albeit at a lower rate, and they generated more
revenue. That's exactly what the chairman of the Budget Committee is
talking about in his Path to Prosperity.
Another one of our colleagues on the other side of the aisle stood up
and said, according to this budget plan--at least, thank God, we have
one. The Democrats couldn't produce one last year because of their fear
of the political consequences--Medicare as we know it, by the year
2022, will disappear. How is that possible when, by that time, there
will probably be 75 million people on Medicare as we know it before we
will go to this premium support plan that Chairman Ryan has proposed?
Our friends on the other side keep saying, You keep giving tax breaks
to the rich. Well, according to this plan, the people who are in the
top 2 percent of income will only get 30 percent of the premium
support, an average of $8,000 a year. The people in the top 8 percent
would get 50 percent. So you keep wanting to beat on the producers in
society that create the jobs.
Support this plan. It's a great budget.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I would remind my friend Mr. Gingrey
that, when Mr. Bush became President, he inherited a $5.6 trillion
surplus. By the end of the 8 years, it was gone.
Now, with respect to tax rates and jobs, what this chart shows is
that, when the highest income earners in the country were paying the
lower rates during the Bush administration, you actually lost jobs
versus during the Clinton administration when, at the higher rates, 20
million jobs were created.
The point is not that higher tax rates increase jobs. The point is
that small differences in the top tax rates are not the main drivers of
our economy. They are not the main engines of job growth. The figures
tell the story. Trying to tell another story is just anti-historical.
The reality is that the numbers show, during the Clinton
administration, we had very strong growth. During the Bush years, we
ended up losing over 600,000 jobs. So let's at least get our history
straight.
[[Page H2821]]
With that, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the gentlelady from California
(Mrs. Capps).
{time} 1920
Mrs. CAPPS. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
Mr. Chairman, I rise in strong opposition to the Republicans'
misguided budget and attack on Medicare. The issue is not whether we
reduce the deficit, but how we do it. Simply put, the Republican plan
uses our deficit as an excuse to end Medicare as we know it.
Medicare is a cornerstone of the American Dream, a promise that
health care will always be there for our seniors and permanently
disabled citizens. But the Republican budget takes away that guarantee,
and what does it give our future seniors in return? No guarantee of
coverage; a real chance of being denied insurance due to preexisting
conditions; and around $6,000 a year in additional out-of-pocket costs,
as well as the knowledge that the insurance companies will be well
taken care of while they are struggling to get by on their fixed
income. And not one aspect of the plan will do anything to reduce the
costs of care--it just passes the buck.
This is not a plan for our future. It is a recipe for disaster for
our seniors. Forty-five years ago, when seniors were the most uninsured
group in our country, we made a promise that health care for seniors
would be guaranteed. The Republican voucher proposal breaks that
promise.
I urge a ``no'' vote on the Republican budget proposal.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself 2 minutes.
I have heard a lot of debate today about how we're slashing taxes,
slashing revenues for the rich and for everybody else, and bad oil
companies and things like that. Let me just show you a little chart.
Under our budget, revenues rise. Revenues go up over $12 trillion. So
revenues still increase. Even keeping the Tax Code where we are today,
revenues increase.
Now, the President's plan says he wants to raise them another $1.5
trillion. The gentleman from Maryland's plan wants to raise them
another $1.7 trillion. But let's not kid ourselves: Revenues, even
under our plan, continue to increase.
Now, we don't have a revenue problem, we have a spending problem. The
green line is the revenue line. The red line is the spending line.
Revenues are stable, increasing; spending is on a tear, Mr. Chairman.
Spending is growing at an unsustainable rate. We can't keep spending
money we don't have. If we keep doing this, we're going to have a debt
crisis. People are going to get hurt. Interest rates will go up. We
will have to cut indiscriminately across the board at the time it
happens. We want to avoid that.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield myself 1 more minute, Mr. Chairman.
Let's talk about the Bush tax cuts, or what happened. Let's talk
about the distribution of the tax burden. In 2001, the top 1 percent of
earners paid 34 percent of the tax burden. Now they pay 38 percent; a
higher tax burden. The top 5 percent in 2001 paid 53 percent of the
taxes. Today, the top 5 percent pay 59 percent of the taxes. So on and
so forth.
We don't have a revenue problem, a tax problem; we have a spending
problem. But here's the real problem. If we don't get our situation
under control, we really go in the hole. In 2009, the Government
Accountability Office is telling us our fiscal gap, the unfunded
promises we are making to current Americans, was $62.9 trillion.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has again expired.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield myself 1 more minute to explain, Mr.
Chairman.
That means we would have to take $62.9 trillion, set it aside, invest
it at Treasury rates, just so government can keep the promises that it
is now making to everybody in America. In 2009, we owed more than we
were worth as total households in America. Last year, 2010, that fiscal
gap grew to $76.4 trillion. Now, $99.4 trillion.
We are digging our hole more than $10 trillion a year by kicking the
can down the road. Every year we fail to fix this problem, we are
submitting our children to a worse future, a diminished country. So the
sooner we get our act together, the sooner we fix this problem, the
better off we're going to be. If we keep ignoring this, if we keep
spending on the path we are on, this fiscal gap, the pile of empty
promises that politicians from both parties have been making to
Americans gets that much higher.
We have about $100 trillion of empty promises Washington is making to
Americans. It is time we tell people the truth. It is time we get
government to live within its means, and it is time we get Washington
to honor its promises, fix these programs, get spending under control,
and give our children a debt-free Nation.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
The gentleman is absolutely right. We need to come up with a plan
that puts the country on a predictable, steady course of deficit
reduction, and we need to do it in a balanced way.
The chart the chairman showed about revenues presumed we wouldn't
have certain changes in the revenue. For example, that we wouldn't say
to the wealthiest, we want you to pay the same rates you were paying
during the Clinton administration when the economy was roaring and jobs
were being created.
There is a reason the bipartisan fiscal commission called the
Republican plan unbalanced. And this is what it is. Under the
commission plan, they have a balance of spending cuts and revenue
increases. For example, they say the folks at the top, they should be
paying a little more. In fact, $2.5 trillion more over the next 10
years than the Republican plan. Because they don't do what the
commission recommended, they have to cut into Medicaid, which will hurt
seniors in nursing homes, disabled individuals, poor kids, everybody
who depends on that already stretched program. They have to terminate
Medicare. So those are choices they are making. They have made a one-
sided, lopsided choice.
I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the gentleman from Minnesota (Mr. Ellison).
Mr. ELLISON. Mr. Chairman, we are in a debate of generational
proportions. The promises that were made during the 1960s and before
that, and even after that, about expanding our country, making it a
greater country, widening its embrace, are now being abdicated. We are
seeing a budget, offered by our Budget Committee chairman, that says to
our seniors who have cut a path for all of us younger people, You know
what? We can't be there for you any more.
We are seeing a budget where we say to our students, who are the
intellectual drivers of our economy, we cannot be there for you any
more. As a matter of fact, two-thirds of this budget, two-thirds of
this budget, two-thirds of the cuts are from low-income programs that
serve people who are making it, hardworking Americans who are trying to
make it every single day. But that's where the cuts come from.
The question on the table is: What's the proper role of government?
We believe the proper role of government is to look after our seniors.
They believe grandma has to figure out what she is going to do. We
believe that young people have to have an opportunity, and things like
the Pell Grant are going to help them and help us. They believe if you
are smart enough to go to college, you should pay for it by yourself,
or maybe get a high-cost loan to do that.
We have a different vision of America. As a matter of fact, we have a
vision that the people who are well to do and the corporations who have
done so well should help out more. We believe in equity and a shared
burden.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield the gentleman an additional 15 seconds.
Mr. ELLISON. We believe in equity and a shared burden. In fact, the
big five oil companies have received profits that are enormous when you
look at them on this chart.
The gentleman keeps talking about tax reform. I would love to know,
what corporate loopholes are you going to close? Are you going to close
these Big Oil subsidies, or not?
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Georgia (Mr. Kingston), a
[[Page H2822]]
senior member of the Appropriations Committee.
Mr. KINGSTON. I thank the gentleman for yielding, and let me say that
I want to be the first one to say we do want to close the tax loopholes
for Big Oil. In fact, for the 4 years the Democrats were in charge,
we're not sure why they didn't take it on. We are ready to take it on
after this 4-year negligence on it.
Think about this, Mr. Chairman: For every dollar we spend, 40 cents
is borrowed. Now, if that was happening in your family, you would bring
everybody to the kitchen table and you would say, Look, we have got to
make some changes here. We can't continue to spend money the way we are
doing.
Today, the national debt is 90 percent of the GDP. Spending is
approaching 24 percent of the GDP. That's a historic high. We can't get
to a balanced budget with a spending gap that high above revenues, and
yet that is what we are doing. That is why the Republican budget, the
Ryan budget, not just reduces spending by $4 trillion, but changes the
trajectory of spending. Because unless we change the pattern and we
make some choices for the next generation, important programs like
Social Security, like Medicaid, like Medicare, will not be there.
{time} 1930
Too often we hear from the liberals in Washington, D.C., the scare
tactics: Well, Republicans hate seniors, they hate clean air, they hate
education. And that's what we're seeing here tonight. In fact,
yesterday the President tried to claim a mulligan on his budget. He
actually introduced a budget in February and did not bring in one
recommendation of his own deficit reduction commission. Even though
I've seen a chart on the floor tonight about it. It sounds great, but
it's not in the President's budget because it wasn't presented.
We think it might be a good idea to use some of the recommendations
of the deficit reduction commission, and that's what the Ryan budget
does. But more importantly, it doesn't do anything to the important
entitlement programs for anybody over the age of 55. Medicare will be
there for them as it is today. But for younger people, it is not going
to be there because it is going broke. That's why we need to make some
changes. And giving them a subsidy to help them have more choices in
Medicare is the way to save the program.
That's just one of the many aspects of the Ryan budget, and it's well
worth supporting.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I was pleased to hear my friend is
interested in getting rid of the subsidies for Big Oil. We can do it
tonight or tomorrow. All you've got to do is vote for the Democratic
alternative. And, by the way, you can, at the same time, get rid of the
tax breaks that reward companies for shipping American jobs overseas.
We don't have to study about it. We don't have to send it to the Ways
and Means Committee. We can instruct them tomorrow, tonight, and we
will get it done if you vote for the Democratic alternative.
With that, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the gentleman from New York (Mr.
Engel).
Mr. ENGEL. I thank the gentleman.
Mr. Chairman, as Ronald Reagan used to say, ``There you go again.''
My Republican friends want to repeal the 20th century. They want to
use the budget deficit to kill and destroy every program they have
hated all these years, including Medicare and Medicaid.
This budget would roll back 50 years of progress on Medicare and
Medicaid and destroy these two programs, which are two of the most
important social programs of the past century. It's unconscionable that
we would take an ax to these programs to pay for tax cuts for
millionaires and billionaires.
This budget shifts the burden from the wealthiest Americans and puts
the burden on the poor and middle class. I understand that my
Republican colleagues want to protect their rich friends, but on the
Democratic side of the aisle, we care about working people, the middle
class, poor people, seniors, and children.
The Republicans last year promised they'd focus on two things if they
got the majority: jobs and spending. But all we have seen are repeated
attacks on the middle class and lower-income people. We haven't seen a
single jobs bill, and their idea of cutting spending is to kill
Medicare and Medicaid. Instead of passing this budget, we would be more
likely to create jobs by waving a magic wand and saying
``abracadabra.''
In this time of divided government, the American people want us to
come together and compromise. But all the legislation we're seeing from
the other side is extreme. We need to come together. We do have
difficulty. We don't want our children to have a diminished standard of
living. But this is not the way to do it, to try to balance the budget
on the backs of poor people, on seniors, on children. We need to have a
fair and balanced budget.
I urge a ``no'' vote.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to a
distinguished member of the Rules and Budget Committees, the gentleman
from Georgia (Mr. Woodall).
Mr. WOODALL. I thank the chairman for yielding.
I tell you we see a lot of shrill things here on the House floor. I
want to have a slightly different voice. I just want to tell you how
proud I am to be here--how proud I am to be here because, as the
gentleman who previously said very accurately, I ran on two things: I
ran on cutting spending and I ran on creating jobs. And tonight,
because of the hard work of my chairman on the Budget Committee, my
colleagues on the Budget Committee, I get to vote tomorrow to do just
that--just that. I have been here a hundred days, and I get a vote to
change the direction of this country, from driving us off the edge of
the cliff to restoring the freedom and economic success that we're
known for the world around. A hundred days and I get to make that
choice.
Now, I'm thrilled, in the spirit of openness, that we have some
alternatives. If you want to raise taxes, you're going to have budgets
to get to do that. But if you want to close $2.9 trillion in tax
expenditures, in loopholes, in lobbyist-funded giveaways, you've got
one budget to choose from, and that's the Ryan budget.
We go after those items that, for whatever reason, folks hadn't gone
after in years past. We do those things that, for whatever reason,
people couldn't find the courage to do in years past. Vote after vote
after vote I presume people had to vote on things they didn't like to
vote on. They didn't want to run up spending. They didn't want to
increase the debt limit. They didn't want to do those things. But they
had to do it.
Folks, tonight I'm here to talk about something I want to do. I
cannot wait to come to this floor tomorrow and cast a vote for my
children, for America's grandchildren, for the future of this land. And
that's a vote in favor of the Ryan budget. I am grateful to my
colleagues for giving me that opportunity.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I welcome our friend from Georgia, and
I would just say that we agree on one thing: that this budget does pose
a fundamental choice. And that's what we're here to debate about. And
we believe that it's just wrong to be providing another round of big
tax breaks to the wealthiest Americans when you're ending the Medicare
guarantee, when you're cutting investments in kids' education. Those
are choices that we shouldn't be making.
We are going to present, and have presented, a Democratic alternative
that we think provides a balanced approach.
With that, I yield 2 minutes to the distinguished gentleman from New
York (Mr. Rangel).
Mr. RANGEL. I am so glad you picked me at this time because I want to
join the previous speaker in saying that the atmosphere and the
attitude here is just too shrill. If we're dealing with the lives and
the futures of the generations to follow, it should be in a different
way. We should not just be fighting with each other.
So I make an appeal to ministers and priests and rabbis and imams to
try to figure out, as we go into these holy holidays, whether or not
the screaming is going to help or whether or not we're going to find
ourselves with the lesser among us.
I don't know the whole story, but it runs something like: I was
hungry, and you didn't give me anything to eat; I was thirsty, and you
didn't give me
[[Page H2823]]
anything to drink; I was sick, and you didn't visit.
Well, it sounds like the answer that's going to be given is: Well, I
told the State to take care of you. I'm sorry they didn't. Or, Don't
you remember? I'm the guy that gave you a voucher. Or, I pulled myself
up by my own bootstraps. Why can't you do it without a scholarship?
No, I think not. This great Nation was built to believe in God we
trust. And it just seems to me when you're talking about the lives of
our mothers and our grandmothers and the future of our children that
all of the things we hoped and dreamed about, it's not going to be
shattered by political budget ventures put together by the majority. If
it's not stopped here, it's going to be stopped in the Senate or
stopped in the White House. But I hope those that are listening that
are involved in providing spiritual care, that recognize how important
health care is for our sick and our poor, why don't you just write your
Congressperson and share with us whether or not you think that we have
an obligation to protect the wealthy among us rather than the lesser of
our brothers and sisters.
We will be going home for a couple of weeks during these Easter
holidays, and I do hope that all of us try to find out which side are
we on: the rich or the lesser among us.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from New Mexico (Mr. Pearce).
Mr. PEARCE. I appreciate Chairman Ryan for bringing this issue to the
floor.
Mr. Chairman, basically the entire discussion that we're having in
Washington right now centers around two figures: We spend 3.5 T,
trillion, and we bring in 2.2 T, trillion, in revenues to the
government from taxes. Now, it's the bringing together of those numbers
that's a difference of opinion here in Washington.
I read the text of the President's speech yesterday--I did not get a
chance to listen--and he says that we can close that gap by taxing the
millionaires and billionaires. And it sounds so fluid. It comes off so
easy. But I will tell you, it's a process that many nations have
followed before: tax the millionaires.
I don't know what Bill Sweat in Artesia is worth, but he tells me to
create a job it costs $340,000 to buy a new bulldozer and he needs a
new pickup truck. So he needs $400,000 in the bank to create a job.
{time} 1940
Now our friends on the other side of the aisle--and the President's
speech--said we need to be taxing that money away from him. Nancy
Pelosi said a couple of years ago we need to tax the profits of the
corporations and spend them. But what you do is you take away Mr.
Sweat's $400,000 and he doesn't get a new bulldozer, and we don't get a
job.
So what we have here is this differential, $1.3 trillion in deficit
on these top line figures. That's what we're accruing. Then that goes
into our debt barrel, $15 trillion. That's what we have over the life
of our country, from George Washington until today, approximately $15
trillion, and we're bringing in 2.2.
Now if we begin to give the tax increases that the President says,
we're actually going to squeeze down to 2.2 because companies will not
be hiring people. For instance, off the shore of Louisiana, we are now
choking off those jobs. And so every job off Louisiana that the
government kills takes one person from paying taxes and puts them up
here receiving welfare, unemployment and food stamps.
Economic growth is the only thing that can cure this Nation's
economic problems. The Ryan budget does that. The President's budget
does not do it. Let's support the Ryan budget.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, I have to show us this chart again
because I just need to remind the body that during the Clinton
administration, when we had the folks at the very top paying a little
bit higher rate, 20 million jobs were created. When that rate was
dropped for the high-income earners at the beginning of the Bush
administration, not only did it contribute to deficits going up, but at
the end of that period over 653,000 jobs were lost.
Now the point isn't, again, that by changing the tax rate that was
the driver. The point is that small differences in tax rates are not
the main engines of economic opportunity. And we need to make choices
here. Again, they choose to provide tax breaks to the folks at the very
top and end the Medicare guarantee.
Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the gentlewoman from Illinois (Ms.
Schakowsky), who has been a champion of Medicare, Medicaid, and a whole
number of other issues important to our seniors and Americans.
Ms. SCHAKOWSKY. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
The Republicans are trying to claim the mantle of fiscal
responsibility today. It's just ridiculous. They are the party
responsible for a decade of fiscal recklessness with two unpaid-for
wars, two unpaid-for tax cuts, and a blind eye to Wall Street leading
to a disastrous recession. And as the President said yesterday,
``There's nothing serious about a plan that claims to reduce the
deficit by spending $1 trillion on tax cuts for millionaires and
billionaires.''
This chart illustrates that, from 1979 to 2005, the bottom 20 percent
of households saw their incomes increase by a grand total of $200. Over
the same period, the top .1 percent here in the red saw income growth
of nearly $6 million each year.
There is nothing courageous about a plan that would protect the
wealthy and Big Oil and big corporations that ship jobs overseas at the
expense of elderly and their Medicare and their Medicaid and the
disabled and children.
The Republican budget resolution does not reflect the values of
Americans, and I urge my colleagues to reject it soundly.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield myself 1 minute.
Unshared prosperity, spending money on tax cuts. Mr. Chairman, the
presumption behind that is that all the money out there made in America
is the government's, and then the government decides who they spend it
back to.
We do have different philosophies. The money that people make is
their money. And then the question is: How much of it does the
government take?
The money made in America by individuals, by businesses, is their
money. It's not the government's money. So we don't spend money on tax
cuts.
By the way, Mr. Chairman, we're not even cutting taxes in this bill;
we're just not raising them. So the new definition of cutting taxes
apparently is: If you're against raising taxes, you're cutting them.
I don't even know where to start with this, but I'm going to start by
yielding 2 minutes to the gentleman from Kansas (Mr. Huelskamp), a
member of the Budget Committee.
Mr. HUELSKAMP. Mr. Chairman, we clearly have a choice here in
Washington: We can maintain the same old status quo, which favors more
spending, more taxes, and more Washington control, or the real American
choice, making good on promises made to voters last year by cutting
spending and creating jobs. The choice is ours; the opportunity is now.
The Path to Prosperity offers a long, overdue fix to Medicaid. There
are many problems with the program, and the costs are out of control,
hemorrhaging the budgets of State after State and our Federal
Government. Clearly, the answer is not more money; instead, the
solution is spending money more wisely and more efficiently.
Governors from all across America have expressed their desires for
more flexibility with Medicaid, and this budget offers exactly that. In
converting Federal spending on Medicaid to block grants, folks closest
to the American people--Governors, legislators and local officials, not
some bureaucrat sitting in Washington--will make decisions best for
their citizens and design programs that work best for their States and
for their people. They will have the freedom to adapt Medicaid to their
own State's unique needs and priorities.
Also, because this budget defunds ObamaCare, we are preventing the
Federal Government from imposing another mandate on the States.
ObamaCare forces States to expand Medicaid eligibility but leaves it up
to them how they will pay for it. By supporting this budget, we put a
stop to this intrusion of the Federal Government and make Medicaid
better for those who truly need it.
[[Page H2824]]
This Path to Prosperity will increase the Medicaid budget and provide
much needed regulatory reform for the 50 States of this great Union.
Only those committed to the status quo--including many of our
colleagues across the aisle--can make the ridiculous claim that somehow
spending more taxpayer money and pushing more Washington red tape is
somehow a solution. By lifting the heavy hand of Washington from
Medicaid, we make this program more effective and more efficient for
the States to manage these programs and provide compassionate care for
the Americans who truly deserve assistance.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. Chairman, hardworking American people have been
paying their Medicare payroll taxes day in, day out, month in, month
out. The choice we have here is whether we are going to make good on
that Medicare guarantee or whether we're going to say to the folks at
the very top, We just can't take you back to the tax rates that were in
place during the Clinton administration.
Why would we say that to people who have been putting their payroll
taxes into Medicare? Why would we say we're going to end the Medicare
guarantee?
With that, I yield 2 minutes to the gentlelady from Texas (Ms.
Jackson Lee).
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Mr. Chairman, unlike the gentleman from
Wisconsin who just doesn't know what to do and seems to be confused on
his side of the aisle as to what his budget is all about, I will say
that I am getting unconfused because his budget is a destruction of the
fabric and the way of life of all Americans.
Do you want to know what the Republican budget does? It cuts food
assistance for struggling families; it takes away affordable health
care coverage for working families; and, of course, it dismantles the
health care safety net. But also, it deals with the education of our
children.
As the cochair and founder of the Congressional Children's Caucus,
let me show you what happens when we don't educate our children. We can
see the numbers of individuals who are unemployed who have not had a
high school degree. Our friends and the Republican budget are going to
cut education, and they're going to wind up with increasing
unemployment because you can see that less of our Americans are being
able to go to college, and, therefore, without college, without a high
school education, we just undermine a growing child's opportunity.
Let me tell you what else we do. We go from children to their
grandparents. I remember standing on the floor of this House trying to
prevent the doughnut hole from coming about, but Republicans again
established a doughnut hole that millions of seniors have fallen
through. In fact, the Republican budget causes seniors to pay some
$12,000 on their Medicare. Listen to me clearly, seniors, you will be
paying an extra $12,000 with the Republican budget plan. And of course
we will open up the doughnut hole again, the very doughnut hole that
has been taken care of by the Affordable Care Act.
On the other hand, the Democratic budget balances the budget, and of
course it recognizes the value of a shared sacrifice. I just visited
Texas soldiers, National Guard. They understand about shared sacrifice;
they support each other. But this is a suicidal budget. It has no
shared sacrifice, and all of the cuts come from the most vulnerable.
The Republican plan is all about turning back the clock and throwing
the poor people over the bridge. That is what it's all about. It is a
disgrace. Vote for the Democratic Budget.
Mr. Chair, I rise in opposition to the Republican Budget for Fiscal
Year 2012 and beyond. Unlike the proposed Democratic Budget, the
Republican Budget purports to reduce our nation's deficit by making
disturbingly deep cuts to important programs and will have an adverse
affect on our nation's families, children, and the health of women.
The Republican Budget:
Guts Food Assistance for Struggling Families. The budget resolution
calls for $127 billion in cuts to SNAP (formerly called food stamps) in
a six-year period (2015 through 2021). This proposal to block-grant and
reduce funding represents a cut of 25 percent in food benefits for some
of the most vulnerable Americans. States will be forced to cut benefits
to some households or create waiting lists for needy families.
Takes Away Affordable Health Coverage for Millions of Working
Families. The majority's budget resolution calls for $1.4 trillion in
savings from repealing coverage provisions of the Affordable Care Act,
which Congress enacted a year ago to hold insurance companies
accountable and extend health coverage to more than 30 million
Americans who would otherwise be uninsured. This would mean repealing
$777 billion in tax credits to help low- and middle-income families
afford health insurance coverage.
Dismantles Health Care Safety Net for Vulnerable Populations. The
majority's budget devastates health security for 28 million poor
children, 5 million seniors, and 10 million disabled individuals who
rely on Medicaid for a basic safety net of health care.
To protect tax cuts for the wealthy, the budget includes the absurd
idea to dismantle the Medicaid program and to let the chips fall where
they may, no matter who might get hurt. The real hard choices are left
to others: state governors, who will decide which populations or health
services to drop; health care providers, whose Medicaid payments might
get cut so low they will have to decide whether they can afford to
continue providing services to Medicaid beneficiaries; low-income
families, who may have to decide between buying groceries and taking a
sick child to a doctor; and adults with aging parents, who may have to
decide between sending a child to college or paying for their parents'
long-term care.
The Democratic Budget:
Democratic budget reduces the deficit responsibly, reaches primary
balance by 2018. The Democratic budget reduces the deficit by $1.2
trillion more than the President's budget over ten years.
Includes Pell grant and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance (SNAP)
initiatives. The Democratic budget includes two mandatory initiatives
that are fully paid for with spending reductions. First, it includes
the President's proposed mandatory funding to sustain the maximum Pell
grant award at $5,550, in contrast to the Republican budget, which cuts
Pell grant funding substantially.
The Democratic Budget protects Medicaid and the Medicare guarantee
for seniors. The Democratic budget protects Medicare's guarantee of
health care coverage for seniors and disabled workers. It also
preserves the existing structure of Medicaid that provides a health
care safety net for vulnerable children, families, seniors, and persons
with disabilities. In contrast, the Republican budget dismantles
Medicaid and ends Medicare by converting it into an inadequate voucher
for the purchase of private insurance.
I would urge all Members of Congress to oppose the Republican Budget
and instead support the Democratic Budget to responsibly cut spending
and give America's families, women and children a chance.
{time} 1950
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the
gentleman from Oklahoma, a member of the Budget Committee, Mr.
Lankford.
(Mr. LANKFORD asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. LANKFORD. This is a little surreal to walk in the Chamber and be
able to hear that somehow Republicans are interested in throwing old
people off the bridge and that somehow old people--that we're focused
on all of these things: that we hate those in poverty, and we hate our
own parents, and we hate all of these other things.
In reality, as a newcomer walking into this body, I walk into a
Chamber saying, We came to get things done. And the driving factor that
I walked in this Chamber with is the reality that we have $14 trillion
in debt. Now, that's hard to be able to wrap your head around, $14
trillion in debt. So the way I try to wrap my head around it is with an
old illustration from me personally.
I remember being 9 years old watching the Voyager spacecraft take off
and thinking it will take forever for the Voyager spacecraft to get all
the way up to Saturn and to Jupiter. It would take all of 10 years to
get out there. But I remember when those pictures were done, and they
were sent back, and how significant they were.
Now, just imagine this: in 1977 when the Voyager 1 spacecraft took
off, if it started dropping a dollar a mile from the time it took off,
how long would it take it to drop $14 trillion? Now, remember, the
Voyager spacecraft has been out 34 years. It is still operating. It has
left the solar system now. It is past Pluto, headed out of the solar
system. If it dropped a dollar a mile since the time it took off, it
will drop $14 trillion 41,801 years from now. A spacecraft that's
already flown out of our
[[Page H2825]]
solar system will have to continue flying at the same speed another
41,801 years from now.
It is surreal for us to stand here and to be able to not take
seriously the amount of spending that we do and how out of control we
really are. This is not just a tax problem. This is a long-term issue
that's not Republican and Democrat. We have both spent too much money.
It is time for us to pull our own budget back and to take this
seriously.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I, too, remember the Voyager spacecraft and also the
Apollo program and Moon launch. Great examples of things that
individuals and corporations can't do by themselves, things that we
have to do by coming together as a people behind a purpose.
The Republican budget, if you look at the long-term forecast provided
by CBO, essentially says when you project out here, given the
assumptions they were given, you eliminate all of the Federal
Government except defense--and even defense is at a smaller share of
GDP when you get out there than it is today. That is the kind of result
that you get.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield to the gentleman from Wisconsin.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. That is because GDP growth grows at a faster
pace than government. So it is not as if government goes away.
Government keeps spending; government keeps defense and education. It's
just that the economy outgrows the size of government, and we're on a
virtuous path to more prosperity, more opportunity.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Reclaiming my time, look, the issue here is what is
the appropriate role and size of government. There is no doubt that we
have to take what we think should be a balanced approach that involves
both cuts and, as the fiscal commission, the bipartisan fiscal
commission says, you've got to deal with the revenue piece if you're
going to do deal with this problem in a realistic way.
With that, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from Georgia (Mr.
Scott).
Mr. DAVID SCOTT of Georgia. Thank you very much, Mr. Van Hollen. I
appreciate it. Let me commend you for the excellent leadership that you
are providing in this fight.
Ladies and gentlemen of the Congress, this is America. This is the
greatest country in the world. And we are great because we have certain
values. Paramount among those values is the sense of fairness.
Now, let me tell you what the flaw is in the Republican budget. The
flaw in the Republican budget is it is not fair. Whatever polls we
read, wherever we look, the American people are beginning to see it.
How can you justify cutting seniors, cutting young people, cutting the
low-income, cutting the middle class while at the same time giving over
a trillion dollars to billionaires and millionaires in this country?
That is the disconnect, Mr. Speaker.
I don't care which side you're on or where you are in this country.
The American people know that we, yes, must bring down our deficit and
cut this debt. It has become a national security issue.
For 8 years since I've been in Congress I have been arguing for that,
standing up for paying down our debt. During the years of the Bush
administration, which, let's tell the truth, was a primary cause of us
being in the position that we're in now to have three wars going at the
same time.
And so ladies and gentlemen, in conclusion I'm just saying that the
point we have to make is it is not fair to cut this budget on the backs
of the poor, the elderly, and the young while at the same time giving
billionaires over a trillion dollars.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Mr. Chairman, I will give myself a minute to
simply say again just to clear up for the record, if you're a person
who is 55 years of age or older, there's no change in Medicare for you.
The Medicare you're on or that you're organizing your life and getting
ready to prepare for when you retire will be there as it is forever for
your life under our proposal.
Contrary to the status quo. Medicare goes bankrupt in 9 years. Status
quo, the President has a new board called the Independent Payment
Advisory Board; 15 people he appoints. They ration Medicare. They put
price controls in Medicare. They decide what Medicare can do or what it
can't do. Congress is out of the loop. Unelected bureaucrats by the
President, his people, they do it. And the President just yesterday
said, You know what? Go cut more. Go get more savings. That's the
status quo.
With that, Mr. Chairman, I yield 2 minutes to the gentlelady from
North Carolina (Ms. Foxx).
Ms. FOXX. I thank my colleague from Wisconsin for the exceptional
leadership he has been bringing to this House on this issue of the
budget.
I want to say I agree with my colleague from Georgia. We are the
greatest country in the world. We also have the smartest people in the
world, and they're not going to buy this demagoguery anymore.
The President and Democratic political strategists are engaged in
demagoguery of the worst sort. Yesterday the President accused us of
wanting to leave sick kids to fend for themselves. But we've heard this
before.
On the eve of the 1996 welfare reform, Senator Frank Lautenberg
voiced his concern that the bill would transform America into a Third
World nation leaving ``children hungry and homeless, begging for money,
begging for food and even at 8 and 9 years old engaging in
prostitution.''
Senator Carol Moseley-Braun trumped Lautenberg by wondering aloud
whether the welfare reform bill would prompt the widespread auctioning
of abandoned children into slavery. Jill Nelson of The Nation did them
one better by predicting that ``working- and middle-class communities
all over America will become scary, violent wastelands.''
Representative Jim McDermott made a more prosaic prediction that within
2 years of enactment, the bill would ``put 1.5 million to 2.5 million
children into poverty.'' Even Daniel Patrick Moynihan warned that the
law would ``have children sleeping on grates.''
{time} 2000
What happened? Child poverty rates fell by 1 percent per year in the
5 years following the passage of the 1996 Personal Responsibility and
Work Opportunity Act, and they remain below 1995 levels, even though
the Nation is still emerging from a severe recession. Transforming
welfare, by among other things block granting the program and giving
States more control over its implementation, cut caseloads in half
against a backdrop of falling poverty rates. In almost every
particular, the critics were wrong.
The aim of the social safety net should be to empower individuals,
putting them in stronger position to achieve. Government can play a
positive role in this area with policies aimed at helping those who are
down on their luck get back on their feet.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentlewoman has expired.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield the gentlewoman an additional 30
seconds.
Ms. FOXX. This budget strengthens the social safety net and promotes
policies that help people recover from poverty and lead self-sufficient
lives.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Mr. Chairman, we ask every American to read this budget, this
Republican budget, and see whether or not it reflects their values and
the choices that they would make. We believe when they do that they
will reach the same conclusion that the bipartisan fiscal commission
did, which is that it's simply unbalanced, it's simply unfair. It puts
all the burden of the sacrifice on working men and women. And it does
provide those folks at the very top once again--we've seen it before--
with a big tax break.
When it comes to Medicare, it's a fact seniors are no longer going to
be able to choose to stay in Medicare. They're going to be forced into
the private insurance market with ever-increasing costs and ever-
declining support. That is rationing care. That's what insurance
companies do. If you don't have enough money to buy the benefits that
they are offering, you don't get them. If your doctor's not on that
plan, tough luck.
So those are the choices that we're making this evening. And I hope
as we go forward the American people will look very closely at this
proposal. I'm confident they'll reach the same conclusion the
bipartisan fiscal commission did, which is it's just not balanced, and
it doesn't reflect American values and priorities.
[[Page H2826]]
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield myself 2 minutes, Madam Chair.
Now, let's take a look at what our drivers of the debt are: Social
Security, Medicaid, Medicare. The health care entitlements are the
biggest drivers. The black line here shows our revenues. These three
programs alone take up all Federal revenues. You throw interest on top,
which you have to pay interest, by 2035 they consume every single penny
of every Federal tax everybody pays.
Now, why are we proposing what we're proposing on Medicare? Because
we have experience that this kind of thing works. Giving people more
choices, having more competition works. Prescription drugs. That's a
program, very successful, very popular. When that program was passed,
it was projected to cost $634 billion over the budget window. It ended
up costing $373 billion. It came in 41 percent below budget. Premiums
are lower than were anticipated. Name me one other government program
that actually came in 41 percent below cost projections. There isn't
one. Why did this one do that? Choice, competition. The senior is in
charge.
We are not interested, Madam Chair, in giving control over Medicare
to 15 unelected people to decide where, when, how, and under what
circumstances they get their Medicare. We protect Medicare for current
seniors. We deny the 15 people on the board the ability to ration their
care. And we want 40 million seniors to have the choices. We want them
to be in control of their Medicare.
The Acting CHAIR (Ms. Foxx). The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield myself an additional 30 seconds.
Because what we have learned is that giving them more control, the
senior, the beneficiary, the patient, not the government--competition
works. We've tried so many different plans at rationing care. They
don't work. One person does work to reduce prices: The consumer. That
is why we are saving Medicare.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Madam Chairman, I yield myself such time as I may
consume.
I have to say that to say this plan saves Medicare is in my view
Orwellian. It does remind me of the phrase from many years ago that you
have to destroy the village in order to save it. I have to say that if
you look at what we're doing here, you're saying to seniors you've got
to go into the private insurance market.
Now, the chairman mentioned a couple other examples of the private
market. But in this case we've already experimented, through Medicare
Advantage, with that kind of private plan within Medicare. And you know
what we discovered? That you had to subsidize them at 114 percent of
the fee-for-service program. It cost us more for Medicare Advantage. In
fact, one of the reforms that we made as part of the Affordable Care
Act was to say we're not going to ask the taxpayers and folks who are
on Medicare fee-for-service to subsidize those private plans that are
running over cost. And you know what? In this budget our Republican
colleagues kept that reform. If it was so great to have the Medicare
Advantage plan, how come they took part of the savings from that plan?
They did not.
So it is a big mistake to say to seniors we're going to throw you
into the private insurance market with an ever-declining voucher
premium. The reason this isn't premium support, it doesn't support the
premium. What Federal employees and Members of Congress have is a
premium support system through a fair share formula. This is not a fair
share for seniors.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Madam Chair, I will just simply say we do
actually put $10 billion back into Medicare Advantage to make sure the
program stays alive.
I yield 2 minutes to a member of the Budget Committee, the gentleman
from Kansas (Mr. Huelskamp).
Mr. HUELSKAMP. Madam Chairman, as a freshman I guess I am a little
confused here on the floor of the House listening to this debate about
the budget. And I guess I am a little confused which party was in
charge of this Chamber for the last 4 years as we ran up trillions and
trillions and trillions of deficits. The concern wasn't about deficits.
The concern was about spending and how much more could we do, and how
much more could we throw into the economy. We look at the results
today: Unemployment levels that we haven't seen for a long time, Madam
Chairman.
I guess as we debate and discuss this budget, of course we might be a
little bit rusty. It's my understanding it's been a couple years since
we even allowed a budget debate on the floor. I welcome that debate.
But one thing that was mentioned, read the Path to Prosperity. I agree.
I agree with my colleagues, please read the bill. Please do. And here
is what you will find.
A Path to Prosperity we believe runs not through Washington, not
through this floor, certainly not through the other Chamber, but the
Path to Prosperity in this country runs through the hard work of
entrepreneurs, a flatter, fairer tax system, closed tax loopholes,
regulatory reform, work rather than welfare.
The result is this, Madam Chairman. We expect a million new jobs
potentially might be created if we get Washington out of the way, as we
see in the Path to Prosperity.
Madam Chairman, ideas have consequences. And we believe, this plan
believes in one thing, in the power of the American people, not
Washington elites. This plan, this budget is about liberty and freedom,
Madam Chairman. I hope and pray 2011 will be remembered not for what we
do here, but for whether or not the end result of our actions will help
us restore the American Dream in this country.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Madam Chairman, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the
gentleman from California (Mr. Garamendi), former insurance
commissioner for the State of California.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Madam Chair, for 8 years I was the insurance
commissioner in California. And for 8 years I battled the health
insurance industry. What we heard on the floor was that 2011, what will
we remember? What it will be remembered for is the death of Medicare,
the demise, the death of Medicare. The most successful insurance
program, the most successful health insurance program in this Nation.
{time} 2010
It works. It is efficient. It is effective. It is a nationwide
standard policy available to every American 65 years of age and older
and some of those who are younger.
I heard the author of this bill a moment ago saying competition would
make it better. In fact, it does not. In fact, it does not.
The private health insurance industry is inefficient. It is
ineffective, it is discriminatory and it clearly, clearly harms
customers. There is a profit motive that has to be paid for. There are
compensations for the sale and compensations for those who sell the
insurance. All of that adds up.
It is also extremely inefficient in that there are multiple policies,
multiple people that have to be paid, insurance companies that have to
be paid, different deductions, different copays. All of that is out
there.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I yield the gentleman an additional 15 seconds.
Mr. GARAMENDI. My Republican colleagues have done everything they can
to repeal the Affordable Health Care Act, which had insurance reform in
it. Without the insurance reform, which clearly they want to do away
with, you are throwing senior citizens to the sharks, to health
insurance.
I urge us not to do that.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Madam Chair, I yield myself 30 seconds.
I would simply say we have new data from the Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services on national health care expenditures. In 2009, the
last year we have data available, Medicare costs grew by 7.9 percent.
Private health insurance plans costs grew by 1.3 percent.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I will not yield to the gentleman.
With that, Madam Chair, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Wisconsin (Mr. Duffy).
Mr. DUFFY. Madam Chairwoman, as a freshman in this House, it has been
unique to sit and see one of the age-old tactics that takes place,
scaring seniors, not to move the ball down the
[[Page H2827]]
field, but for political points. The gentleman was just referencing
Medicare and telling the American people that it's not broken, that
it's going to continue to work.
These are CBO charts. If you take a look at them, it's broken. We
can't afford it.
We have to reform this program to save it, and to deny that is trying
to scare seniors for your own political gain, and I think that's
shameless.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. DUFFY. No, I won't.
I think we have to be honest with the American people, come out and
say you know what, this is a program that if we can reform it, we can
save it for our retirees. But not only that, those who are about to
retire, 55 and older, we can save the program for them as well. And we
can modify the program for those of us in later generations.
But let's not try to scare our seniors tonight and tell them that
this plan is going to take away their care, because it's not. This
plan, and its proposal, is that those who are 55 and older are going to
continue to get the same plan that exists today.
The reforms are for future generations, and with those reforms we are
guaranteeing that current retirees get the benefits that we promised
them. If you say you care about our seniors, you would join with us,
and we would all work to resolve this issue and make sure our grandmas
and our grandpas continue to get the benefits that our country has
promised them.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Madam Chairman, may I inquire how much time remains?
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Maryland has 2\1/4\ minutes. The
gentleman from Wisconsin has 7\3/4\ minutes.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Woodall).
Mr. WOODALL. Madam Chair, I am glad I had the opportunity to speak
after my freshman colleague from Wisconsin.
I was down on the floor earlier. I walked back to my office. I asked
Mr. Maroney, who is answering the phones in my office, What are you
hearing about? Are you hearing about the continuing resolution?
He said, No. I said, Are you hearing about the budget debate? He
said, Not really. I said, What are you hearing about? He said, I am
hearing from seniors who are scared. I am hearing from folks on
Medicare who are scared.
Now, who does that surprise? It doesn't surprise me, and I don't know
what the goal was when we went down this scare tactic path. I will say
to the ranking member, I know you know better.
You've got a persuasive case to make, a persuasive case to make for
why your vision is better than our vision, but you're scaring people.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. WOODALL. I will yield to have the gentleman tell me if anyone age
55 or older will be affected.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Isn't it true that the Republican budget reopens the
prescription--
Mr. WOODALL. If the ranking member is not going to answer my
question, I will not yield. You should be ashamed.
I reclaim my time.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. And that's because you don't like the answer you're
going to hear.
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Georgia controls the time.
Mr. WOODALL. I reclaim my time to say we have honest debates here. We
have honest disagreements here. But folks are scared because you're
scaring them and you know good and well you don't need to.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. WOODALL. I want to associate myself with Mr. Duffy's comments
that we could get together and solve this problem, or we can just
choose to scare people.
Mr. GARAMENDI. If the gentleman would yield, I will answer his
question.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Will the gentleman yield?
Mr. WOODALL. I will yield to the gentleman to tell me if anyone age
55 years of age or over will have their benefits changed in any way.
The Acting CHAIR. Will all Members please suspend.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Yes, they will have their prescription drug benefit
changed.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Point of order ma'am.
The Acting CHAIR. Will Members please suspend.
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Madam Chair, the House is not in order.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Madam Chair, a point of order.
The Acting CHAIR. All Members are reminded to address their remarks
to the Chair.
Mr. GARAMENDI. Thank you.
Mr. RYAN. I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the gentleman from South Carolina
(Mr. Mulvaney).
Mr. MULVANEY. Madam Chairwoman, I wanted to speak very briefly to a
topic that was raised earlier tonight by my colleague, Mr. Ellison from
Minnesota. It is a comment, a message that has been repeated several
times tonight and was, in fact, repeated several times during the
committee process, which dealt with the subsidies that we give to Big
Oil, to oil and gas.
I will tell my folks, especially my colleague from Maryland (Mr. Van
Hollen), that I share the frustrations that you have with those types
of subsidies. I also share the frustrations that I have with other
members of my conference that alternative energies receive seven times
as many subsidies in the Tax Code as oil and gas. In fact, if you take
the subsidy, the excise tax credit for ethanol, that number rises to 10
times.
So I do share your frustrations with the amount of tax credits that
the code currently gives to oil and gas. But I am 10 times as
frustrated, Madam Chairwoman, with the subsidies that we give to
alternative energies.
I would invite, Madam Chairwoman, my colleagues on the other side of
the aisle who have that same frustration to join us and vote for the
budget. It's the best chance they are going to get this year to get rid
of these subsidies as part of this process of closing the loopholes,
lowering the tax rates and broadening the base.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Madam Chair, I yield myself the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Maryland is recognized for 2\1/
4\ minutes.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. We've had a spirited debate this evening about
fundamental choices that we need to make as a country. We all agree
that we have to reduce our deficits in a predictable, steady way. The
question is how do you do it, and we believe, as did the cochairs of
the bipartisan fiscal commission, that the Republican plan is
unbalanced; and it's unbalanced because it asks very little of the
folks at the very top and reduces dramatically our investments in our
kids' education and it does end the Medicare guarantee.
Seniors will no longer be able to stay in the Medicare program. They
will be forced into the insurance program. It immediately does end the
prescription drug benefit, something we worked hard to close, the
doughnut hole.
{time} 2020
It ends the effort that was put in place under the Affordable Care
Act to end the doughnut hole. So I would say to the gentleman from
Georgia who spoke earlier, those seniors who are calling his office,
they will lose that benefit in closing the doughnut hole right away if
this Republican budget passes.
For other seniors and people who have been paying in the Medicare
system through their payroll taxes, we want to make sure they have the
benefit of the Medicare guarantee. Throwing them into the private
insurance market and giving them a deal that Members of Congress do not
give ourselves is wrong. It is absolutely wrong.
We have a fair share deal, and we are asking seniors to take a raw
deal. We have a true premium support system for Members of Congress
where the Federal Government shares the risk of increasing costs. Under
the Republican plan, they are asking seniors to do what they don't want
Members of Congress to do: take all the risk of the rising costs.
Those are not choices that reflect American values and priorities. We
should not be giving tax breaks to the folks at the top and ending the
Medicare guarantee.
[[Page H2828]]
Mr. RYAN of Wisconsin. Madam Chair, I yield myself the remainder of
the time.
First, let me say with respect to the Medicare guarantee, we keep
hearing that. As you know, because we've said it over and over again,
in our budget--by the way, go to budget.house.gov if you want to read
the plan. I encourage people to please do that.
With the new Medicare plan with people 54 and below, it's a Medicare
guarantee. The plan you will be given to select from, just like a
system that works like the one we have, like the prescription drug
benefit plan, they are guaranteed plans. You are guaranteed to get them
if you want them, and your subsidy is guaranteed.
Now, we simply say, wealthy people shouldn't get as much of a subsidy
as everyone else. Lower income people should get a bigger subsidy. And
as people get sicker, they, too, should get a bigger subsidy to protect
their premiums.
And I would simply say the greatest danger, enemy and threat to
Medicare is the status quo. Medicare goes insolvent in 9 years.
But let me look at this from a different perspective. We've had a lot
of debt before in our country. When you buy a house or a car or get a
business loan, you get debt. What matters is how big is your debt
relative to your ability to pay it. What also matters is: Who are you
borrowing it from? Are you borrowing it from your local community bank?
Are you borrowing it from your brother-in-law? Fine.
Where are we borrowing our money from? We used to lend it to
ourselves. Americans would buy T bills and lend it to ourselves. In
1970, 5 percent was held by foreigners, 95 percent by Americans. In
1990, 19 percent of our debt was held by foreigners. Today, 47 percent
of our debt is held by other countries. Number one is China. We are
borrowing 42 cents of every dollar today, and half of that from other
countries, the number one being China.
Look at where we're headed. We have a crushing burden of debt. The
debt goes to double the size of the economy, then triple the size of
the economy, to eight times the size of the economy. The CBO tells us
the economy crashes in 2037. Their computers can't figure out how the
American economy can grow past the year 2037 because of the debt
burdens.
We can't keep borrowing money from other countries to cash flow our
government. We are giving them our sovereignty. We are losing control
of our own destiny. We are giving our children a debt prison.
Why is this happening? Because politicians from both political
parties have been making promises and promises that are empty. We need
to get government to live within its means. We can't keep spending
money we don't have.
By the way, you don't fix this by raising taxes and raising taxes and
raising taxes. You fix this by cutting spending--novel idea. I know it
is in Washington.
So we're going to start. We're going to start by cutting $6.2
trillion in spending. We're going to start by putting the right
policies in place to grow the economy. We're going to start by keeping
the promise to people who have retired so that their Medicare and
Social Security is there for them. We're going to start by saving these
programs for future generations so they're not empty promises. We're
going to start by preserving our social safety net and making it more
adaptive, resilient and sustainable for the 21st century.
We want to repair the social safety net so it works. And we want to
gear it not toward keeping people on welfare, but getting them back on
their feet into lives of self-sufficiency so they, too, can flourish
and reach the American Dream. We're going to start by passing this
budget so that we can give our children a debt-free nation, so we can
maintain the legacy of America, which every generation prior to ours
upheld, which has given the next generation a more prosperous America,
a better chance, a better chance at securing the American Dream.
If we don't do this, if we don't fix this, if we don't make the tough
choices now to get this under control, we will be the first generation
to sever that legacy. And, Madam Chair, that's a disgrace. It is within
our control. We see this coming. We know what's happening. We know why
it's happening. And if we don't fix this before it gets out of control,
shame on us.
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Texas (Mr. Brady) and the
gentleman from New York (Mr. Hinchey) each will control 30 minutes on
the subject of economic goals and policies.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Texas.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Madam Chair, on behalf of the Joint Economic
Committee, I yield myself as much time as I may consume.
This country is starved for truth-tellers, people in Congress who
will just tell them what the problems are that this country faces, give
them options and help them make the right choice, people who are strong
enough to lead and bold enough to lead at a time when the country needs
leadership. When it comes to the budget, when it comes to the economy
where the President has failed, House Republicans will lead.
The Paul Ryan budget helps spur job creation in America today. It
stops spending money the government doesn't have. It lifts the crushing
burden of debt. This plan puts the budget on the path to balance in
paying down the debt over the long term, and it puts the economy on the
path to prosperity.
Let's talk about the economy. It is the number one concern of most
people, and the debt and deficit have a lot to do with it.
We are undergoing one of the worst recoveries we've seen in a long
time. It is two to three times slower than the Reagan recovery, and
there is reason for that. We were told by the President and
congressional Democrats that if we just spent money, spend it in the
stimulus and spend it in increased deficits, that the economy would
recover. And they were wrong. After spending hundreds of billions of
dollars on the stimulus, we have 2 million fewer jobs in America today
than when the stimulus began. We have fewer jobs today than when all
that spending took off.
We were told if Congress passed all the stimulus bills that our
unemployment rate today would be 6.8 percent. It's 8.8 percent. And
it's only that low because so many people have given up simply looking
for work anymore. They've lost hope. And then finally, for those who
say we just spend more to create this economy, they were off, their
predictions, by 7 million American jobs.
It's time to stop listening to the economists who got it wrong and
start listening to economists who got it right.
{time} 2030
Let's take a look at what spending has done to our economy in
America. Here is a chart. It looks back on the last 40 years in
America, and it tracks Federal Government spending against job creation
along Main Street, not government jobs but jobs in the private sector,
the small-, medium-, and large-sized businesses that our economy
depends upon. The blue line is government spending. The red line
represents jobs along Main Street. You can tell with the blue line.
Look at how different job creation is. In fact, over each of these four
decades, not only is there no correlation between Federal spending and
jobs along Main Street, but it's a negative correlation in each of the
4 decades. As government spending goes up, jobs along Main Street go
down.
Look at this next chart. We also went back the last four decades in
America and asked about private business investment. What happens when
companies large and small buy new equipment, buy new software, buy new
buildings, and invest back in the economy? Here is the chart. The blue
is the private, fixed investment from business. The red is job creation
along Main Street. As you can tell, it's a very close correlation.
In fact, there is no substitute in America for private investment in
the economy--no substitute, no rebates, no stimulus, no shovel-ready
projects. Nothing is a substitute for creating jobs like getting
businesses to invest back in their workforces, in their workplaces and
in the economy.
Recently, I had the Joint Economic Committee take a look at the
economic studies over the last 40 years of our competitors around the
world, competitor countries that got themselves into debt trouble but
that worked their way out of it. You would be interested in the results
of this
[[Page H2829]]
study, and there are three key points to it.
One is that the countries that were most successful in getting their
debt down, in getting ahold of their financial paths, didn't do it by
raising taxes. That didn't succeed. They did it by reducing spending.
That's how they best and most successfully got ahold of their debt.
There were 21 times that 10 different of our global competitor
countries got a handle on their debt successfully by reducing spending.
The second takeaway from this study, called ``Spend Less, Owe Less,
Grow the Economy,'' was that countries that got ahold of their debt the
right way also grew the economy as well. Economists agree that the
countries that get their financial houses in order grow their economies
over the long term. What this study shows is that, with our
competitors, if you get a handle on your spending the right way, you
grow your economy in the short term as well.
Here is Canada. Neighboring Canada got themselves in financial
trouble. Their economy was growing at a paltry pace, less than 1
percent a year. They lowered their debt as a nation by about 12
percentage points, and their economy took off. For almost 16 years,
they've averaged economic growth of almost 3\1/2\ percent.
Sweden, another developed country with an economy like ours, actually
had an economy that was shrinking. It was actually contracting. They
got ahold of their financial house and put that in order as well,
reducing their debt by more than 11 percentage points. Their economy
took off, growing 3\1/2\ percent a year, on average, for almost a
decade. New Zealand did the same.
You may say, Look, we're not Canada; we're not New Zealand; we're not
Sweden. Yet 26 times, nine of our competitor countries around the world
that lowered their debt by reducing spending grew their economies
strongly, not just in the long term but in the short term. They didn't
grow them a little. Those countries rocketed to the top quarter of
economic growth in the world. Countries that reduce their spending and
do it the right way grow their economies.
Here is a third and another, again, telling point about this, which
is that not all spending cuts are the same. When it comes time to grow
the economy, not all spending cuts are the same.
What these economists showed is that the nations that grew their
economies the most successfully undertook cuts that were large,
credible and difficult to reverse. So they made cuts in savings that
mattered, and the cuts in savings that grew their economies made sense.
They shrunk their Federal workforces. They right-sized them to what
they could afford. They eliminated duplicate programs, obsolete
programs--as a business would--programs that waste money. They reduced
subsidies to corporations which were interfering in the free
marketplace. Finally, they tackled their entitlement reforms in health
care and in pensions. What is interesting is that, even if the reforms
they made in their entitlements didn't affect their current
beneficiaries and even if they phased those reforms in over time, the
reforms sent the right signals to the marketplace.
Then what happened in each of these countries is that businesses, in
no longer facing higher taxes because of all that spending, felt
comfortable getting to reinvest back into their workforces, back into
their countries' economies. Households like ours, in no longer facing
higher taxes to pay for all these spending sprees, felt more
comfortable buying larger ticket items, like cars and houses. As we
know, when businesses invest, jobs along Main Street grow. It has been
made clear time and time and time again, like businesses, countries
that can get ahold of their debt, that can do it the right way and that
can put themselves on financially sound paths grow. America's economy
can grow as well.
The budget resolution presented tonight by Chairman Paul Ryan meets
the test that spending reductions must be large, credible and difficult
to reverse once made to boost our economy:
The Ryan budget attacks the medical entitlements that are driving
Federal spending higher. It attacks corporate welfare by phasing out
government guaranties to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. It eliminates
subsidies for green energy, and it reduces agriculture subsidies by $30
billion over the next decade. The Ryan budget rolls back non-security
discretionary spending to its 2008 levels and then freezes it for 5
years.
It adopts a number of the recommendations from the President's own
fiscal commission to eliminate waste and to achieve real savings in our
budget. It eliminates agencies and programs identified by our own
government as wasteful and duplicative. That alone will save over $100
billion in the next decade.
It reduces the Federal workforce. It right-sizes the Federal
workforce by 10 percent over the next 5 years by attrition, simply by
hiring only one new Federal employee for every three employees who
leave or retire. Together, that saves almost $400 billion.
The Ryan budget envisions a pro-growth tax reform that lowers the top
income tax rate for both individuals and companies to 25 percent and
makes us competitive again in this world.
The Ryan budget is a fiscally responsible plan that accelerates
economic growth and job creation. It is a game-changer for this Nation
and tells the truth about our challenges, and addresses them with ideas
and proven solutions that move us forward.
Madam Chair, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. HINCHEY. I yield myself such time as I may consume.
Madam Chair, I think it's very important for us to understand and
remember how the economy here grew and how it became much more positive
and progressive during those 8 years of the Clinton administration. The
deficit that Clinton inherited when he came into office was
dramatically reduced and brought back a surplus. When he left office,
the national debt was in the neighborhood of a little over $5 trillion.
By the time the next President left, George W. Bush, the deficit was
about $10.7 trillion. So it's important for us not to have the same
kind of experience now that the opposition here on the other side of
the aisle is trying to push on us.
The most critical challenge that we face as a country, of course, is
the need to create new jobs. If Congress hopes to get the economy
moving at the right pace, we are going to have to take this challenge
of job creation very seriously. The question is: What should we do?
What should we not do to reform government so that we can better
compete in the world economy and yield strong, sustainable, long-term
growth and prosperity?
After 100 days, Republicans have failed to put forward a single plan
to create jobs. Instead, they have laid out a budget plan that shows us
exactly what not to do.
{time} 2040
We must remember how we got into this budget mess in the first place.
While my friends on the other side would like to pretend that our
economic woes began the very second that President Obama took his hand
off the Bible and was sworn into office, we know that is not the truth
at all.
In fact, it was quite the opposite. The things he did as President
were positive for the economy, and we are seeing that today. We are
seeing the economy growing. We are seeing unemployment declining. We
are seeing employment going up, all of that as a positive effect of the
actions of this President.
My friends on the other side pushing this budget are the same people
who carried President George W. Bush's agenda through Congress, and in
doing so nearly doubled our national debt, as I said, from about $5.7
trillion to $10.7 trillion over the 8 years of the Bush Presidency.
We need to make sure that they are not able to do that again. They
did so then by recklessly lowering taxes on the wealthy with the
promise that doing so would create jobs and strengthen our economy.
Well, we know that neither of those happened. In fact, just the
opposite occurred. They did so by passing a prescription drug plan that
is a major giveaway to the pharmaceutical industry without finding a
way to pay for it. And they did so by taking us into Iraq under false
pretenses and committing us to what will ultimately be several
trillions of dollars.
Now we are seeing economic inequality at record levels. The
wealthiest 10
[[Page H2830]]
percent of the population here in the United States of America receives
nearly half of all income in our country. And the richest 1 percent has
seen its share of the national income increase by nearly 10 percent;
and they are now at about 35 percent of all income, all of that
increasing for the richest and declining for working people across this
country.
This trend has consequences, and it is no coincidence that the last
time we saw inequality at this level was during the Great Depression in
the 1930s. But instead of working to correct this problem, the House
Republican proposal acts as a huge wealth transfer program from the
working class Americans to the rich. Overall, two-thirds of the cuts
the Republicans propose take dead aim at working class Americans to
lower their economy and lower their economic conditions.
The Republicans' budget plan eliminates Medicare, forcing seniors to
buy insurance in the private marketplace, using a coupon that barely
covers a fraction of the cost of care. It cuts food stamps, Pell
Grants, and low-income housing. And at the same time, our friends
across the aisle here, their plan would give away $2.9 trillion in tax
cuts to the hugest, biggest corporations and to the wealthiest
Americans.
This is the exact wrong approach, and it will severely damage our
economy, hurt the middle class, and impoverish senior citizens.
Let's take a closer look at how this plan hurts seniors. Their budget
eliminates Medicare. It eliminates Medicare and creates a new voucher
program that would saddle seniors with a large portion of their health
care costs. They would then be more responsible for it, and the whole
health care system would decline.
The Republican budget also makes prescription drugs more expensive
for seniors. The health care law we passed last year is gradually
eliminating the gaps in prescription drug coverage. The Republican plan
undoes this essential reform, forcing seniors to pay out of pocket. The
Republican budget also threatens to make nursing home care unaffordable
by cutting $771 billion from Medicaid over a 10-year period. Medicaid
currently covers nearly half of all long-term care costs, and we know
what would happen if their plan was to be successful. All of that would
be essentially eliminated. The Republican budget also cuts $10 billion
from Social Security's administrative budget, which will impact service
to seniors.
What this plan does to America's seniors is absolutely unacceptable;
but the worst part of it is that while they cut Medicare and Medicaid
and they cut prescription drug coverage and the Social Security
Administration, they also cut taxes on the very wealthy, reducing
substantially the amount of taxes that the wealthiest people in this
country pay while at the same time raising taxes on everyone else.
Now, 10 years ago, the conservative Heritage Foundation projected
that in 2011, 1.6 million more Americans would be working as a result
of the Bush tax cuts. They were wrong. They were wrong then, and they
are wrong now. We know what happened then, just the opposite of what
they predicted.
The Republican debate isn't about good policy or the facts. It is
about a dogmatic approach to governing and doing what's best for the
very rich, doing what's best for the very rich regardless of how it
affects everyone else who are the main promoters of the economy.
Working class people, middle-income people are the people who drive the
economic growth here in America. If they are forced to decline their
economic conditions, then the whole economy of this country declines.
All of that is needed to be understood, and the actions that they are
proposing must be avoided.
Even President Reagan's budget director, David Stockman, recently
said that he finds it ``unconscionable that the Republican leadership,
faced with a $1.5 trillion deficit, could possibly believe that good
public policy is to maintain tax cuts for the top 2 percent of the
population.''
We know that isn't the case. We know that is going to be just the
opposite. We know that tax cuts for the wealthiest, making the
wealthiest people in this country even wealthier and driving down the
economy of the working people, is going to have a deadly effect on the
economic circumstances across this country.
Tax rates are now lower than they were, even under President Reagan;
and yet the Republicans are actually proposing to cut taxes again for
the very rich, lower the corporate rate, and keep special tax earmarks
for Big Oil, tax earmarks for Big Oil which is now growing to be one of
the highest growing economic aspects of this country that we have to
deal with. Tax earmarks for Big Oil and for the biggest companies, and
the biggest companies particularly that export jobs overseas,
continuing to give tax cuts to those economic companies that take jobs
out of the United States and exports them to other countries. What a
big mistake that is in the context of rescinding this economy.
Overall, the Republican budget plan for 2012 will not balance the
budget; and while it does not balance the budget, it eliminates
Medicare by replacing it with a private voucher program that will make
it impossible for seniors to get health care. It also provides huge new
tax breaks for the wealthy while cutting key investments in our
economy.
All of these proposals that we are facing here are clearly deadly. If
they were to be successful, the economic circumstances that are now
just getting better in this economy as a result of the actions by the
Obama administration would be reversed, and it would be reversed
dramatically, and we would see a downslide in the economic
circumstances here in our country.
{time} 2050
We need to oppose this effectively, and we need to have a policy that
is going to focus its attention on working class people, on the need to
create more jobs, and to create more jobs more effectively.
I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Madam Chair, I yield myself 30 seconds.
I would remind the listeners that it was Democrats who fought the
prescription drug program for our seniors; who last year slashed a
half-trillion dollars from our seniors programs, which will hurt our
local hospitals, our nursing homes, our hospice programs. They're going
to drive 7 million American seniors out of their Medicare Advantage
plan. And yet they failed to lead to preserve Medicare for every
generation once and for all. They failed; we're going to lead.
At this time I would like to yield 3 minutes to a new member of the
Joint Economic Committee, the gentleman from South Carolina (Mr.
Mulvaney).
Mr. MULVANEY. Madam Chair, when I travel my district, I have tried to
figure out a way to explain to people, and to myself, how to make sense
out of these trillions of dollars. And I do it this way. I put it in
numbers that I can understand.
I tell folks to assume that you're a family who brings home $46,000 a
year, and you sit down at the beginning of the year to do your budget,
and when you add up all of the things that you spend money on, you're
spending $78,000. And then I say to them, When you're doing that and
you're making $46,000 and you're spending $78,000, I want you to
realize the Visa bill in the drawer is $281,000. And that's where we
are as a Nation.
And I tell them, as we try to figure out a way to save money, I
remind them that the first thing that we did in this Congress was we
cut $35 million from our own budgets. To lead by example, we cut our
own budgets in this House by $35 million. And in that world where
you're making $46,000 and you're spending $78,000, and you're trying to
find $32,000 of savings in your household, that $35 million represents
70 cents.
That's how big the numbers are. And I think the folks back home have
started to grasp it. I certainly have started to grasp it.
But I do get some good questions when I give that presentation on the
road. Some folks will ask me and say, If I was in that position at my
household, not only would I try to cut expenditures, but I'd also try
to get another job. I'd try to make a little bit more money.
And I said, That's a really good point and that's what most families
would do. With government it's different. With government the only
chance they have to get that additional job, to get
[[Page H2831]]
more money to come in, is to raise taxes. And when they ask me why
don't we just raise taxes, I say because it simply doesn't work. It
simply does not work. It has never worked.
This graph shows the top marginal tax rates going back to the 1950s.
For those of you who were around or studied the era, the top marginal
rates in the 1950s were actually above 90 percent. The top marginal
income tax rate in the 1950s was above 90 percent. And the government
was still only able to take from the economy about 20 percent of the
economy; 18\1/2\ percent is the average over the course of the last 50
years. So even when tax rates were as high as 90 percent, the
government took only about 18, 19 percent of the economy out in taxes.
That number has stayed bizarrely stable over the course of the last
50 years. We've lowered marginal tax rates; we've raised marginal tax
rates. Yet the government only takes out 18, 19, at the most 20
percent.
Raising taxes does not bring in more money to the government over the
long haul. It may for a short period of time. It may for a year or two.
But the world doesn't work on a static model. The world works on a
dynamic model. And when you raise taxes, the economy grows slower, and
eventually we get back to this 18, 19 percent average.
By the way, I made this presentation in a debate to a former member
of the Clinton administration. And the moderator, after I had mentioned
that we've never been able to get more than 18, 19 percent out of the
economy, turned to that member of the administration and said, Is that
true? How do you respond to that?
And the member of the Clinton administration said, You know, he's
absolutely right. We have not been able to figure out a way to do it in
the United States of America, even with high top marginal tax rates.
But they do it in Europe. They do it in Europe. In Europe the
governments can get 30, 40, even 50 percent of the economy away from
the private sector, away from people, and put it in the pockets of the
government.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. I yield the gentleman an additional minute.
Mr. MULVANEY. And I put it to you, Madam Chairwoman, that that's what
this debate is really about. That's what this debate is really about.
Are we going to maintain the American system, or are we trying to move
towards a European system? And I will tell you that that's really what
this fight is all about.
And the budget that we're here defending tonight, as members of the
Joint Economic Committee, is the budget that defends the American
system, that defends the system that says the government really should
only take 18 or 19 percent away from the private sector, that that's
enough, that we don't want to be Europe, where people pay VAT taxes and
people pay much higher rates of taxation. The government takes 30, 40,
or 50 percent. And what the opposition is offering is a European-style
model.
So I simply ask my friends on both sides to consider what kind of
country we want to be. Do we want to continue on as the America that
we've known for years, or do we want to become Europe? And I suggest,
Madam Chair, that the former is the better course of action.
Mr. HINCHEY. Madam Chair, I yield 5 minutes to the gentleman from
California (Mr. Garamendi).
Mr. GARAMENDI. Madam Chair, we've heard a lot of discussion here this
evening about what economic policy works, where do the deficits come
from. Let's just figure it out.
Beginning with this man over here--I think we would all recognize
him--that would be Ronald Reagan. After every year, at the end of the
year, the Congressional Budget Office, nonpartisan, makes a projection
of what's going to happen in the next 10 years. At the end of Ronald
Reagan's period, they did their projection, and they said, voila, a
$1.4 trillion deficit in the years ahead. Followed by George Bush the
senior. At the end of his 4 years, they did another estimate: What's
going to happen in the next 10 years? Well, let's see. That says a $3.3
trillion deficit. How about that?
We were just talking about some economic policy here a minute ago.
Well, let's talk about the Clinton period. At the end of the Clinton
period, 8 years, another projection was made by the Congressional
Budget Office: What's going to happen in the next 10 years? A $5.6
trillion surplus, enough to pay off all of the American debt.
How did it happen? How did it happen?
It happened this way: Early in his administration, they set about to
deal with the deficit. There was a tax increase. It cost my Democratic
colleagues the House. But they did it. They put it in place. And they
also put in place PAYGO and the balanced budget amendment. What
happened was that in those 8 years was the largest job growth in
America's history except in the 1950-1960 period. It was enormous job
growth. More than 20 million jobs were created and extraordinary
revenue growth.
So much for the argument we just heard.
In fact, a combination of holding tight on the budget together with a
tax increase worked. I was part of that administration, and we were
told to reinvent government. We did. At the Department of the Interior,
we reduced the number of employees from 90,000 to 75,000, and we
maintained and actually increased the efficiency and the effectiveness
of that Department. It can and it was done.
However, let's take a look at George W. Bush, the most recent Bush
presidency. At the end of his presidency, the Congressional Budget
Office did their estimate, and they came up with an $11.5 trillion
deficit in the years ahead.
How did it happen? It happened this way: He cut taxes year one, 2001,
cut taxes. Year two, 2002, cut taxes. Two wars unpaid for, borrowed
money from China, and then backed away from all regulation of Wall
Street, and the great crash. The result: An $11.5 trillion deficit. The
day Barack Obama came into office, he was handed a $1.3 trillion bill
due. That's what the Republican President gave to this Nation and to
this Congress. So we've set about solving it.
Now I want to move to another issue here, which happens to be this
debate about Medicare. You're not going to solve the Medicare problem,
which is one of ever-increasing cost in the underlying health sector of
America. When I first got into this in 1991 as insurance commissioner,
9 percent of the American economy was in medical services. This year
it's approaching 18 percent. You cannot solve this problem by throwing
senior citizens off Medicare. It does not solve it.
{time} 2100
Do not throw the seniors to the wolves. The wolves are the insurance
companies. I know. I was the insurance commissioner for 8 years, and I
fought those characters every year I was in office. I know what they
will do to seniors. They will rip them off, they will deny benefits,
they will deny coverage, and they will not control cost.
In California this year, insurance companies are raising costs by 20
to 40 percent. Medicare went up 6 percent. Medicare is efficient.
Medicare is efficient. It is a nationwide policy. You can get it
anywhere in this Nation. There is no administrative cost that even
comes close to what the insurance companies' administrative costs are,
perhaps 30 percent of the premium. Profit, sales, expenses, all of
those things added up, and that includes the chaos at the delivery, the
medical delivery. We need to change that.
You want to deal with something more? Take a look at this. This is
Medicaid. In Medicaid, the Republican budget intends to cut Medicaid by
three-quarters of $1 trillion in the next decade. Who gets Medicaid?
Senior citizens and the disabled. The aged, blind and disabled get
Medicaid. And this is immediate.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. HINCHEY. I yield the gentleman 1 additional minute.
Mr. GARAMENDI. I'm just getting warmed up.
Who gets Medicaid? The aged, the blind and the disabled get Medicaid.
The Republican budget cuts Medicaid three-quarters of $1 trillion.
Seniors will be--not 10 years from now, but immediately, as those
budget reductions take place, according to the Republicans--thrown out
of nursing homes.
I just finished a conversation not more than 2 hours ago with the
owner
[[Page H2832]]
of nursing homes in California. He said, Don't let them do it. We're
just hanging on. Any further reductions, any reductions in the
Republican bill will force us to send out of our nursing homes the
Medi-Cal, which are people covered by Medicaid.
Who are these children? These are the children in poverty. The
children in poverty get medical services from Medicaid, and Medi-Cal in
California, 20 percent. Are those the people you want to throw out in
the street? You will do it.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Yielding myself 30 seconds, I would remind our
colleagues that are Democrats that Congress slashed a half trillion
dollars from our seniors' care, including nursing homes, just last
year. I will also remind our colleagues that Medicare is insolvent. The
biggest threat to our seniors today is to do nothing.
Democrats and the President failed to lead. Republicans are not only
going to preserve Medicare as it is today for those 55 and older, but
for the younger generation, we are going to give them the choices and
the options to preserve that program for them for their entire life.
Madam Chair, I yield 5 minutes to a new member of the Joint Economic
Committee who understands that government doesn't create jobs, it is
the private sector that creates jobs, the gentleman from Wisconsin (Mr.
Duffy).
Mr. DUFFY. Madam Chairwoman, in reference to one of the charts we
just saw from the gentleman from California, I found it interesting
that he laid out many different debts and deficits from prior
Presidents, but the one he failed to present to this House was the one
from President Obama. On the day that the President took office, we
were projected, over the course of 10 years, to borrow $1.8 trillion,
from the CBO, and today we are projected to borrow $9.4 trillion. We
have inherited now a fiscal mess.
Let's review where we're at. This country owes $14 trillion. This
year we are going to borrow $1.6 trillion. Last year we borrowed over
$1 trillion. The year before that we borrowed over $1 trillion. Let's
look out 10 years. For the next 10 years, on average, we're going to
borrow $1 trillion every single year. This is unsustainable. We cannot
continue on this course.
Listen, I wasn't a big fan of President Bush's spending, but his
biggest year of deficit spending was $460 billion. That pales in
comparison to the $1.6 trillion we're going to borrow today. I mean, I
know we've all seen these charts so often, but this is our debt chart
from the CBO. We have a sea of red, a sea of debt that we are going to
leave off to the next generation. This is unconscionable.
What does this mean for future generations? This means higher
interest rates. This means massive tax increases. This means a lower
standard of living for our next generation. And I guess I will present
to this House, if you were to ask your grandma and grandpa what they
thought about leaving this off to our next generation, they would be
outraged. They would be furious that this is their legacy, that this is
what their grandchildren are going to inherit. We need to fix the
problem.
Let's talk about the budget proposal that has been made.
Congressman Paul Ryan and the Budget Committee, they propose reducing
spending by $6.2 trillion over the course of 10 years. Yes, they also
talk about tax reform, a fair, flatter Tax Code. And you know what? We
have to realize this isn't 1980. We are in a global marketplace. We
compete against China and India, Mexico, Vietnam.
And you know what? This isn't just against Kansas and Kentucky. We
have to engage. We have to have an environment where our businesses can
compete, succeed, and win. And when they do, who benefits? The people
that benefit are our families because they have jobs, they have
opportunity. But if we build walls around this country with more
mandates and more regulation and more taxes, we are going to see more
businesses go overseas and fewer jobs for our families. And as we've
been talking about tonight, we will have less revenue in the Federal
Reserve.
I've heard a lot this evening, Madam Chairwoman, about Medicare and a
lot of demagoguery across the aisle about what it's going to do. Let's
be clear with the American people. Let's be honest with the American
people that if we don't reform Medicare, the CBO says it's going broke
in 9 years. We have to fix it. We have to fix it to make sure we can
preserve it for our current seniors. So let's not sit here and scare
people and tell our seniors we're taking away their Medicare. We are
not. We are working on solutions that are going to preserve it.
And so when we talk about reform, to be clear, we're not talking
about reform for our current seniors or even those who are about to
retire. The reforms we are talking about are for my generation. And
what's beautiful about this is if we reform Social Security, we get to
guarantee the benefits for our current seniors, but then you allow me
to plan for the benefits I'm going to have when I retire. And if we do
it, we can succeed in this reform.
We've heard a lot about taxes as well. And so we all know here that
the top tax rate, 35 percent, and a family who makes $350,000 a year
falls into that tax category. And so I would, Madam Chairwoman, suggest
to my friends on the left, why don't we do this. Let's bump that tax
rate up--not to 35 percent, maybe 50 percent. No, let's go 100 percent.
Let's take every dollar of a family that makes $350,000 a year or more,
let's take every single dollar from them. And if we do that, we still
can't balance the budget. So let's go to the next level. Let's go to
the next highest rung of income earners, those who make $200,000 or
more as a family. A mom makes $100,000; a dad makes $100,000. We would
all agree they're wealthy. Let's take 100 percent of every dollar they
make as well.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. I yield the gentleman 1 additional minute.
Mr. DUFFY. And if you do that, you still can't balance the budget.
You cannot tax your way out of this problem. We have to reduce our
spending. If we reduce our spending and we reform our Tax Code, we can
bring prosperity back to this country. But to sit here in this House
and tell the American people that we can tax our way out, the bottom
line is you can tax every penny of every profit of the wealthiest
Americans and you can't balance the budget.
Madam Chairwoman, I think we have to take a serious look at
Congressman Ryan's budget. I'm willing to consider other commonsense
solutions that are going to get this country back on track, but ones
where we are going to demagogue plans and say we just have to raise
taxes and not reform are not real solutions. That is going to give us
more of the same.
Mr. HINCHEY. Madam Chairman, may I inquire as to the time remaining?
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New York has 12 minutes
remaining. The gentleman from Texas has 9 minutes remaining.
Mr. HINCHEY. I yield 5 minutes to the gentleman from Maryland (Mr.
Van Hollen).
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. I thank my colleague.
The gentleman from Texas mentioned the fact that as part of the
Affordable Care Act last year we made some reforms in Medicare. Yes, we
did. We got rid of the overpayments to the private plans, the Medicare
Advantage plans. Why did we do that? Because they were costing the
taxpayer 114 percent of the fee-for-service, which is why this notion,
frankly, that by saying to seniors you can't stay in Medicare now,
you've got to go into the private insurance market, has been disproven
by our experience most recently.
{time} 2110
So we said we're not going to overpay them. And you know what? We
used some of those savings to close the prescription drug doughnut hole
that seniors fall in. We used some of those savings.
Now, it's important to understand that the Republican budget, even
though there was a lot of demagoguery about that, you kept those
savings, but what you didn't do is continue to close the doughnut hole.
Immediately upon passage of the Republican budget, that doughnut hole
will stop closing for seniors.
I want to pick up on a point Mr. Garamendi made about Medicaid
because, as this chart indicates, the great
[[Page H2833]]
majority of funds for Medicaid go to seniors and individuals with
disabilities. Make no mistake, this happens immediately. We're not
talking about 10 years from now, 8 years from now. This happens right
away.
Now, Medicaid is a program where actually the costs of care have
grown much slower than the rest of the health care market, including
the private market, and yet it is a program that is stretched very
thin. You take $700 billion-plus out of that system, you are going to
be putting people at serious risk, already overstretched programs.
So what choice did you make? Well, this is what choice you made with
respect to Medicaid.
You cut about $771 billion. Guess what? You returned to the tax rates
that were in effect on the top 2 percent income earners during the
Clinton administration; over 10 years, $800 billion. Those are the
choices you're making. Put all of these individuals at risk--seniors in
nursing homes, assisted living facilities, poor kids--so that you can
provide that tax break.
I've heard it said on the floor that, oh, boy, if we do that, if we
go back to the Clinton-era tax rates, that's going to really hurt the
economy. That's going to hurt jobs.
Look at this. Here's the Clinton-era tax rate: 20 million jobs were
created during that period of time. Here's the current tax rate, end of
the Bush administration: 653,000 jobs lost.
The history tells the story. The reason is because there are lots of
factors that go into decisions by businesses how to invest. And while,
obviously, tax rates are a part of it, they are not the major driver in
the economy.
I've heard it said that this is going to hurt small businesses. I
hope one thing that we can agree on is that small businesses are the
engine of our economy. They're what make this economy go.
And so we always hear from our Republican colleagues, well, you go
back to the Clinton era rates for the top, you're going to hurt small
businesses. Well, I hope everybody will look at the Joint Committee on
Taxation. What they say is that there are only 3 percent of small
businesses who fall into that higher income category, because we're
talking about taxable income. Only 3 percent of small businesses fall
into those rates.
Now, we hear from our Republican colleagues, oh, that's true it's
only 3 percent, but it's 50 percent. Well, here. Fifty percent of the
income comes from those 3 percent. Why do you think that is? Well, look
at the same Joint Committee on Taxation report. Many such businesses
are hardly ``small.''
In 2005, over 12,000 S corporations and over 6,000 partnerships
grossed more than $50 million. There's your mom-and-pop store. There's
your mom-and-pop store working hard as a small business trying to make
ends meet. Those are what Republicans are calling small businesses.
I'm going to give you some examples of those small businesses. And
there are lots of them, but just to give people an idea of the
Republican definition of small businesses: major Wall Street investment
house KKR; one of the big four accounting firms, Pricewaterhouse--these
are S corporations--Fortune 100; Pipeline Company; Enterprise GP
Holdings; Washington law firms.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. HINCHEY. I yield the gentleman an additional 1 minute.
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Washington law firms.
I want to point out, these firms are doing good work. There is
nothing wrong with what these firms are doing. But don't tell the
American people that these are small businesses. Over $50 million a
year. They can help do their share to get our deficit under control.
Go back to the Clinton administration rates. Let's have a balanced
approach. Yes, we need to do cuts. We understand that. But as the
bipartisan fiscal commission said, you've got to do revenues, too, and
if you don't, here's what happened:
President Bush inherited a $5.6 trillion surplus from the Clinton
administration, and where did it go? When President Obama was sworn in,
the day he put his hand on the Bible, he faced a deficit in that year
of over $1.3 trillion and a 10-year deficit of over $10 trillion.
Let's have a balanced approach. Let's have shared sacrifice. Let's be
serious about getting our deficits under control.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Yielding myself 30 seconds, I can't help but
think many Democrats are eager for everyone else to sacrifice. What
about government? Why can't government sacrifice a little? All of those
obsolete agencies and all of those wasteful programs, the money they
spit away on stimulus programs and to bail out anyone who needs it.
Maybe it is time for shared sacrifice, and it can start with the big,
fat, bloated Federal Government.
At this time, I'd like to yield 5 minutes to a physician who has
delivered more than 3,000 babies in his life, is a valued member of the
Joint Economic Committee, and expert on health care and many of our
health care entitlements, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Burgess).
Mr. BURGESS. I thank the gentleman for the recognition, and it is an
important debate that we're having tonight. Madam Chairwoman, I hope
that people are watching the debate because this really does set the
tone, set the course, set the compass for the future of our country.
And this is a debate that really should not be partisan, although we
certainly have heard some partisan references. I may even make one or
two myself.
But right now intergenerational expectations are down. And in that
murky environment, we now have Paul Ryan come forward and bringing us a
fact-based budget that provides a pathway for America's future.
Everyone knows the rising cost of health care is a serious threat--not
just to our Federal Government but to our prosperity in general.
Unfortunately, the President last year, and the Democratic majority
that was present in Congress last year, made the problem worse.
Here's the simple truth. Instead of reforming Medicaid and Medicare
and using the savings for deficit reduction, the Democrats spent every
penny of savings, every single penny of savings and then a lot more on
a new entitlement program. Incredibly, they accelerated the crisis, and
Medicare and Medicaid are even more in peril today than they were
before this all started in 2009. They found a fire, and they put it out
with gasoline, and is it a surprise that it's worse?
In contrast, the budget that we're debating tonight, the Ryan budget,
saves Medicare and Medicaid for future generations and uses reforms to
make the programs financially sustainable.
Now, according to the Congressional Budget Office, the Democratic
plan that we know as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
would increase spending by almost $1\1/2\ trillion, primarily by
expanding Medicaid and creating new subsidies to buy health insurance.
The so-called Affordable Care Act would increase coverage for the
insured and uninsured, provide coverage for the uninsured, but that
also is going to create greater demand for health care. But at the same
time we put in constraints. We limit physician education and training.
We limit testing and patents for drugs and devices. We restrict the
very supply of health care. And, consequently, much of the increased
demand will in fact deliver us higher prices, not more services.
The Congressional Budget Office and chief actuary at the Center for
Medicare and Medicaid Services who scored the legislation readily admit
that they did not include the price effects of the increased demand for
services.
{time} 2120
In fact, the chief actuary at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid
Services, his report wasn't even released until 3\1/2\ weeks after you
passed the bill a little over a year ago and signed it into law. Thus,
the official budget estimates understate the true cost of the amount of
spending that was contained within this health care law.
Secondly, the available budget estimates ignore the negative impact
of higher taxes on economic growth. An almost 4 percent surtax on
interest, dividends, and capital gains for those earning over $250,000
a year will reduce business investment and employment. Thus, the new
tax will reduce economic growth and generate less revenue than
expected. This problem cannot be fixed by simply raising taxes on the
American people.
[[Page H2834]]
Thirdly, the budget estimates assume a 29 percent across the board
reduction in Medicare physician payments in 2012 and beyond, as well as
continual reductions in other Medicare provider payments, but both the
CBO and the Medicare actuary have called the reductions unrealistic. In
fact, Chief Actuary Foster said if you believe this, then I have got
good news for you about the future of Medicare. But we all know that
the reality does not match the expectations.
Then here is the other problem, the Independent Payment Advisory
Board. And I have got a great deal of sympathy with my colleagues on
the Democratic side of the aisle. When you passed the Affordable Care
Act the first time, you did not include the Independent Payment
Advisory Board because you saw through that. You saw that as a trick, a
trap. Yet when you got the bill from the Senate that you in turn felt
you had to pass, it contained the Independent Payment Advisory Board.
What does the Independent Payment Advisory Board do? Well, it gets 15
people, goodness knows who they are, goodness knows who selects them,
and they are going to deliver to Congress a menu of cuts. We either get
to vote them up or down. Sure enough, we get to participate in that.
But if we vote them down, we have got to come forward with an identical
dollar figure on cuts. And if we are unable to do that, and when has
that ever happened in this body, if we are unable do that, the
Secretary of Health and Human Services the following April 15, that is
tomorrow, gets to implement those cuts anyway.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. I yield the gentleman 1 additional minute.
Mr. BURGESS. Then what happened yesterday? The President, in talking
about his vision for the budget--by the way, his second vision for the
budget this year--doubled down on the Independent Payment Advisory
Board and said it's such a good idea we're going to do even more.
You know Elias Zerhouni, the former head of the National Institutes
of Health, talked about a day medicine is going to become much more
personalized, personalized, predictive, therefore more preventive and
requiring more participation by patients. Wouldn't it be great,
following Chairman Ryan's vision, that we personalized Medicare to
match that personalized medicine that our children and our
grandchildren are going to enjoy in the future?
Instead, we are going to end up with more of the same, which is a
benevolent, albeit benevolent central planner, moving those data points
around on a spreadsheet. Why not put the power back in the hands of the
American people? That's what the Ryan budget plan does. We ought to
support his effort and be grateful for its presence.
Mr. HINCHEY. Madam Chair, can you tell us how much time we have left
on both sides?
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from New York has 6 minutes
remaining. The gentleman from Texas has 2\1/2\ minutes remaining.
Mr. HINCHEY. Madam Chair, I yield 3 minutes to the gentleman from
Vermont (Mr. Welch).
Mr. WELCH. I thank the gentleman for yielding.
Madam Chair, one of the great companies in this Nation, and a big
company in Vermont, is International Business Machines. This year they
are about to celebrate their 100th anniversary. I was speaking to some
folks from IBM in my office a few days ago, and they told me the story
of what happened to them in 1992.
The world was turning upside down in the tech industry. Companies
that wanted to survive had to make big decisions. They had 400,000
employees, and there was some question as to whether they were going to
make payroll. They had to make changes. They did two things. They
looked at every single element of their operation. They looked at every
single line item in their spending. In every single place they could
make a cut, tough as it was, they did. They made cuts. But they also
said where do we have to be in 10 years, and what do we have to do to
get there?
As nerve-wracking as it was for those folks at IBM, they made
decisions to invest money in acquisitions, in research and development,
to meet a plan that required investment, that required spending at a
time when they were doing every single thing they could to save every
single nickel.
Now IBM is stronger than ever, and it's going to celebrate its 100th
anniversary. This country has to make similar decisions. We have to
cut. There is not an argument here. I listened to Paul Ryan when he
gave his opening statement, and he said we have to leave this country
and its fiscal state better off for our kids and grandkids. He is
right. There is no question about it. That means like companies that
look at a balance sheet, we have to look every single place we can to
save money.
The criticism about many governmental programs you know is right, we
know is right. Wherever we can find that waste, fraud, or abuse, let's
get rid of it. That serves nobody, Republican or Democrat. But on the
other hand, we have to make investments. There are places we in fact do
have to spend money. And we have seen that in the history of our
country. So judgments have to be made.
My question about the Republican budget is basically the premise in
the budget. It's not the goal. Mr. Ryan stated that well. He speaks for
me when he says about that obligation to leave our kids better off. But
there are two premises in the budget as I see it. One is that lower
taxes are always better and will lead to growth. Sometimes that's true,
but not always. We have to have revenues to pay for infrastructure, to
pay for things like broadband deployment, to pay for the National
Institute of Science, things that we might argue about where is the
best priority, but we need revenues to do things like a company needs
revenues to make investments.
The second premise is that less spending is always better than more
investment. Those, as I see it, are the two premises that are in the
Ryan budget. And those are debatable.
Now, the other aspect of the budget that in my view, Madam Chair, is
lacking is what's off the table. It's not what's on the table. I don't
agree with the Medicare proposal in the Ryan budget. But it's fair to
put Medicare on the table for debate. We've got to make that more
affordable.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. HINCHEY. I yield the gentleman an additional 30 seconds.
Mr. WELCH. What is the problem is that the Pentagon is off the table,
the war in Iraq and Afghanistan are still on the credit card and off
the table. Whatever our positions are on some of these matters,
including military, we will all stand up, we have to pay our way.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Madam Chairman, I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. HINCHEY. Madam Chair, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from
California (Mr. Garamendi).
Mr. GARAMENDI. Madam Chair, I want to speak directly to the senior
citizens of America and to those who want to become senior citizens.
The Republican budget destroys, terminates Medicare as we know it
today. Under the Republican budget, in 10 years Medicare will no longer
exist as it is today, a guaranteed benefit available to every American
who turns 65. It will be over. Instead, you will be given a voucher, a
voucher that will be insufficient to pay for your health insurance, and
there is no guarantee what that health insurance will be.
Let me speak also to those who are on Medicare today. The Republican
budget over the next 10 years removes three-quarters of a trillion
dollars, $771 billion, from Medicaid. Medicaid provides services to the
aged, blind, and disabled. Those senior citizens that are in nursing
homes stand the risk of being thrown out of the nursing homes.
I want to now speak to those who want to become 65, who want to live
long enough to get into Medicare. If you are 55 years of age and
younger, you will not have Medicare if the Republican budget becomes
law. It is over. It is terminated. It is gone. Instead, you will be
given a voucher to go talk to the insurance companies. And what will
you talk about? You will talk about pain, pain, pain.
They say that there is no tax shift in this. In fact, there is a
$6,000 tax equivalent to every person 55 and younger.
[[Page H2835]]
You are going to wind up paying an additional $6,000.
{time} 2130
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Madam Chair, I yield myself 30 seconds.
I would remind our listeners that it was our Democrats who fought the
prescription drug program that has been so critical for seniors to buy
their medicine. They slashed half a trillion dollars from Medicare to
pay for the new ObamaCare plan, and they did nothing to preserve
Medicaid for our seniors.
The exaggerations today that are flying through this Chamber really
are shameful. What the Republicans are intent on doing is preserving
Medicare for every generation. We are not going to bury our heads in
the sand.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. I yield myself an additional 15 seconds.
The Democrats have failed to lead on these important entitlement
programs. They had their chance. They failed. The Republicans will
lead, and we will preserve those programs.
Mr. HINCHEY. Madam Chair, how much time remains?
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman has 30 seconds remaining.
Mr. HINCHEY. I yield myself the balance of my time.
The circumstance that we are dealing with is to continue the progress
that we have made. We have provided health care for people through
Medicare and Medicaid.
The opposition here in this district wants to eliminate that. They
want to cut back on Medicare and make it more difficult and more
expensive.
We have expanded the opportunity for people to get jobs. They want to
eliminate that. We have tried to make this whole system more equitable,
more fair, and more genuine. They are trying to provide more funding
for the wealthiest people and less for the working people and fewer
opportunities for the working people.
For all of those reasons, we oppose this legislation, and we hope
that most of the population of this district will oppose it as well.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
The gentleman from Texas is recognized for 1\3/4\ minutes.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. Madam Chair, how many Americans really think this
country is heading in the right direction? How many Americans, middle
class Americans, believe that these deficits, trillion-dollar deficits,
can go on and on as far as the eye can see? Although Americans believe
that they have better lives and opportunities than their parents, how
many of them question whether their children will have the same
opportunities in America today?
You know, we can't continue to go down this path, and that's what the
Ryan Republican budget is all about, a new direction for America where
we no longer hide our heads in the sand and ignore the problems facing
America.
Paul Ryan and the Republican budget tell the truth to the American
public about how serious a problem we face as a Nation. It offers real
commonsense solutions to address them. It gives them ideas that work,
solutions that work. It creates economic growth and job creation by
fostering the right business climate for growth in America.
It tackles our spending, dangerous spending deficits, by reducing
those over time, implying and imposing discipline on our Federal
Government. So they have to live within the same means our families and
small businesses have to. It provides real security for our seniors and
Medicare and Medicaid and Social Security.
More importantly, it offers hope for young people who don't think
those programs will ever be around again. Paul Ryan and the Republican
budget offer some hope that they don't have today, and it repeals this
terrible ObamaCare and gives America hope again.
I strongly support this budget.
Mr. COOPER. Madam Chair, I believe that America should solve its
biggest problems in a bipartisan fashion. It takes Democrats,
Republicans and Independents working together to find the best
solutions. This is particularly true of budgets, which determine so
much of the future of our great Nation. Unfortunately, budget season is
one of the most partisan times in Congress, despite the fact that the
public has been demanding that we stop the bickering.
I have been working hard to offer this House the chance to vote on a
budget that is modeled on the President's Fiscal Commission, known as
the Bowles-Simpson Report. I support this approach to budgeting because
it is, so far at least, the only serious, bipartisan plan for reducing
our runaway federal budget deficits. The Bowles-Simpson Commission
received the support of Commission members as diverse as the liberal
Democratic Senator Dick Durbin and the conservative Republican Senator
Tom Coburn. The Commission received such widespread support because it
did three things:
Cut the deficit by $4 trillion over the next ten years;
Shared the sacrifice: put every federal program on the table; and
Provided a balanced approach: 2/3 spending cuts and 1/3 tax reform.
While there are many other important features of the Bowles-Simpson
Report, it is important to understand that budget resolutions never
include detailed recommendations of any reform plan. Budget resolutions
only include a broad framework and mandate that the committees of
jurisdiction figure out ways to achieve the necessary savings and
reform. That's why the Cooper Substitute makes House committees reduce
the deficit by as much as Bowles-Simpson recommends, but does not tell
them exactly how to do it.
I am proud to have the full support and vote of my Republican
colleague, the gentleman from Virginia Frank Wolf, who worked with me
to pass the Cooper-Wolf SAFE Commission Act to form a Fiscal Commission
last Congress. The SAFE Act became the model for the Bowles-Simpson
Commission. Frank Wolf has worked harder than any member I know to get
the leadership of both parties, in both houses, and the White House, to
take our budget deficit problems seriously and to act promptly in order
to reduce their burden on future generations. Frank Wolf is a true
leader, and he is, in my opinion, a genuine American hero on fiscal
responsibility.
I appreciate the Rules Committee making the Cooper Substitute in
order. I hope that this return to more open debates in the House
becomes the norm so that the best ideas, not just the most partisan
ideas, can reach the House floor. Chairman Dreier has already taken
important steps in this regard so that the House can once again work
its will, regardless of politics or party.
Madam Chair, I had hoped to offer my Substitute tonight, even though
the hour is late, not believing that it ever had a ghost of a chance of
passage, but believing that the votes deserved to be counted on this
important proposal. The timing is not right, however, for several
unforeseeable reasons.
Yesterday, the President made an important speech on the budget that,
temporarily at least, has inflamed partisan passions on both sides of
the aisle, making a vote tomorrow less likely to be a reasoned one. I
think the President should be complimented for moving the debate in a
positive direction, regardless of the spin that each side has given it.
For example, if the President had called for $4 trillion of deficit
reduction as recently as two months ago, he would have been denounced
by many people. Yesterday, he was more favorably received. I give
Republicans, particularly my friend, the gentleman from Wisconsin and
Chairman of the Budget Committee Paul Ryan, credit for having moved the
debate so far. Mr. Ryan, just like the President, has been unfairly
vilified, which does nothing to reduce the debt burden on future
generations. Finger-pointing does not solve problems.
Another crucial development is the sensitive nature of the quiet
Senate negotiations on deficit reduction, particularly the so-called
Gang of Six. We all realize that, because the other body is less
partisan than today's House, a comprehensive solution is more likely to
originate in that chamber. The fact that Senators ranging from Durbin
to Coburn have already supported Bowles-Simpson is proof. I do not
think it is wise to risk doing anything to derail or impair those
behind-the-scenes negotiations, which I am told by key senators in both
parties could be the result of a premature House vote.
The day will come, probably with the necessary debt ceiling increase
this summer, for a comprehensive, bipartisan solution to our deficit
problem. For that to happen, the partisan passions of this budget
debate must burn out. Members must go back home and brag about their
favorite budget before they get realistic and agree on a spending plan
that can actually pass the House and Senate and be signed into law by
the President. Every day we wait to solve these problems costs us
dearly; by some estimates, as much as $8 billion a day. I wish that
this cycle of additional politics were not necessary--and I have done
everything I can to avoid it--but there are no shortcuts in a
democracy.
The time spent on the Cooper Substitute has not been wasted.
Countless members in
[[Page H2836]]
both parties have learned the contents of the Bowles-Simpson Report
because they thought they might have to vote for a budget that embodies
spending cuts of such size and tax reforms of such nature that it would
actually make a difference. Nothing so concentrates the mind as the
fear of voting. Numerous members of both parties have told me that they
intended to support Bowles-Simpson either on a stand-alone basis or in
addition to supporting another budget of their choice. I appreciate the
interest and genuine goodwill that so many members have shown in asking
questions, comparing alternatives, and making the tough decisions that
are required by budgeting. I think that the work that I, and my allies
like Frank Wolf, have done is important for laying the groundwork for
an eventual bipartisan budget that will be required, no later than this
summer, in order to start solving our Nation's deficit problems.
Madam Chair, this Congress must act very soon indeed to start solving
our Nation's fiscal problems. I wish today were that day. I voted today
for $38 billion in cuts to appropriations for the remaining few months
of this year, but that is only a tiny beginning and only affects 12% of
our federal budget. Serious reform means getting the House to pass
something as large, as important, and as bipartisan as Bowles-Simpson-
sized reforms. Bowles-Simpson is not the only solution for our
problems, but it is the fastest, fairest, and most feasible solution
that we know of today. As soon as this House is able to consider it
calmly and sensibly, the House must do so.
COOPER BUDGET SUBSTITUTE
The Cooper Budget Substitute takes the benchmarks set by
the President's bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal
Responsibility and Reform and puts them into a budget
resolution framework. It would reduce the deficit by $4
trillion over the next 10 years with 2/3 spending cuts and 1/
3 tax reform. The Commission proposed a series of specific
recommendations for achieving these benchmarks, but these are
not included in the Cooper Substitute. Instead, like all
budgets, this resolution provides a blueprint for committees
of jurisdiction to determine how spending cuts of this size
should be made.
The Cooper Substitute embodies the only bipartisan approach
for getting America back on track. The U.S. federal budget is
on an unsustainable path. For years, members have talked
about fiscal responsibility. It's time for those who claim to
be fiscally responsible to walk the walk, not just talk the
talk.
OVERVIEW
------------------------------------------------------------------------
2021 Deficit 2021 Debt as
as % GDP % GDP
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ryan........................................ -1.6% 67.5%
Cooper...................................... -1.6% 69.4%
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Details of the Cooper Budget Substitute are as follows:
Shared sacrifice: everything is on the table
Big enough to matter: Cuts the deficit by over $4 trillion
over the next 10 years
Balanced approach: Achieves deficit reduction with 2/3
spending cuts, 1/3 tax reform
Fast enough to matter: Reaches primary balance in 2015
Reduces the size of government: Returns to 2008 spending
levels by 2013
Caps revenue at 21% of GDP; gets spending below 22% and on a
path to 21% of GDP
Bipartisan cooperation to ensure 75-year solvency of Social
Security
Tax reform:
Reduces tax rates for individuals, small businesses, and
corporations
Reduces the $1.1 trillion in annual tax expenditures and
tax give-aways
Mr. RAHALL. Madam Chair, I rise in strong opposition to the
Republican's ``Road to Ruin'' Budget Resolution for a variety of
reasons, including because it will destroy hundreds of thousands of
American transportation jobs--jobs lost in every state--and will
severely jeopardize our Nation's economic competitiveness.
This Budget slashes investments in our people--from ending Medicare
as we know it to destroying the family-wage jobs of highway
construction--all the while, providing a double-digit percentage tax
break for millionaires that most of them will not even notice. It makes
Big Oil smile from ear to ear knowing that they can exploit $40 billion
in tax loopholes, yet the Budget completely neglects millions of
American potholes.
As the Ranking Member on the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure, and given that Congress faces major surface
transportation reauthorization legislation this year, let me focus for
a moment on what this Budget does to highway and transit infrastructure
investment.
Consider this for a moment. Today, China spends nine percent of its
GDP per year on infrastructure. India spends five percent of its GDP
per year on infrastructure. Yet, the United States of America only
spends 1.9 percent of its GDP per year on infrastructure. Woefully
inadequate as it stands.
Yet, the Republican Budget cuts highway, highway safety, and transit
investment by about one-third: one-third less bridge repair, one-third
less safety improvement, and one-third less bus service is where this
Budget leads us--destroying family-wage highway and transit
construction jobs all along the way. And placing us in an even less
competitive position than we already are against countries like China
and India. Incredible. Simply incredible.
Over the next six years, the current budget baseline investment level
for highway, highway safety, and public transit investments is $331
billion, including $316 billion of contract authority from the Highway
Trust Fund and $15 billion from the General Fund.
Based on the assumptions included in the Republican Budget, the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that the Republican
Budget provides only $219 billion of Highway Trust Fund funding over
the next six years. In effect, the Republican Budget slashes surface
transportation investment by more than $100 billion over the next six
years.
Let me repeat that, because I want my colleagues to be very aware of
what this budget proposes to do in this area. Today is the 100th day
that the Republicans have been in control of the House and today they
are proposing to cut more than $100 billion from investments in
America's future. Investments that keep our economy moving and help to
ensure that America remains a good place to do business. One hundred
days in control of the House and they want to slash $100 billion from
transportation investments. They haven't brought a single jobs bill to
the Floor of this House, and yet, today, to mark their 100th day
anniversary, here we are debating a Budget that will destroy half a
million highway jobs. Amazing.
According to a CBO analysis of the Republican Budget assumptions,
this Budget will slash current year highway funding from $41.1 billion
to approximately $27 billion in fiscal year 2012. A 34 percent cut in
year one of the reauthorization bill will destroy more than 490,000
jobs over the coming years. West Virginia cannot afford a $143 million
cut in highway investment next year. This investment and its 5,000
good-paying jobs are critical to our mountain economy and ensuring that
rural America shares in the great opportunities provided by our
country. Put simply, middle class Americans cannot afford the
Republican ``Road to Ruin'' budget.
Finally, the Republican Budget destroys any pretext that Republicans
will restore the highway and transit budget firewalls that they wiped
away on the first day of their new majority in the 112th Congress. When
Congress enacted those firewalls in 1998 to restore the trust to the
Highway Trust Fund and keep faith with the traveling public, I stood
shoulder-to-shoulder with former Republican Committee Chairman Bud
Shuster. We lost that battle on the Budget at 3:00 a.m. in May 1997,
but, one year later, won the war with enactment of the Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century establishing the budget firewalls,
which have served the traveling public for the past 14 years. As their
very first act in the majority, Republicans broke the ``trust'' of the
Highway Trust Fund.
There was a time when Republicans were proud of their heritage in
leading the way on infrastructure investment. They were the party of
Lincoln and Eisenhower.
To my good friends across the aisle, do not let infrastructure
investment become a mere footnote in the legacy of your party.
Join with me and let us rebuild America.
Let us provide the building blocks to ensure that every community and
all of our people have an opportunity to succeed.
I urge my colleagues to join with me and defeat H. Con. Res. 34, the
Republican Budget Resolution.
REPUBLICAN BUDGET RESOLUTION STASHES FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAY INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
[FY 2012 Highway Cuts Destroy More than 490,000 Jobs, April 15, 2011]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jobs Lost
under
FY 2011 Estimated FY 2012 FY 2011 Estimated Republican
State (P.L. 112-5 & Republican Budget & Republican Budget
H.R. 1473) Res. (H. Con. Budget Res. Resolution
Res. 34) Difference (FY 2012 Cuts
Only)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alabama............................. $723,817,235 462,250,406 -,566,829 -9,097
Alaska.............................. 428,269,900 285,374,201 -142,895,699 -4,970
Arizona............................. 693,234,143 447,806,436 -245,427,707 -8,536
Arkansas............................ 482,477,889 308,255,243 -174,222,646 -6,059
California.......................... 3,431,126,457 2,171,036,650 -1,260,089,807 -43,825
[[Page H2837]]
Colorado............................ 510,719,211 322,886,021 -187,833,190 -6,533
Connecticut......................... 471,433,185 301,400,538 -170,032,647 -5,914
Delaware............................ 158,128,144 99 887,076 -58,241,068 -2,026
District of Columbia................ 153,577,571 95,065,701 -58,511,870 -2,035
Florida............................. 1,789,644,393 1,165,594,138 -624,050,255 -21,704
Georgia............................. 1,220,785,141 791,842,153 -428,942,988 -14,918
Hawaii.............................. 162,407,438 101,173,351 -61,234,087 -2,130
Idaho............................... 271,135,551 174,914,534 -96,221,017 -3,346
Illinois............................ 1,351,823,020 863,482,496 -488,340,524 -16,984
Indiana............................. 901,039,828 585,100,712 -315,939,116 -10,988
Iowa................................ 457,309,004 287,486,787 -169,822,217 -5,906
Kansas.............................. 363,077,071 225,819,716 -137,257,355 -4,774
Kentucky............................ 632,175,735 404,926,310 -227,249,425 -7,904
Louisiana........................... 647,903,984 410,682,482 -237,221,502 -8,250
Maine............................... 178,205,952 109,980,962 -68,224,990 -2,373
Maryland............................ 573,449,606 361,042,525 -212,407,081 -7,387
Massachusetts....................... 583,187,497 363,290,346 -219,897,151 -7,648
Michigan............................ 1,003,912,719 637,456,986 -366,455,733 -12,745
Minnesota........................... 600,731,686 382,954,688 -217,776,998 -7,574
Mississippi......................... 452,174,362 286,047,250 -166,127,112 -5,778
Missouri............................ 858,241,416 549,923,220 -308,318,196 -10,723
Montana............................. 364,842,726 236,468,527 -128,374,199 -4,465
Nebraska............................ 276,860,675 173,666,205 -103,194,470 -3,589
Nevada.............................. 345,191,710 221,019,688 -124,172,022 -4,319
New Hampshire....................... 157,856,187 99,692,079 -58,164,108 -2,023
New Jersey.......................... 945,386,072 603,896,272 -341,489,800 -11,877
New Mexico.......................... 341,222,251 217,735,976 -123,486,275 -4,295
New York............................ 1,606,218,296 1,010,339,801 -595,878,495 -20,724
North Carolina...................... 987,134,805 634,033,049 -353,101,756 -12,281
North Dakota........................ 237,776,846 149,197,373 -88,579,473 -3,081
Ohio................................ 1,250,956,575 800,549,144 -450,407,431 -15,665
Oklahoma............................ 605,192,291 383,540,118 -221,652,173 -7,709
Oregon.............................. 468,329,024 294,096,576 -174,232,448 -6,060
Pennsylvania........................ 1,568,798,108 991,784,840 -577,013,268 -20,068
Rhode Island........................ 207,603,230 128,123,683 -79,479,547 -2,764
South Carolina...................... 595,668,018 383,573,586 -212,094,432 -7,376
South Dakota........................ 262,505,740 167,067,361 -95,438,379 -3,319
Tennessee........................... 785,406,105 504,632,610 -280,773,495 -9,765
Texas............................... 2,987,661,091 1,933,957,611 -1,053,703,480 -36,647
Utah................................ 307,014,758 195,286,348 -111,728,410 -3,886
Vermont............................. 191,887,512 118,612,958 -73,274,554 -2,548
Virginia............................ 948,805,255 608,667,388 -340,137,867 -11,830
Washington.......................... 634,850,084 395,948,876 -238,901,208 -8,309
West Virginia....................... 407,534,178 264,177,667 -143,356,511 -4,986
Wisconsin........................... 686,452,037 445,591,025 -240,861,012 -8,377
Wyoming............................. 232,719,377 147,196,966 -85,522,411 -2,974
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Lands and Other Allocated $4,603,138,911 $3,695,463,345 -$907,675,566 -31,568
Programs...........................
===========================================================================
Total........................... $41,107,000,00 $27,000,000,000 -14,107,000,000 -490,627
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: This table was prepared by Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Democratic Staff based on
technical assistance from the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). The FY 2011 Estimated column represents
the state-by-state distribution of the Federal-aid Highway obligation limitation assuming enactment of H.R.
1473. Based on the Highway Trust Fund parameters included in H. Con. Res. 34, the Congressional Budget Office
estimates that the FY 2012 Federal-aid Highway obligation limitation would be $27 billion. The FY 2012
Republican Budget Resolution column reflects the state-by-state distribution of these funds under current FHWA
apportionment factors. The Jobs Lost column is based on the 2007 FHWA model on the correlation between highway
infrastructure investment and employment: $1 billion of Federal-aid Highway investment creates or sustains
34,779 jobs over a seven-year period.
Mr. COSTELLO. Madam Chair, I rise today in support of the budget
agreement for the rest of fiscal year 2011. This bill, which contains
nearly $40 billion in spending cuts, brings a much-needed conclusion to
this year's budget debate.
While I have concerns about some of the cuts in this bill--
particularly to the Army Corps of Engineers and the Federal Aviation
Administration--doing nothing is simply not an option. The American
people expect us to cut spending and reduce the deficit, and this
agreement represents a compromise that moves us forward.
As we take up next year's budget and raising the debt limit, it is my
hope that we will do so carefully without undermining our nation's
economic recovery. And, as President Obama noted yesterday during his
budget address, there must be shared sacrifice. Upper income Americans,
corporations and the Department of Defense must be part of the process
of cutting spending and increasing revenues, while we ensure that our
social safety net remains intact. Programs for our seniors and the poor
must not be singled out during this debate.
Madam Chair, we can find budget savings across all departments of the
government while still making strategic investments and protecting the
safety and security of the American people, and I look forward to
continuing this work.
Ms. RICHARDSON. Madam Chair, the Republican budget for FY 2012
continues the reckless Republican fiscal policy. It takes a slash and
burn approach to the budget, rather than going line by line to see
where we can afford to cut and where we cannot. This is a budget that
favors Big Oil over the middle class, asks for sacrifice from seniors
who can barely make ends meet, and fundamentally alters the social
contract in our America.
The budget would open an enormous hole in our country's social safety
net by turning Medicare into a voucher program. These fixed-value
vouchers do not account for the yearly increases in health care costs
and will increase seniors' annual out-of-pocket expenses by nearly
$7,000. Their budget would decimate our primary assistance to the poor
by turning Medicaid into a block grant. This is the Republican vision:
to balance the budget on the backs of the seniors and the poor.
Madam Chair, Democrats have a better way. We understand that our
current economic situation calls for a balanced approach that protects
our fragile recovery. Our plan would take on our deficits in a
responsible way, while continuing to invest in the things that make our
country strong: education, health care, innovation, and clean energy.
Democrats will balance the budget without reneging on the bedrock
promise of Social Security and Medicare.
Madam Chair, this Republican budget moves us backwards. I urge my
colleagues to join me in voting against it and taking a more sensible
approach.
Mr. BRADY of Texas. I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. All time for general debate has expired.
Pursuant to the rule, the amendment in the nature of a substitute
printed in part A of House Report 112-62 is considered as an original
concurrent resolution for the purpose of amendment and is considered
read.
The text of the amendment in the nature of a substitute is as
follows:
H. Con. Res. 34
Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate
concurring),
SECTION 1. CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL
YEAR 2012.
(a) Declaration.--The Congress determines and declares that
this concurrent resolution establishes the budget for fiscal
year 2012 and sets forth appropriate budgetary levels for
fiscal years 2013 through 2021.
(b) Table of Contents.--
Sec. 1. Concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2012.
TITLE I--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS
Sec. 101. Recommended levels and amounts.
Sec. 102. Major functional categories.
[[Page H2838]]
TITLE II--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS FOR FISCAL YEARS 2030, 2040,
AND 2050
Sec. 201. Policy statement on long-term budgeting.
TITLE III--RESERVES AND CONTINGENCIES
Sec. 301. Costs of the global war on terrorism.
Sec. 302. Effective date.
Sec. 303. Reserve fund for health care reform.
Sec. 304. Reserve fund for the sustainable growth rate of the Medicare
program.
Sec. 305. Reserve fund for deficit-neutral revenue measures.
Sec. 306. Deficit-neutral reserve fund for rural counties and schools.
TITLE IV--BUDGET ENFORCEMENT
Sec. 401. Discretionary spending limits.
Sec. 402. Limitation on advance appropriations.
Sec. 403. Concepts and definitions.
Sec. 404. Adjustments of aggregates and allocations for legislation.
Sec. 405. Limitation on long-term spending.
Sec. 406. Budgetary treatment of certain transactions.
Sec. 407. Application and effect of changes in allocations and
aggregates.
Sec. 408. Fair value estimates.
Sec. 409. Exercise of rulemaking powers.
TITLE V--POLICY
Sec. 501. Policy Statement on Medicare.
Sec. 502. Policy Statement on Social Security.
Sec. 503. Policy statement on budget enforcement.
TITLE VI--SENSE OF THE HOUSE PROVISIONS
Sec. 601. Sense of the House on a responsible deficit reduction plan
must consider all programs, including those at the
Pentagon and the other national security agencies.
Sec. 602. Sense of the House regarding the importance of child support
enforcement.
TITLE I--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS
SEC. 101. RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS.
The following budgetary levels are appropriate for each of
fiscal years 2012 through 2021:
(1) Federal revenues.--For purposes of the enforcement of
this resolution:
(A) The recommended levels of Federal revenues are as
follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $1,866,454,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $2,127,981,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $2,324,503,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $2,425,363,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $2,522,695,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $2,693,493,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $2,807,893,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $2,958,678,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $3,119,794,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $3,286,942,000,000.
(B) The amounts by which the aggregate levels of Federal
revenues should be changed are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: -$25,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: -$227,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: -$346,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: -$406,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: -$448,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: -$482,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: -$527,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: -$544,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: -$561,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: -$597,000,000,000.
(2) New budget authority.--For purposes of the enforcement
of this resolution, the appropriate levels of total new
budget authority are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $2,858,545,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $2,835,737,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $2,905,952,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $2,970,061,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $3,114,578,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $3,224,937,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $3,330,942,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $3,490,088,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $3,639,728,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $3,767,274,000,000.
(3) Budget outlays.--For purposes of the enforcement of
this resolution, the appropriate levels of total budget
outlays are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $2,947,916,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $2,915,241,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $2,902,944,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $2,949,301,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $3,097,060,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $3,193,477,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $3,271,881,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $3,450,742,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $3,587,701,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $3,726,564,000,000.
(4) Deficits (on-budget).--For purposes of the enforcement
of this resolution, the amounts of the deficits (on-budget)
are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $1,081,462,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $787,260,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $578,441,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $523,938,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $574,365,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $499,984,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $463,988,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $492,064,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $467,907,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $439,622,000,000.
(5) Debt subject to limit.--Pursuant to section 301(a)(5)
of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, the appropriate
levels of the public debt are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $16,204,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $17,177,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $17,951,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $18,697,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $19,503,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $20,245,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $20,968,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $21,699,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $22,408,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $23,102,000,000,000.
(6) Debt held by the public.--The appropriate levels of
debt held by the public are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $11,418,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $12,216,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $12,797,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $13,319,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $13,876,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $14,351,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $14,787,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $15,242,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $15,673,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021; $16,068,000,000,000.
SEC. 102. MAJOR FUNCTIONAL CATEGORIES.
The Congress determines and declares that the appropriate
levels of new budget authority and outlays for fiscal years
2011 through 2021 for each major functional category are:
(1) National Defense (050):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $582,626,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $593,580,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $600,283,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $597,211,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $616,451,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $606,903,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $628,847,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $618,837,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $641,976,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $635,475,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $653,695,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $643,275,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $665,679,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $650,246,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $677,884,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $666,959,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $690,273,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $679,088,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $702,903,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $691,494,000,000.
(2) International Affairs (150):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $36,575,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $36,102,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $35,653,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,545,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $31,694,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,178,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $30,316,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $32,613,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $29,356,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $32,161,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $30,729,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $31,926,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $31,978,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $31,594,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $32,824,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $30,487,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $33,698,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $30,123,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $34,572,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $30,740,000,000.
(3) General Science, Space, and Technology (250):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $27,452,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,798,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $27,316,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $28,242,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $27,312,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $27,763,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $27,312,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $27,469,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $27,311,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $27,506,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $27,652,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $27,646,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $28,341,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $28,114,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $29,049,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $28,684,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $29,758,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,344,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $30,472,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,946,000,000.
(4) Energy (270):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $6,996,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,174,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $3,850,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $10,053,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $1,215,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $4,547,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $1,101,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $1,360,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $1,021,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $340,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $1,010,000,000.
[[Page H2839]]
(B) Outlays, $460,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $1,075,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $539,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $1,211,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $497,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $1,179,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $470,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $1,195,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $476,000,000.
(5) Natural Resources and Environment (300):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $31,921,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $36,818,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $29,414,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $33,386,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $25,296,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $28,943,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $26,893,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,271,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $25,231,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $26,070,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $26,156,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $26,307,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $26,618,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $25,308,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $26,956,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $25,439,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $27,787,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $25,990,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $27,756,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $25,992,000,000.
(6) Agriculture (350):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $19,819,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $19,559,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $18,396,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,989,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $16,717,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,469,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $17,355,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,688,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $17,235,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,505,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $16,859,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,069,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $17,025,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,180,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $17,159,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,283,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $17,469,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,579,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $17,755,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,873,000,000.
(7) Commerce and Housing Credit (370):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $14,317,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $16,275,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $4,040,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $2,611,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $508,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$13,986,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, -$2,609,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$19,417,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, -$3,260,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$23,459,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, -$293,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$23,592,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, -$261,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$25,981,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, -$222,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$17,547,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, -$128,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$17,992,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, -$196,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$19,650,000,000.
(8) Transportation (400):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $64,316,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $80,431,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $64,515,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $71,264,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $64,265,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $67,722,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $60,377,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $66,084,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $68,563,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $65,957,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $65,916,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $67,036,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $70,578,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $67,451,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $66,719,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $69,869,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $67,472,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $71,551,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $68,936,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $76,853,000,000.
(9) Community and Regional Development (450):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $11,572,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $23,559,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $11,344,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $20,609,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $11,280,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $18,127,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $11,206,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $14,176,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $11,117,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $12,257,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $11,219,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $11,231,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $11,497,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $10,860,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $11,779,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $11,028,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $12,065,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $11,294,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $12,354,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $11,524,000,000.
(10) Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services
(500):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $67,122,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $100,012,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $63,887,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $73,071,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $66,076,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $68,044,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $69,446,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $70,450,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $73,314,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $73,310,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $75,371,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $75,665,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $76,798,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $77,013,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $78,314,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $78,385,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $79,629,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $79,806,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $80,952,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $81,047,000,000.
(11) Health (550):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $341,873,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $346,636,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $343,733,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $340,608,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $338,064,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $320,444,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $327,012,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $315,117,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $320,409,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $325,200,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $339,663,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $342,703,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $349,840,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $347,303,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $371,826,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $368,558,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $395,908,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $382,056,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $404,674,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $400,682,000,000.
(12) Medicare (570):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $481,521,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $481,816,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $519,903,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $520,406,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $550,105,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $550,248,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $573,252,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $573,333,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $618,945,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $619,385,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $637,938,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $638,059,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $657,067,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $657,111,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $711,486,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $711,897,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $758,271,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $758,376,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $809,106,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $809,201,000,000.
(13) Income Security (600):
[[Page H2840]]
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $501,664,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $501,006,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $487,498,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $487,248,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $457,308,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $456,072,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $431,150,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $429,143,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $436,659,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $438,896,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $436,985,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $434,795,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $441,467,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $434,302,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $457,183,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $454,448,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $468,308,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $465,565,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $480,687,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $477,942,000,000.
(14) Social Security (650):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $54,439,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $54,624,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $29,096,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,256,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $32,701,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $32,776,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $36,261,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $36,311,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $40,171,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $40,171,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $44,263,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $44,263,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $48,717,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $48,717,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $53,508,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $53,508,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $58,552,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,552,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $64,053,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $64,053,000,000.
(15) Veterans Benefits and Services (700):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $128,339,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $127,140,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $130,024,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $130,025,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $134,143,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $134,055,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $138,167,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $137,851,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $147,410,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $146,868,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $146,323,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $145,704,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $145,412,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $144,751,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $155,091,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $154,407,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $159,680,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $158,979,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $164,381,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $163,622,000,000.
(16) Administration of Justice (750):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $56,946,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $53,931,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $45,326,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $50,482,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $45,093,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $48,664,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $44,928,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $47,337,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $47,009,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $48,519,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $45,731,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $46,650,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $46,669,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $46,957,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $47,768,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $47,649,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $50,848,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $50,415,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $52,863,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $52,407,000,000.
(17) General Government (800):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $22,762,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $27,205,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $22,185,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $23,460,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $22,232,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,619,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $22,183,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,021,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $22,217,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,643,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $22,453,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,718,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $22,979,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,016,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $23,559,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,295,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $23,915,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,606,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $24,356,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $23,024,000,000.
(18) Net Interest (900):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $372,558,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $372,558,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $435,109,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $435,109,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $508,435,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $508,435,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $578,063,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $578,063,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $648,083,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $648,083,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $712,300,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $712,300,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $769,605,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $769,605,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $818,115,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $818,115,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $864,371,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $864,371,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $899,690,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $899,690,000,000.
(19) Allowances (920):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, -$6,299,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$2,626,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, -$4,386,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$5,545,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, -$10,247,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$11,263,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, -$16,340,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$16,946,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, -$22,243,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$22,809,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, -$27,786,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$27,637,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, -$33,072,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$32,959,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, -$38,404,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$38,286,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, -$43,684,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$43,594,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, -$49,060,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$48,947,000,000.
(20) Undistributed Offsetting Receipts (950):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, -$84,517,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$84,517,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, -$81,449,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$81,449,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, -$82,695,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$82,695,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, -$84,857,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$84,857,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, -$85,946,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$85,946,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, -$91,248,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$91,248,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, -$97,099,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$97,099,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, -$101,718,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$101,718,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, -$105,645,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$105,645,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, -$110,174,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$110,174,000,000.
(21) Global War on Terrorism and related activities (970):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $126,544,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $117,835,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $92,661,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $64,878,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $54,401,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $50,929,000,000.
[[Page H2841]]
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $50,147,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $49,851,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $49,784,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $49,769,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $50,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $49,769,000,000.
TITLE II--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS FOR FISCAL YEARS 2030, 2040,
AND 2050
SEC. 201. POLICY STATEMENT ON LONG-TERM BUDGETING.
The following are the recommended budget levels for each of
fiscal years 2030, 2040, and 2050 as a percent of the gross
domestic product of the United States:
(1) Federal revenues.--The appropriate levels of Federal
revenues are as follows:
Fiscal year 2030: 19 percent.
Fiscal year 2040: 19 percent.
Fiscal year 2050: 19 percent.
(2) Budget outlays.--The appropriate levels of total budget
outlays are as follows:
Fiscal year 2030: 20.75 percent.
Fiscal year 2040: 18.75 percent.
Fiscal year 2050: 14.75 percent.
(3) Deficits.--The appropriate amounts of deficits are as
follows:
Fiscal year 2030: -1.75 percent.
Fiscal year 2040: 0.25 percent.
Fiscal year 2050: 4.25 percent.
(4) Debt held by the public.--The appropriate levels of
debt held by the public are as follows:
Fiscal year 2030: 64 percent.
Fiscal year 2040: 48 percent.
Fiscal year 2050: 10 percent.
TITLE III--RESERVES AND CONTINGENCIES
SEC. 301. COSTS OF THE GLOBAL WAR ON TERRORISM.
In the House, if any bill, joint resolution, amendment, or
conference report makes appropriations for fiscal year 2012
for the global war on terrorism and other activities and such
amounts are so designated pursuant to this paragraph, then
the allocation to the House Committee on Appropriations and
the discretionary spending limits set forth in section 401
may be adjusted by the amounts provided in such legislation
for that purpose up to the amounts of budget authority
specified in section 102(21) for fiscal year 2012 and the new
outlays resulting therefrom.
SEC. 302. EFFECTIVE DATE.
Section 3(c) of House Resolution 5 (112th Congress) shall
have force and effect through May 31, 2011.
SEC. 303. RESERVE FUND FOR HEALTH CARE REFORM.
In the House, the chairman of the Committee on the Budget
may revise the allocations, aggregates, and other appropriate
levels in this resolution for the budgetary effects of any
bill, joint resolution, amendment, or conference report that
repeals the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act or the
Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010.
SEC. 304. RESERVE FUND FOR THE SUSTAINABLE GROWTH RATE OF THE
MEDICARE PROGRAM.
In the House, the chairman of the Committee on the Budget
may revise the allocations, aggregates, and other appropriate
levels in this resolution for the budgetary effects of any
bill, joint resolution, amendment, or conference report that
includes provisions amending or superseding the system for
updating payments under section 1848 of the Social Security
Act, if such measure does not increase the deficit in the
period of fiscal years 2012 through 2021.
SEC. 305. RESERVE FUND FOR DEFICIT-NEUTRAL REVENUE MEASURES.
If any bill reported by the Committee on Ways and Means, or
amendment thereto or conference report thereon, decreases
revenue, the chair of the Committee on the Budget may adjust
the allocations and aggregates of this concurrent resolution,
if such measure would not increase the deficit over the
period of fiscal years 2012 through 2021.
SEC. 306. DEFICIT-NEUTRAL RESERVE FUND FOR RURAL COUNTIES AND
SCHOOLS.
In the House, the chairman of the Committee on the Budget
may revise the allocations of a committee or committees,
aggregates, and other appropriate levels and limits in this
resolution for one or more bills, joint resolutions,
amendments, motions, or conference reports that make changes
to or provide for the reauthorization of the Secure Rural
Schools and Community Self Determination Act of 2000 (Public
Law 106-393) or make changes to the Payments in Lieu of Taxes
Act of 1976 (Public Law 94-565), or both, by the amounts
provided by that legislation for those purposes, provided
that such legislation would not increase the deficit or
direct spending over either the period of the total of fiscal
years 2012 through 2021 or the period of the total of fiscal
years 2012 through 2016, or for fiscal year 2012.
TITLE IV--BUDGET ENFORCEMENT
SEC. 401. DISCRETIONARY SPENDING LIMITS.
(a) Discretionary Spending Limits.--Spending limits for
total discretionary Federal spending are--
fiscal year 2012--
(1) new budget authority, $1,019,402,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,170,384,000,000;
fiscal year 2013--
(1) new budget authority, $1,027,896,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,113,298,000,000;
fiscal year 2014--
(1) new budget authority, $1,038,537,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,094,740,000,000;
fiscal year 2015--
(1) new budget authority, $1,046,680,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,089,081,000,000;
fiscal year 2016--
(1) new budget authority, $1,055,779,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,093,043,000,000;
fiscal year 2017--
(1) new budget authority, $1,067,794,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,098,357,000,000;
fiscal year 2018--
(1) new budget authority, $1,085,259,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,105,668,000,000;
fiscal year 2019--
(1) new budget authority, $1,103,802,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,126,521,000,000;
fiscal year 2020--
(1) new budget authority, $1,122,611,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,145,102,000,000; and
fiscal year 2021--
(1) new budget authority, $1,141,640,000,000; and
(2) outlays, $1,167,939,000,000.
(b) Enforcement.--In the House, it shall not be in order to
consider any bill or joint resolution, or amendment thereto
or conference report thereon, that causes discretionary
budget authority to exceed any level set forth in subsection
(a).
SEC. 402. LIMITATION ON ADVANCE APPROPRIATIONS.
(a) In General.--In the House, except as provided in
subsection (b), any bill, joint resolution, an amendment
thereto or conference report thereon, making a general
appropriation or continuing appropriation may not provide for
advance appropriations.
(b) Exceptions.--An advance appropriation may be provided
for programs, projects, activities, or accounts referred to
in subsection (c)(1) or identified in the report to accompany
this resolution or the joint explanatory statement of
managers to accompany this resolution under the heading
``Accounts Identified for Advance Appropriations''.
(c) Limitations.--For fiscal year 2013, the aggregate
amount of advance appropriation shall not exceed--
(1) $52,541,000,000 for the following programs in the
Department of Veterans Affairs--
(A) Medical Services;
(B) Medical Support and Compliance; and
(C) Medical Facilities accounts of the Veterans Health
Administration; and
(2) $28,852,000,000 in new budget authority for all other
programs.
(d) Definition.--In this section, the term ``advance
appropriation'' means any new discretionary budget authority
provided in a bill or joint resolution making general
appropriations or any new discretionary budget authority
provided in a bill or joint resolution making continuing
appropriations for fiscal year 2013.
(e) Adjustments.--The chairman of the Committee on the
Budget may adjust the list referred to in subsection (b) or
the amount set forth in subsection (c)(2) to accommodate the
enactment of general or continuing appropriation Acts for
fiscal year 2011.
SEC. 403. CONCEPTS AND DEFINITIONS.
Upon the enactment of any bill or joint resolution
providing for a change in budgetary concepts or definitions,
the chairman of the Committee on the Budget may adjust any
appropriate levels and allocations in this resolution
accordingly.
SEC. 404. ADJUSTMENTS OF AGGREGATES AND ALLOCATIONS FOR
LEGISLATION.
(a) Enforcement.--For purposes of enforcing this
resolution, the revenue levels shall be those set forth in
the March 2011 Congressional Budget Office baseline. The
total amount of adjustments made under subsection (b) may not
cause revenue levels to be below the levels set forth in
paragraph (1)(A) of section 101 for fiscal year 2012 and the
period comprising fiscal years 2012 to 2021.
(b) Adjustments.-- (1) The chairman of the Committee on the
Budget may adjust the allocations and aggregates of this
concurrent resolution for--
(A) the budgetary effects of measures extending the
Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001;
(B) the budgetary effects of measures extending the Jobs
and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003;
(C) the budgetary effects of measures that adjust the
Alternative Minimum Tax exemption amounts to prevent a larger
number of taxpayers as compared with tax year 2008 from being
subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax or of allowing the use
of nonrefundable personal credits against the Alternative
Minimum Tax, or both as applicable;
(D) the budgetary effects of extending the estate, gift,
and generation-skipping transfer tax provisions of title III
of the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization,
and Job Creation Act of 2010;
(E) the budgetary effects of measures providing a 20
percent deduction in income to small businesses;
(F) the budgetary effects of measures implementing trade
agreements;
(G) the budgetary effects of measures repealing the tax
increases set forth in the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act and the Health Care and Education Affordability
Reconciliation Act of 2010;
[[Page H2842]]
(H) the budgetary effects of measures reforming the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and
Education Affordability Reconciliation Act of 2010; and
(I) the budgetary effects of measures reforming the tax
code and lowering tax rates.
(2) A measure does not qualify for adjustments under
paragraph (1)(H) if it--
(A) increases the deficit over the period of fiscal years
2012 through 2021; or
(B) increases revenues over the period of fiscal years 2012
through 2021, other than by--
(i) repealing or modifying the individual mandate (codified
as section 5000A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986); or
(ii) modifying the subsidies to purchase health insurance
(codified as section 36B of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986).
(c) Other Adjustments.--If a committee other than the
Committee on Appropriations reports a bill or joint
resolution, or an amendment thereto or a conference report
thereon, providing for a decrease in direct spending (budget
authority and outlays flowing therefrom) for any fiscal year
and also provides for an authorization of appropriations for
the same purpose, upon the enactment of such measure, the
chairman of the Committee on the Budget may decrease the
allocation to such committee and increase the allocation of
discretionary spending (budget authority and outlays flowing
therefrom) to the Committee on Appropriations for fiscal year
2012 and the applicable discretionary spending limits by an
amount equal to the new budget authority (and the outlays
flowing therefrom) provided for in a bill or joint resolution
making appropriations for the same purpose.
SEC. 405. LIMITATION ON LONG-TERM SPENDING.
(a) In General.--In the House, it shall not be in order to
consider a bill or joint resolution reported by a committee
(other than the Committee on Appropriations), or an amendment
thereto or a conference report thereon, if the provisions of
such measure have the net effect of increasing mandatory
spending in excess of $5,000,000,000 for any period described
in subsection (b).
(b) Time Periods.--(1) The applicable periods for purposes
of this section are any of the first four consecutive 10-
fiscal-year periods beginning with the first fiscal year
following the last fiscal year for which the applicable
concurrent resolution on the budget sets forth appropriate
budgetary levels.
(2) In this paragraph, the applicable concurrent resolution
on the budget is the one most recently adopted before the
date on which a committee first reported the bill or joint
resolution described in paragraph (1).
SEC. 406. BUDGETARY TREATMENT OF CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS.
(a) In General.--Notwithstanding section 302(a)(1) of the
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, section 13301 of the Budget
Enforcement Act of 1990, and section 4001 of the Omnibus
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989, the joint explanatory
statement accompanying the conference report on any
concurrent resolution on the budget shall include in its
allocation under section 302(a) of the Congressional Budget
Act of 1974 to the Committee on Appropriations amounts for
the discretionary administrative expenses of the Social
Security Administration and the United States Postal Service.
(b) Special Rule.--For purposes of applying section 302(f)
of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, estimates of the
level of total new budget authority and total outlays
provided by a measure shall include any off-budget
discretionary amounts.
(c) Adjustments.--The chairman of the Committee on the
Budget may adjust allocations and aggregates for legislation
reported by the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform
that reforms the Federal retirement system, but does not
cause a net increase in the deficit for fiscal year 2012 and
the period comprising fiscal years 2012 to 2021.
SEC. 407. APPLICATION AND EFFECT OF CHANGES IN ALLOCATIONS
AND AGGREGATES.
(a) Application.--Any adjustments of allocations and
aggregates made pursuant to this resolution shall--
(1) apply while that measure is under consideration;
(2) take effect upon the enactment of that measure; and
(3) be published in the Congressional Record as soon as
practicable.
(b) Effect of Changed Allocations and Aggregates.--Revised
allocations and aggregates resulting from these adjustments
shall be considered for the purposes of the Congressional
Budget Act of 1974 as allocations and aggregates included in
this resolution.
(c) Budget Committee Determinations.--For purposes of this
resolution, the levels of new budget authority, outlays,
direct spending, new entitlement authority, revenues,
deficits, and surpluses for a fiscal year or period of fiscal
years shall be determined on the basis of estimates made by
the Committee on the Budget.
(d) Exemptions.--Any legislation for which the chairman of
the Committee on the Budget makes adjustments in the
allocations and aggregates of this concurrent resolution on
the budget and complies with the Congressional Budget Act of
1974 shall not be subject to the points of order set forth in
clause 10 of rule XXI of the Rules of the House of
Representatives or section 405.
SEC. 408. FAIR VALUE ESTIMATES.
(a) Request for Supplemental Estimates.--Upon the request
of the chairman or ranking member of the Committee on the
Budget, any estimate prepared for a measure under the terms
of title V of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, ``credit
reform'', as a supplement to such estimate of the
Congressional Budget Office shall, to the extent practicable,
also provide an estimate of the current actual or estimated
market values representing the ``fair value'' of assets and
liabilities affected by such measure.
(b) Enforcement.--If the Congressional Budget Office
provides an estimate pursuant to subsection (a), the chairman
of the Committee on the Budget may use such estimate to
determine compliance with the Congressional Budget Act of
1974 and other budgetary enforcement controls.
SEC. 409. EXERCISE OF RULEMAKING POWERS.
(a) In General.--The House adopts the provisions of this
title--
(1) as an exercise of the rulemaking power of the House of
Representatives and as such they shall be considered as part
of the rules of the House, and these rules shall supersede
other rules only to the extent that they are inconsistent
with other such rules; and
(2) with full recognition of the constitutional right of
the House of Representatives to change those rules at any
time, in the same manner, and to the same extent as in the
case of any other rule of the House of Representatives.
(b) Limitation on Application.--The following provisions of
H. Res. 5 (112th Congress) shall no longer have force or
effect:
(1) Section 3(e) relating to advance appropriations.
(2) Section 3(f) relating to the treatment of off-budget
administrative expenses.
(3) Section 3(g) relating to a long-term spending point of
order.
TITLE V--POLICY
SEC. 501. POLICY STATEMENT ON MEDICARE.
(a) Findings.--The House finds the following:
(1) More than 46 million Americans depend on Medicare for
their health security.
(2) The Medicare Trustees report has repeatedly recommended
that Medicare's long-term financial challenges be addressed
soon. Each year without reform, the financial condition of
Medicare becomes more precarious and the threat to those in
and near retirement becomes more pronounced. According to the
Congressional Budget Office--
(A) the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund will be exhausted in
2020 and unable to pay scheduled benefits; and
(B) Medicare spending is growing faster than the economy.
Medicare outlays are currently rising at a rate of 7.2
percent per year, and under CBO's alternative fiscal
scenario, mandatory spending on Medicare is projected to
reach 7 percent of GDP by 2035 and 14 percent of GDP by 2080.
(3) Failing to address this problem will leave millions of
American seniors without adequate health security and younger
generations burdened with enormous debt to pay for spending
levels that cannot be sustained.
(b) Policy on Medicare Reform.--It is the policy of this
resolution to protect those in and near retirement from any
disruptions to their Medicare benefits and offer future
beneficiaries the same health care options available to
Members of Congress.
(c) Assumptions.--This resolution assumes reform of the
Medicare program such that:
(1) Current Medicare benefits are preserved for those in
and near retirement, without changes.
(2) For future generations, when they reach eligibility,
Medicare is reformed to provide a premium support payment and
a selection of guaranteed health coverage options from which
recipients can choose a plan that best suits their needs.
(3) Medicare will provide additional assistance for lower-
income beneficiaries and those with greater health risks.
(4) Medicare spending is put on a sustainable path and the
Medicare program becomes solvent over the long-term.
SEC. 502. POLICY STATEMENT ON SOCIAL SECURITY.
(a) Findings.--The House finds the following:
(1) More than 50 million retirees and individuals with a
disability depend on Social Security for a key part of their
income. Since enactment, Social Security has served as a
vital leg on the ``three-legged stool'' of retirement
security, which includes employer provided pensions as well
as personal savings.
(2) The Social Security Trustees report has repeatedly
recommended that Social Security's long-term financial
challenges be addressed soon. Each year without reform, the
financial condition of Social Security becomes more
precarious and the threat to seniors and those receiving
Social Security disability benefits becomes more pronounced:
(A) In 2018, the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund
will be exhausted and will be unable to pay scheduled
benefits.
(B) In 2037, the combined Federal Old-Age and Survivors
Insurance Trust Fund and Federal Disability Insurance Trust
Fund will be exhausted, and will be unable to pay scheduled
benefits.
(C) With the exhaustion of the Trust Funds in 2037,
benefits will be cut 22 percent across the board, devastating
those currently in or near retirement and those who rely on
Social Security the most.
(3) The current recession has exacerbated the crisis to
Social Security. The most recent CBO projections find that
Social Security has entered into permanent cash deficits.
(4) Lower-income Americans rely on Social Security for a
larger proportion of their retirement income. Therefore,
reforms should take into consideration the need to protect
lower-income Americans' retirement security.
(5) Americans deserve action by their elected officials on
Social Security reform. It is critical that the Congress and
the administration work together in a bipartisan fashion to
address the looming insolvency of Social Security. In this
[[Page H2843]]
spirit, this resolution creates a bipartisan opportunity to
find solutions by requiring policymakers to ensure that
Social Security remains a critical part fo the safety net.
(b) Policy on Social Security.--It is the policy of this
resolution that Congress should work on a bipartisan basis to
make Social Security permanently solvent. This resolution
assumes reform of a current law trigger, such that--
(1)(A) if in any year the Board of Trustees of the Federal
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund and the Federal
Disability Insurance Trust Fund in its annual Trustees'
Report determines that the 75-year actuarial balance of the
Social Security Trust Funds is in deficit, and the annual
balance of the Social Security Trust Funds in the 75th year
is in deficit, the Board of Trustees should, not later than
September 30 of the same calendar year, submit to the
President recommendations for statutory reforms necessary to
achieve a positive 75-year actuarial balance and a positive
annual balance in the 75th year; and
(B) such recommendations provided to the President should
be agreed upon by both Public Trustees of the Board of
Trustees;
(2)(A) not later than December 1 of the same calendar year
in which the Board of Trustees submits its recommendations,
the President shall promptly submit implementing legislation
to both Houses of Congress, including recommendations
necessary to achieve a positive 75-year actuarial balance and
a positive annual balance in the 75th year; and
(B) the Majority Leader of the Senate and the Majority
Leader of the House should introduce such legislation upon
receipt;
(3) within 60 days of the President submitting legislation,
the committees of jurisdiction to which the legislation has
been referred should report such legislation, which should be
considered by the full House or Senate under expedited
procedures; and
(4) legislation submitted by the President should--
(A) protect those in and near retirement;
(B) preserve the safety net for those who rely on Social
Security, including survivors and those with disabilities;
(C) improve fairness for participants; and
(D) reduce the burden on, and provide certainty for, future
generations.
SEC. 503. POLICY STATEMENT ON BUDGET ENFORCEMENT.
(a) Findings.--The House finds the following:
(1) The President's fiscal year 2012 budget requests a $13
trillion increase in the debt subject to limit over the
period of years covered by the budget.
(2) Under the President's fiscal year 2012 budget,
according to the Congressional Budget Office, debt held by
the public will rise to 69 percent of gross domestic product
in 2011 and will reach 87.4 percent of gross domestic product
by 2021.
(3) The Congressional Budget Office, the Federal Reserve,
the General Accountability Office, the President's National
Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, and ten
former Chairmen of the Council of Economic Advisors all
concluded that debt is growing at unsustainable rates and
must be brought under control.
(4) Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, stated, ``Our national debt is our biggest national
security threat.''.
(5) According to the Congressional Budget Office, if
entitlements are not reformed, entitlement spending on Social
Security, Medicare, and Medicaid will exceed the historical
average of revenue collections as a share of the economy
within forty years.
(6) According to the Congressional Budget Office, under
current policies, debt would reach levels that the economy
could no longer sustain in 2037 and a fiscal crisis is likely
to occur well before that date.
(7) To avoid a fiscal crisis, Congress must enact
legislation that makes structural reforms to entitlement
programs.
(8) Instead of automatic debt increases (the ``Gephardt
rule'' was repealed by the House in House Resolution 5) and
automatic spending increases, Congress needs to put limits on
spending with automatic reductions if spending limits are not
met.
(9) The adoption of a conference report on this concurrent
resolution will not cause the automatic passage of an
increase in the debt limit by the House of Representatives.
(10) Changes in debt levels assumed in this resolution are
contingent upon its proposed spending reductions being
achieved.
(11) From 1990 to 2002, there were statutory enforceable
limits on discretionary spending.
(12) The budget lacks controls over spending in the short-
term and the long-term. Greater transparency and controls,
particularly for entitlement spending in the long-term, are
needed to provide Congress with tools to tackle this growing
threat of a fiscal crisis.
(b) Policy on Debt Controls.--It is the policy of this
concurrent resolution on the budget that in order to begin to
bring debt under control the following statutory spending and
debt controls are needed:
(1) Enforceable statutory caps on discretionary spending at
levels set forth in this fiscal year 2012 concurrent
resolution on the budget for the period of fiscal years 2012
through 2021.
(2) Any increase in the statutory debt limit be accompanied
by the enactment of a budget enforcement mechanism to ensure
that if spending reductions are not achieved there would be--
(A) an across-the-board reduction in spending at the end of
the year;
(B) a fast-track process or failsafe mechanism to give
Congress the ability to expedite consideration of legislation
to reduce spending and avoid the automatic across-the-board
spending reductions; and
(C) an exemption of Social Security from these enforcement
mechanisms, with Social Security solvency ensured as provide
in section 502.
(3) Limits on total spending with long-term structural
reforms that--
(A) require--
(i) the Office of Management and Budget and the
Congressional Budget Office to make long-term budget
projections (similar to the timeframes of projections made by
the Social Security and Medicare trustees);
(ii) the inclusion of the estimated long-term fiscal impact
of the President's budget in the President's annual budget
submission;
(iii) in the Congressional Budget Office's reestimate of
the President's budget, an estimate of the long-term impact
of the President's budget; and
(iv) in Congressional Budget Office estimates on
legislation, an estimate of the long-term impact of
legislation that has a significant impact on the long-term
budget;
(B) require enactment of enforceable caps on total spending
as a share of gross domestic product as set forth in this
resolution;
(C) require the review by Congress of Congressional Budget
Office projections relative to the statutory caps and
enactment of legislation to reduce spending to meet those
caps;
(D) require enactment of an enforcement mechanism to ensure
that if these spending reductions are not achieved, there
would be an across-the-board reduction in spending at the end
of the year;
(E) require enactment of a fast-track process or failsafe
mechanism to provide Congress with the ability to expedite
consideration of legislation to reduce spending and avoid the
automatic across-the-board spending reductions; and
(F) exempt Social Security from these enforcement
mechanisms, with Social Security solvency ensured as provided
in section 501.
TITLE VI--SENSE OF THE HOUSE PROVISIONS
SEC. 601. SENSE OF THE HOUSE ON A RESPONSIBLE DEFICIT
REDUCTION PLAN MUST CONSIDER ALL PROGRAMS,
INCLUDING THOSE AT THE PENTAGON AND THE OTHER
NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCIES.
It is the sense of the House that the Nation's debt is an
immense security threat to our country, just as Admiral
Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has stated;
the Government Accountability Office has recently issued a
report documenting billions of dollars of waste and
duplication at Government agencies, including the Department
of Defense, and the Department of Defense has never passed a
clean audit; the bipartisan National Commission on Fiscal
Responsibility and Reform and the bipartisan Rivlin-Domenici
Debt Reduction Task Force were correct in concluding that all
programs, including national security, should be ``on the
table'' as part of a deficit reduction plan; and any budget
plan serious about reducing the deficit must follow this
precept to consider all programs, including national security
programs, the largest segment of discretionary spending.
SEC. 602. SENSE OF THE HOUSE REGARDING THE IMPORTANCE OF
CHILD SUPPORT ENFORCEMENT.
It is the sense of the House that--
(1) additional legislative action is needed to ensure that
States have the necessary resources to collect all child
support that is owed to families and allow them to pass 100
percent of support on to families without financial penalty;
and
(2) when 100 percent of child support payments are passed
to the child, rather than administrative expenses, program
integrity is improved and child support participation
increases.
The Acting CHAIR. No amendment to that amendment in the nature of a
substitute shall be in order except those printed in part B of the
report.
Each amendment may be offered only in the order printed in the
report, may be offered only by a Member designated in the report, shall
be considered as read, shall be debatable for the time specified in the
report equally divided and controlled by the proponent and an opponent,
and shall not be subject to amendment.
After conclusion of consideration of the concurrent resolution for
amendment, there shall be a final period of general debate which shall
not exceed 20 minutes, equally divided and controlled by the chair and
ranking minority member of the Committee on the Budget.
Amendment No. 1 Offered by Mr. Cleaver
The Acting CHAIR. It is now in order to consider amendment No. 1
printed in part B of House Report 112-62.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chairman, I have an amendment at the desk in order
under the rule.
The Acting CHAIR. The Clerk will designate the amendment.
The text of the amendment is as follows:
Strike all after the resolving clause and insert the
following:
SECTION 1. CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL
YEAR 2012.
(a) Declaration.--The Congress determines and declares that
this concurrent resolution establishes the budget for fiscal
year 2012 and sets forth appropriate budgetary levels for
fiscal years 2013 through 2021.
[[Page H2844]]
(b) Table of Contents.--
TITLE I--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS
SEC. 101. RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS.
The following budgetary levels are appropriate for each of
fiscal years 2012 through 2021:
(1) Federal revenues.--For purposes of the enforcement of
this resolution:
(A) The recommended levels of Federal revenues are as
follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $2,205,595,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $2,508,371,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $2,802,758,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $3,010,095,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $3,178,229,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $3,338,407,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $3,492,151,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $3,651,546,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $3,828,074,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $4,015,043,000,000.
(B) The amounts by which the aggregate levels of Federal
revenues should be changed are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $314,184,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $153,416,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $131,883,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $179,193,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $207,037,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $163,096,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $157,689,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $148,730,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $147,564,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $131,460,000,000.
(2) New budget authority.--For purposes of the enforcement
of this resolution, the appropriate levels of total new
budget authority are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $3,140,298,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $3,050,251,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $3,232,125,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $3,401,789,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $3,607,488,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $3,760,946,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $3,897,468,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $4,096,228,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $4,294,254,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $4,459,973,000,000.
(3) Budget outlays.--For purposes of the enforcement of
this resolution, the appropriate levels of total budget
outlays are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $3,114,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $3,109,045,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $3,218,907,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $3,363,248,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $3,573,640,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $3,706,838,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $3,830,523,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $4,043,926,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $4,228,332,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $4,402,622,000,000.
(4) Deficits (on-budget).--For purposes of the enforcement
of this resolution, the amounts of the deficits (on-budget)
are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $908,405,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $600,674,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $416,149,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $353,153,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $395,411,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $368,431,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $338,372,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $392,380,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $400,258,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $387,579,000,000.
(5) Debt subject to limit.--Pursuant to section 301(a)(5)
of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974, the appropriate
levels of the public debt are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $16,060,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $16,845,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $17,548,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $18,037,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $18,675,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $19,305,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $19,932,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $20,604,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $21,301,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021: $22,018,000,000,000.
(6) Debt held by the public.--The appropriate levels of
debt held by the public are as follows:
Fiscal year 2012: $11,276,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013: $11,891,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014: $12,315,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015: $12,673,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016: $13,066,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017: $13,435,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018: $13,781,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019: $14,186,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020: $14,615,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021; $15,043,000,000,000.
SEC. 102. MAJOR FUNCTIONAL CATEGORIES.
The Congress determines and declares that the appropriate
levels of new budget authority and outlays for fiscal years
2012 through 2021 for each major functional category are:
(1) National Defense (050):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $585,002,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $598,671,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $602,632,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $598,619,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $618,636,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $606,563,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $613,259,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $618,381,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $644,497,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $633,438,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $656,109,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $642,414,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $668,181,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $650,635,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $680,395,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $667,965,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $692,600,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $679,989,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $705,330,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $692,257,000,000.
(2) International Affairs (150):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $63,212,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $53,294,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $59,982,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $57,193,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $56,518,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,033,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $56,252,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $57,515,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $56,452,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,087,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $59,018,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $59,239,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $61,083,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $59,852,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $62,194,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $59,320,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $63,327,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $59,343,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $64,511,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $60,294,000,000.
(3) General Science, Space, and Technology (250):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $37,566,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,511,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $33,473,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,569,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $33,400,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $33,802,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $33,528,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $33,475,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $34,587,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,149,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $35,411,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,905,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $36,190,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $34,682,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $36,969,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $36,439,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $37,695,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $37,227,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $38,607,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $37,944,000,000.
(4) Energy (270):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $16,289,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,201,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $11,610,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $17,719,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $8,602,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $11,449,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $7,288,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $8,127,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $7,262,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $7,069,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $7,267,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $6,782,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $7,408,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $6,983,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $7,667,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $6,871,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $7,686,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $6,802,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $7,825,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $6,918,000,000.
(5) Natural Resources and Environment (300):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $38,299,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $41,305,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $36,382,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $39,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $36,729,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $37,871,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $36,794,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $37,796,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $37,803,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $37,709,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $38,616,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $38,289,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $40,044,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $38,449,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $40,817,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $39,161,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $42,184,000,000.
[[Page H2845]]
(B) Outlays, $40,347,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $42,651,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $40,884,000,000.
(6) Agriculture (350):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $21,466,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $20,821,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $21,880,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $23,750,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $22,220,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,857,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $21,773,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,172,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $21,973,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,388,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $22,027,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,397,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $22,303,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,652,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $22,559,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $21,891,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $22,873,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,204,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $23,154,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $22,494,000,000.
(7) Commerce and Housing Credit (370):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $28,301,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $28,782,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $16,460,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $14,886,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $14,909,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$329,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $14,724,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$3,102,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $15,193,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$5,647,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $17,275,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$6,557,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $18,584,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$7,780,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $20,922,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $2,830,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $28,282,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $8,645,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $21,546,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $3,019,000,000.
(8) Transportation (400):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $164,397,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $107,900,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $118,785,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $115,243,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $124,490,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $117,996,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $131,785,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $122,061,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $138,597,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $126,993,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $145,552,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $132,000,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $142,463,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $135,940,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $144,362,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $139,111,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $146,317,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $141,571,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $148,332,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $142,908,000,000.
(9) Community and Regional Development (450):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $20,304,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $27,416,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $16,284,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $25,635,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $16,460,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $23,894,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $16,745,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $19,920,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $17,152,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $17,873,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $17,584,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $17,244,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $18,038,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $17,038,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $18,509,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $17,401,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $18,967,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $17,844,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $19,475,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $18,316,000,000.
(10) Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services
(500):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $127,785,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $122,797,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $110,681,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $116,536,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $116,163,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $115,420,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $120,943,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $119,708,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $127,863,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $124,875,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $131,741,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $129,545,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $133,533,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $132,131,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $135,410,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $133,923,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $137,767,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $135,540,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $138,562,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $137,127,000,000.
(11) Health (550):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $369,493,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $365,443,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $384,710,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $380,637,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $458,629,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $445,506,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $524,185,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $153,567,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $572,119,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $576,975,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $615,385,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $618,309,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $657,150,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $654,695,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $703,207,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $700,159,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $758,257,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $744,694,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $802,020,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $798,239,000,000.
(12) Medicare (570):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $484,111,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $483,780,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $520,430,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $520,624,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $548,261,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $548,183,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $570,614,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $570,466,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $617,637,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $617,836,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $639,232,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $639,114,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $661,919,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $661,747,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $721,678,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $721,870,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $773,720,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $773,596,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $827,773,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $827,625,000,000.
(13) Income Security (600):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $567,181,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $556,666,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $534,400,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $532,449,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $532,748,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $530,980,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $530,252,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $527,489,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $537,507,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $538,348,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $537,892,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $534,372,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $542,056,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $533,620,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $557,509,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $553,333,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $569,122,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $564,783,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $581,727,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $577,158,000,000.
(14) Social Security (650):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $54,745,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $54,930,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $29,094,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,256,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $32,699,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $32,776,000,000.
[[Page H2846]]
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $36,259,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $36,311,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $40,171,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $40,171,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $44,265,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $44,263,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $48,721,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $48,717,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $53,514,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $53,508,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $58,560,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,552,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $64,063,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $64,053,000,000.
(15) Veterans Benefits and Services (700):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $133,332,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $132,353,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $135,012,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $134,811,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $139,125,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $138,965,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $143,143,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $142,792,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $152,382,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $151,805,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $151,311,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $150,657,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $150,399,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $149,703,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $160,078,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $159,359,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $164,666,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $163,930,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $169,367,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $168,573,000,000.
(16) Administration of Justice (750):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $57,432,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,751,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $62,315,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,121,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $56,543,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $58,513,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $57,239,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $59,275,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $60,732,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $61,852,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $60,411,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $60,803,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $61,848,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $62,738,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $63,427,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $63,075,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $67,045,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $66,425,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $69,682,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $69,034,000,000.
(17) General Government (800):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $28,320,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $31,424,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $29,002,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $29,997,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $31,090,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $31,666,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $33,356,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $33,609,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $35,943,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $35,951,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $38,226,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $38,019,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $40,614,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $40,324,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $43,098,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $42,557,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $45,450,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $44,952,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $47,860,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $47,266,000,000.
(18) Net Interest (900):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $373,298,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $373,298,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $429,008,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $429,008,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $495,067,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $495,067,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $556,504,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $556,504,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $617,248,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $617,248,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $673,242,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $673,242,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $723,073,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $723,073,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $765,358,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $765,358,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $806,789,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $806,789,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $838,786,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $838,786,000,000.
(19) Security Allowances (930):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, -$15,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$8,592,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, -$20,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$15,405,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, -$25,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$21,052,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, -$30,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$26,235,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, -$35,000,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$31,385,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, -$35,692,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$33,860,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, -$36,409,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$35,217,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, -$37,142,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$36,167,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, -$37,884,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$36,982,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, -$38,653,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$37,728,000,000.
(20) Undistributed Offsetting Receipts (950):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, -$79,779,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$79,779,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, -$81,619,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$81,619,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, -$85,164,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$85,164,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, -$90,854,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$90,854,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, -$92,630,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$92,630,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, -$93,926,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$93,926,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, -$99,730,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$99,730,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, -$104,303,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$104,303,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, -$108,178,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$108,178,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, -$112,645,000,000.
(B) Outlays, -$112,645,000,000.
(21) Overseas contingency operations (970):
Fiscal year 2012:
(A) New budget authority, $64,544,000,000.
(B) Outlays, $88,028,000,000.
Fiscal year 2013:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $48,016,000,000.
Fiscal year 2014:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $16,911,000,000.
Fiscal year 2015:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $5,271,000,000.
Fiscal year 2016:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $1,535,000,000.
Fiscal year 2017:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $587,000,000.
Fiscal year 2018:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $351,000,000.
Fiscal year 2019:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $265,000,000.
Fiscal year 2020:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $250,000,000.
Fiscal year 2021:
(A) New budget authority, $0.
(B) Outlays, $100,000,000.
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to House Resolution 223, the gentleman
from Missouri (Mr. Cleaver) and a Member opposed each will control 15
minutes.
The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Missouri.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, the Congressional Black Caucus has offered
an alternative resolution to the budget proposals every year since
1981. This year marks the 40th anniversary of the Congressional Black
Caucus, and we have over those years served as the conscience of this
body.
I stand in front of you today to say that this is perhaps the most
important of all of the alternative budgets offered by the
Congressional Black Caucus. And the reason is, Madam Chairman, that we
believe someone must stand up for the vulnerable population. The
vulnerable population is
[[Page H2847]]
not what we generally like to think; it's not the stereotypical view of
a person who doesn't work and is shiftless and is a parasite.
The vulnerable population today consists of firefighters, police
officers, municipal workers, State workers, factory workers who have
been laid off through no fault of their own because of this weak
economy. Those men and women have been struggling trying to make it.
Somebody must stand up for them. They are black, white, brown, they
are elderly. Some of them are at an age where it will be difficult for
them to get another job. And so somebody must stand up for them, and we
have decided that it will be us.
Now, let me just say that these are some weird times. We do have a
budget deficit, and we would not at all suggest that we don't need to
deal with the budget deficit. What we need to do, however, is deal with
it in a way that will protect the vulnerable populations.
Madam Chair, I have a left knee that is artificial, it is a
prosthetic, the result of football injuries. And once I recovered and
left the hospital after the surgery, my brain automatically forced the
rest of my body to pay attention to the sick side of my body. So I
automatically, even though I tried not to, did everything I could do to
protect my left knee. I even put most of my weight on my right knee.
What I am saying is that our bodies provide us with a message that
when some part of our body is vulnerable, is weak, the other part, the
strong part, needs to do everything it can to protect the weak part.
The Congressional Black Caucus is saying that our alternative budget
does exactly that when you consider the fact that the gap in after-tax
income between the richest 1 percent of Americans and the middle and
poorest fifths of our country more than doubled between 1979 and 2009.
So we can see that the rich are getting richer, the poor are getting
poorer. And when I hear people say we must have shared sacrifice, I
disagree.
The poorest people don't need to sacrifice. I am not sure that you
can find a single poor person who is responsible for the economic
collapse of the last 2 years. Mark Zandi, an economist with
unimpeachable Republican credentials, said that 1.7 million people will
lose their jobs in the first 2 years if this budget is enacted.
So, Madam Chair, we intend to present our budget now to demonstrate
how this body can protect its weak side and still maintain the best of
this Republic for the protection of its people.
I reserve the balance of my time.
{time} 2140
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, I rise in opposition to the amendment.
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Utah is recognized for 15
minutes.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. I yield myself 3 minutes.
Madam Chair, I am so glad that we are going through this process this
year. I think this is a healthy part of what we do as the United
States, what separates us from a lot of other countries. And I'm glad
that we are actually doing this. This is my second term in Congress. So
last Congress last year, we didn't even go through this process. I
think this is healthy.
I think we all care deeply, and we are very patriotic about this
country, but I happen to have a vision that says that the proper role
of government is somewhat limited and that there is a proper role for
government, and that we need to adhere to that proper role.
It's funny, sometimes I hear opposition to the Republican proposal or
the Republican budget, and I hear that we're going to sacrifice this
and we're going to cut all that. Let's also understand that we're still
going to spend $3.5 trillion with a capital T. That's a lot of money.
People often ask me, they say how much is $1 trillion? It's kind of a
hard number to get your arms around, but if you were to spend $1
million a day, every day, it would take you almost 3,000 years to get
to $1 trillion, to $1 trillion.
Well, we're $14 trillion in debt. We're paying more than $600 million
a day in interest on that debt. It's on its way to $1 billion a day in
just the interest on that debt, and we're going to have to deal with
the fact that we've got to pay that debt. We've got to cut up the
government credit card. We have spent far too much money.
What I like about what we have proposed in the Republican budget is
that we start to rein in the out-of-control spending; yet we still
fulfill a lot of the obligations that we have to this country,
particularly for seniors and others. We will still spend an exorbitant
amount of money, but over the course of time, we will be on the proper
trajectory to live within our means.
I think that is one of the foundations of this country, the idea of
personal responsibility, the idea that we have to live within our
means, that we are self-sufficient. And we have to deal with the fact
that in Congresses previous, in generations previous, they have racked
up this debt. And we go through and blame each other for that. But the
reality moving forward is we have to put ourselves on a trajectory to
balance the budget and pay off the debt. And that, I think, is one of
the great moral responsibilities that we have in the United States
Congress, the adult conversation that we have.
There are a lot of needs in this country, but we're broke, ladies and
gentlemen. We're broke. And we have got to rein in the spending. And we
have got to make the United States as competitive as we can possibly
be. Because when we're competitive on the world stage--the United
States of America is still the greatest country on the face of the
planet--but if we're going to be the military and economic superpower,
we have a responsibility to live within our means and to become self-
sufficient.
I reserve the balance of my time, Madam Chair.
Mr. CLEAVER. I yield myself 10 seconds to just say, when progress is
made, someone is always left behind. And my concern is that it's always
the vulnerable.
I yield 3 minutes to the gentleman from Virginia, Mr. Bobby Scott.
Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Madam Chair, the Congressional Black Caucus
has a long history of submitting fiscally responsible budget
alternatives regardless of who may be sitting in the White House or
which party holds the majority in Congress.
This year's budget alternative continues this long tradition by
putting forth a plan that significantly reduces our deficit over the
next decade while increasing economic opportunities and promoting job
creation in every corner of our society.
Unlike the Republican budget, the CBC budget brings the deficit to
1.4 percent of GDP by 2015, better than so-called primary balance,
which was the goal of the President's fiscal commission, and achieves
primary balance even earlier than the commission, itself. While I
commend the Republican chairman of the Budget Committee for proposing a
budget that reduces our long-term debt, he only achieves this by
shifting medical costs to lower-income Americans and seniors.
The CBC budget is much more responsible. Our budget makes tough
choices. But unlike the Republican budget, it doesn't jeopardize Social
Security, undermine Medicaid by turning it into a block grant, or shift
Medicare costs to seniors by creating a voucher program that doesn't
keep pace with medical inflation. Our budget protects these vital
programs, and compared to the Republican budget, it has $1.3 trillion
more in deficit reduction over the next decade.
The CBC budget proposes responsible revenue increases by closing
corporate loopholes and preferences, deterring aggressive stock
speculation, which helped contribute to the 2008 financial crisis, and
ensuring that the wealthiest Americans who benefited most from the tax
cuts and bailouts in the last decades pay their fair share.
Now, with the additional revenues and assuming some of the cuts
proposed in the President's budget, the CBC budget uses 80 percent of
the additional revenue for deficit reduction, and then invests the rest
to protect from making the cuts in our safety net programs, like WIC or
Community Health Centers, avoiding cuts in investments in our future
like Head Start, Pell Grants, high-speed rail, and NASA, reducing cuts
in critical functions like clean water, FBI agents and food
inspections, and has more for national defense, homeland security and
our veterans. Our budget also fully funds an additional 14 weeks of
emergency unemployment benefits for those who have exhausted their
benefits, often referred to as the 99ers.
[[Page H2848]]
Now, Madam Chair, the CBC budget protects our social safety net. It
invests in our future. It maintains essential services in national
security. It does all of this and has more deficit reduction than the
underlying Republican budget. So we have a choice. We can have lower
deficits and a better future, or we can have tax cuts for multi-
millionaires and oil companies.
I urge my colleagues to make the right choice and support the Cleaver
amendment.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, I yield 3 minutes to the freshman
gentleman from Oklahoma (Mr. Lankford).
Mr. LANKFORD. Madam Chair, the House budget that we're proposing
tonight from Republicans is a budget that will take discretionary
spending back to the pre-2008 level and begin to deal with our spending
issue that we have as a Nation. We have increased our discretionary
spending 25 percent over the last 2 years. We're trying to move it back
to where we were a few years ago and then allow that to be able to grow
with inflation.
We're focusing on freezing in the Federal workforce. It's a
recommendation done by the President's own debt commission. And taking
that issue on that the President and the debt commission gave to say,
how do we need to handle our Federal workforce? It has increased by
140,000 just in a single year. And it begins to walk through the
process of what do we do with our social safety net to make sure that
the social safety net is still there in the years to come.
We believe there needs to be a social safety net, but as our chairman
has said multiple times, that social safety net should be a safety net
and not a hammock. And it should allow people to be able to go through
that process to find a safe place and a safe harbor for a period of
time until they're able to get back on their feet. That's a good thing
for us to be able to do as Americans, and we need to find ways to be
able to protect that in the days to come.
But part of the struggle that we have with that is finding ways that
that doesn't become a place where people are trapped indefinitely. So
we would like to be able to implement some of the reforms of the
Clinton-era time when temporary assistance for needy families was
transitioned in, and it has become such a great success on helping
families be able to transition into work. The best way we can take care
of families that are in the poverty area is not through a program from
the government; it is with a great job so they have great self-esteem
and they can be engaged and be a part of our ongoing economy.
The President's own debt commission made the comment that the Nation
is broke, and what we need to do is focus on reducing spending and
dealing with how we handle what we do as a Nation and what we're trying
to accomplish.
As far as the issues about Medicare, we've been very clear through
this process. We're dealing with Medicare changes for those that are 54
years old and younger. And for those that are in poverty and facing
disability, those individuals would have full coverage, and as they're
more wealthy, yes, we would means test that. We have an expectation
that wealthier senior adults would be able to help cover more of their
own Medicare; but for those that are in poverty or near the poverty
range, they would be supplemented more to make sure that we're taking
care of them, and it would be a guaranteed coverage like they have now
so that they don't have to worry about not being able to get Medicare.
They would be able to have it, and that would be secured for them.
We have one more major thing that we've all discussed. We all want
taxes to be more simple in the process. Tomorrow is April 15, all of
our favorite day in America, dealing with the taxes and dealing with
the process. And it's not a matter of being a great citizen. It's just
a matter of going through the tax forms. We need to simplify this
process and make it more flat, more level and more fair for people
across the board. So that's a major part of it. We're not talking about
raising taxes $6 trillion. We're talking about keeping tax rates where
they are and finding a way to be able to honor people and honor
families.
{time} 2150
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, how much time remains, please?
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Missouri has 8\1/2\ minutes
remaining.
Mr. CLEAVER. I now yield 2 minutes to the gentlelady from Wisconsin,
Ms. Gwendolynne Moore.
Ms. MOORE. The Congressional Black Caucus, the conscience of the
Congress, rejects cuts that wage war on the poor and war on the working
class. There are 43 of us from 21 States, and we represent over 30
million people. We are aggrieved that two-thirds of the Republican
budget cuts come from programs that serve low-income and working class
people while there is no sacrifice from the uber-wealthy class.
It is our job to be a voice in the wilderness and to point out that
it is downright immoral to choose tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans
and billions of dollars of tax breaks and tax subsidies rather than
preserving the dignity of a life with decent housing, food security,
and access to health care for all Americans.
The gentleman who spoke previously just pointed out that they're
cutting welfare because they believe that people need self-esteem.
Well, you cannot eat self-esteem, and you cannot live in a house built
on self-esteem. We want you to know that half of all Americans in this
country are barely making it without any governmental support, and they
need Medicaid. They don't need you to block grant it. ``Block
granting'' means a cut. ``Block granting food stamps'' means a cut.
Privatizing Medicare is a cut. Inflicting deep cuts to the Low Income
Home Energy Assistance Program and denying extended benefits to the
unemployed is a cut.
Yet the Congressional Black Caucus prioritizes controlling the debt
and deficit. We cut it by $4 trillion over 10 years. We, the CBC,
submit that conservative fiscal policy is compatible with compassion
for the invisible, voiceless majority of Americans who need their
government to respond.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, I yield 3 minutes to the gentleman from
Indiana (Mr. Young).
Mr. YOUNG of Indiana. Madam Chair, there has been much discussion
today about shared sacrifice. The notion of shared sacrifice, let's
disaggregate that for a moment.
We might have shared sacrifice for the next generation. We certainly
are contemplating that right now if we fail to act in a responsible
manner and address our Nation's debt crisis.
Shared sacrifice for the currently unemployed and underemployed in
our country, that is what we are contemplating. If our solution to our
Nation's problems is merely to increase taxes, we're going to see a
decrease in job creation in this country. We will actually see our
going the other direction in terms of employment in this country if we
implement, as is proposed in this substitute, a tax increase of almost
$6 trillion as compared to the budget that we are embracing on the
Republican side.
We are imposing all manner of unnecessary sacrifice under this
substitute on those Americans who are currently working and middle
class. It contemplates a tax increase on capital gains and dividends at
ordinary income rates. What that means, essentially, is we're thinking
of taxing pensions and mutual funds at a rate as high as 49 percent.
That would adversely impact our seniors. It's not the responsible thing
to do.
Here in this proposal, we are also contemplating allowing all tax
provisions of the 2001 and 2003 deals to expire for all taxpayers. In
other words, this is a proposed tax increase on middle class Americans.
I don't think that's the right thing to do right now.
Let's remind ourselves that we cannot tax our way out of this
spending problem. Washington, once again, does not have a tax problem.
We are not in this mess because we're not taxing the American people
enough. Instead, we are in this mess because we're spending far too
much.
This will become a familiar chart for Americans around the country, I
hope, but let's look at this:
This is the ski slope of future spending projections, according to
our Office of Management and Budget and Congressional Budget Office, if
we do nothing. Those on the other side are seemingly proposing that we
continue along this course or that we try and remedy
[[Page H2849]]
this situation through job-constraining tax increases. That's not the
way to go.
Finally, one statistic that was cited earlier tonight bears
reiterating. If we were to tax everyone in this country who makes
$250,000 or more--every family in this country, so that's just two
income earners--at the $125,000 level and at 100 percent of their
incomes, we still could not improve our financial situation enough to
restore private sector job creation and put ourselves back on the path
to prosperity. That is why I think we need to embrace this Ryan budget.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from
Texas, Al Green.
Mr. AL GREEN of Texas. Madam Chair, the American people are
confronting a dilemma, and the dilemma is simply this: to privatize or
not to privatize. When all is said and done, that's the dilemma that we
face based upon what the opposing party proposes.
The simple solution to education is to simply privatize and to give
them vouchers. The simple solution to Social Security is to privatize
and to place it in the stock market. The simple solution to health care
is to privatize and to give them vouchers. For every complicated
problem, there is a simple solution that's usually wrong.
As the economy continues to emerge from the worst recession in
generations, the CBC budget understands the increased need for income
security programs such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(SNAP), Unemployment insurance, Medicaid, and Section 8 housing
vouchers.
As a member of the House Financial Services Committee, I have worked
hard over many years to ensure adequate funding levels for housing and
community development programs, such as the Fair Housing Initiatives
program and the HUD-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing program. I am
pleased that the CBC budget supports investment in these key programs.
For Fiscal Year 2012, the Administration has requested $75 million
for new HUD-Veterans Affairs Supportive Housing (VASH) vouchers, which
will end homelessness for an estimated 11,538 of our nation's veterans.
HUD-VASH combines tenant-based voucher assistance for homeless
veterans with case management and clinical services provided by the
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) at its medical centers in local
communities.
Public housing authorities who are awarded HUD-VASH vouchers develop
partnerships with VA medical centers to help homeless veterans find
permanent supportive housing.
It is estimated that approximately 60,000 homeless veterans will need
HUD-VASH vouchers. A recent report issued by HUD and the VA indicated
that on a single night in January 2009, 75,609 veterans were homeless.
Over the past three fiscal years, Congress has appropriated $75
million a year for 10,000 new vouchers--for a total of 30,000 vouchers.
To continue moving towards the goal of ending veterans' homelessness,
Congress should provide an additional 11,538 vouchers in FY 2012.
I am pleased that the CBC Budget makes homeless veterans a priority
by providing additional funding to Section 8 which will ultimately
ensure adequate vouchers in FY 2012.
The CBC Budget also provides additional funding for community and
regional development programs. I am pleased that the Fair Housing
Initiatives Program is listed among programs targeted to receive
additional support.
This week marked the forty-third anniversary of the signing of the
federal Fair Housing Act which was signed into law because of the
efforts of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. to bring civil rights and justice
in housing to all Americans. The Fair Housing Act outlawed
discrimination in housing based upon race, color, religion, and
national origin.
Despite its passage more than 40 years ago, approximately 4 million
fair housing violations are estimated to occur each year, many of which
involve veterans and military personnel.
However, according to the National Fair Housing Alliance, just 30,000
are reported to federal, state, and local fair housing authorities and
only a handful are investigated with less than 120 actually resulting
in charges.
This number appears low given that housing discrimination is
perceived to be one of the root causes of the current foreclosure
crisis.
Fair housing education and enforcement, primarily provided by
private, non-profit fair housing organizations, play an important role
in fighting housing discrimination and predatory lending.
With support from the federal Fair Housing Initiatives Program
(FHIP), these organizations investigate over half of the nation's
reported housing discrimination complaints, counsel people who have
been victims of housing discrimination, and enforce fair housing laws
through housing testing programs.
The President's Budget proposes $42.5 million in funding for the FHIP
program in FY2012 which provides level funding from the previous year.
FHIP is a key federal program that provides funds to enforce the
nation's fair housing laws, combat housing discrimination and ensure
equal housing opportunities at the state and local level.
Given the ongoing foreclosure crisis, which has forced many families
to enter the rental market, strengthened fair housing programs are more
important than ever.
As the housing market slowly recovers, the need for sustained funding
for fair housing enforcement is critically important. I am pleased that
the CBC budget recognizes the importance of this program by providing
additional funding for it as well.
In addition, I have introduced H.R. 284, the Veterans, Women,
Families with Children, and Persons with Disabilities Housing Fairness
Act of 2011, which aims to provide the necessary enforcement to
guarantee equal opportunities and prosecute housing discrimination, as
well as to be a deterrent for this kind of behavior.
It is my hope that these combined efforts will bring us closer to
ending housing discrimination, especially against disabled persons and
particularly against our veterans.
I ask my colleagues to vote ``aye'' on final passage of the
Congressional Black Caucus Alternative Budget for Fiscal Year 2012.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, I yield myself such time as I may consume
in order to say that we don't offer a proposal to privatize Social
Security. We do not do the things that were just said on this floor.
Nevertheless, I yield 3 minutes to the gentleman from Indiana (Mr.
Rokita).
(Mr. ROKITA asked and was given permission to revise and extend his
remarks.)
Mr. ROKITA. Madam Chair, I rise tonight to also talk a little bit
about the size and the scope and the number of employees that this
Federal Government has. Earlier tonight, I talked about the State from
which I come, Indiana--a AAA bond rating, not raising taxes on anybody,
and a budget that year after year has been in the black.
As Secretary of State for Indiana for the last 8 years, I had
operated a bureaucracy, and I know a little bit about them. What we had
in Indiana, at least in the Secretary of State's office, was a pretty
darned good one. We had no more employees in the Indiana Secretary of
State's office than we did in the early '80s, and we were running on a
1987 budget, unadjusted for inflation.
I can tell by the reaction of some of the Members here in the House
tonight that it's one of derision. It's one of scoffing. It can be
done. The States know how to do it. Let's look to them.
In contrast to Indiana, what do we see here at the Federal level? We
see 155,000 more bureaucrats than just a few years ago, an 80-plus-
percent increase in the size and scope of this Federal Government,
Madam Chairman--and that's just the personnel. We can have cuts in each
of these departments. Every bureaucrat we don't hire after one retires
will cause a 10 percent decrease in the Federal workforce over just a
few years. That's responsible governing, especially when you're talking
about a $14 trillion debt--$1 trillion year after year deficits.
As the previous Republican speaker pointed out, my friend Todd Young,
it's just getting worse. The red menace is upon us, and it's the red
ink produced in this Federal Government, right here from the well of
this House, to begin with. The Ryan proposal that came out of the
Budget Committee addresses this in a responsible manner. The smaller we
make this Federal Government, the more the private sector grows. It's
correlational. It's definitional.
{time} 2200
I urge my colleagues to pass this budget proposal, the Ryan proposal.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, I yield 1 minute to the gentlewoman from
New York (Ms. Clarke).
Ms. CLARKE of New York. Madam Chair, I rise in strong support of the
Congressional Black Caucus budget alternative which lays out what I
truly believe to be a more responsible way forward. In stark contrast
to the irresponsible and reckless cuts proposed by the majority in the
Ryan budget, the CBC budget alternative recognizes that not only can we
not cut and slash our way to prosperity on the backs of our Nation's
most vulnerable while protecting tax cuts for multimillionaires,
[[Page H2850]]
but we also must invest in our Nation's future.
Our proposal creates jobs by investing in the green economy,
diminishing our dependence on foreign oil, invests in our future by
supporting programs that make education from the cradle to college more
affordable, and protects the most vulnerable Americans.
Madam Chair, it is time we have an honest conversation with the
American people about where we are: the greatest wealth transfer from
the poor and the middle class to the rich and the wealthy in our
lifetime. How we got here: Bush tax cuts, subprime scamming, and
financial sector greed. And how we get to fiscal solvency: By
supporting the CBC budget alternative. We are the conscience of the
Congress.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, I would like to inquire of the remaining
time. We have no additional speakers except myself.
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Utah has 3 minutes remaining.
The gentleman from Missouri has 4\1/2\ minutes remaining.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. I reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, I yield 1 minute to the gentlewoman from
the Virgin Islands (Mrs. Christensen), a certified physician.
Mrs. CHRISTENSEN. Madam Chair, I rise today in strong support of the
Congressional Black Caucus' budget, which is responsible and responsive
to the needs of all Americans, especially those who have been ignored
and underserved in these hard economic times.
We reject the Republican budget that, while providing giveaways to
the rich and corporations, sends seniors and people with disabilities
out into the private insurance market with vouchers that will not
cover, and so will increase, their costs, and that reopens the dreaded
doughnut hole.
The CBC budget preserves Medicare, strengthens and extends it, and
ends the doughnut hole. Republicans would cut Medicaid, denying health
care to Americans who need prevention and care most, continuing the
spiral of excess disabilities, illness, and premature death.
Our budget fully funds Medicaid and the Prevention and Public Health
Fund, ensuring health care and the chance for wellness which many would
not have without them.
We robustly fund HIV/AIDS, WIC, maternal and child health, and other
programs to close gaps and bring better health to minorities, the poor,
and Americans in rural areas and the territories.
Unlike the Republicans budget, we create millions of jobs, bring down
costs, and further reduce the deficit. Vote for the CBC budget. Reject
the harmful Republican budget.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. I have no further requests for time, and I reserve the
balance of my time.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Cummings), the ranking member of the Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform.
Mr. CUMMINGS. I thank the gentleman for yielding, and I rise in
strong support of the Congressional Black Caucus budget. As a senior
member of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, and as a
former chairman of the committee's Subcommittee on the Coast Guard and
Maritime Transportation, I know that budget cuts do not build bridges.
They also do not repair roads, and they do not expand our transit
systems.
Unlike the majority's proposed budget which threatens to bring our
transportation networks to a standstill, the Congressional Black Caucus
alternative budget invests $20 billion above the President's budget in
highways, transit, high-speed rail, and bridges. Such an investment in
our Nation's infrastructure will move our recovering economy forward
while creating at least 1 million jobs. Such investments will also
ensure the mobility of our constituents so they can keep moving
forward.
The CBC alternative budget makes investments in economic growth, and
our Nation's needs, and I urge all Members to vote in favor of the
Congressional Black Caucus budget.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. I continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. CLEAVER. I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from Illinois (Mr.
Davis).
Mr. DAVIS of Illinois. Madam Chair, I rise in strong opposition to
the Ryan plan and in favor of the CBC budget. The CBC budget invests
heavily in the education of our youngest citizens, from preschool to
graduate school. This investment is necessary to ensure that all
children receive the world class education they so greatly need and
rightly deserve.
This investment is necessary to build the early childhood education
system. We need to improve school readiness and reduce achievement gaps
among students from different backgrounds. This investment is necessary
to teach critical math and science skills, to improve graduation rates,
and to provide for crucial college preparation programs such as TRIO
and GEAR UP, all of which are essential for success in our
technological world.
Madam Chair, education is a civil rights issue, and unless we educate
all of our children, this country will never be what it ought to be. I
support the CBC budget.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, I understand the gentleman has additional
speakers. I am happy to yield an additional minute to the gentleman.
The Acting CHAIR. The gentleman from Missouri now controls 2\1/2\
minutes.
Mr. CLEAVER. I thank the gentleman from Utah, and I yield 1 minute to
the gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Jackson Lee).
Ms. JACKSON LEE of Texas. Madam Chair, I thank the gentleman from
Utah for yielding to the CBC.
The CBC budget saves $325 billion in interest over 10 years which the
Republican budget does not. I am glad to stand here and talk about
ports and public transit, but I am even more glad to talk about the $5
billion that goes into general sciences, space and technology, and the
$5 billion for community development.
The reason I want to say that is for all of the tax cuts to the
wealthy, $800 billion, the CBC budget understands that they can invest
in health, income security, education, and transportation.
In addition, may I say to you that this is the face of what we are
trying to fight for: a hardworking nurse and a beautiful child. This is
what America is all about. And I would just say to my good friends, the
CBC budget does not engage in slash-onomics. It does not engage in
losing jobs, jobs, jobs. We create jobs through community block grants,
through space, science, and technology, through transportation. And all
the bill for the Republicans will do to America is slash jobs; slash-
onomics. Vote for the CBC budget.
Madam Chair, I rise in support of the Congressional Black Caucus
Alternative Budget for Fiscal Year 2012. The CBC Alternative Budget
provides a far superior alternative to the Republican Budget in general
and especially in the areas of job creating area of transportation and
infrastructure.
IN GENERAL
The CBC Alternative Budget for FY 2012 puts forth a plan that reduces
the deficit over the next decade, and increases economic opportunities
and job creation while ensuring sustained investments in education, job
training, transportation and infrastructure, and advanced research and
development.
Deficit reduction and the path to fiscal sustainability must not be
on the backs of the vulnerable. We cannot win the future by leaving our
most vulnerable behind. Our success as a nation is interwoven in the
success of every community. The CBC Alternative Budget is an honest and
responsible path to prosperity.
Unlike the Republican Budget, the CBC Budget achieves all this by
making tough but responsible decisions to raise new revenue by
broadening the tax base, make our tax system fairer, and close
corporate tax loopholes and preferences that have only contributed to
the loss of American jobs. Instead of recklessly swinging the budget
axe like the Republican leadership, the CBC budget makes targeted
investments that will pay dividends for decades.
Compared to the President's budget, the CBC budget saves $5.7
trillion on the deficit over the next decade.
Compared to the Republican budget, the CBC budget saves $1.3 trillion
on the deficit over the next decade.
EDUCATION
The CBC budget invests $20 billion over the President's Budget in
Education and Job Training Programs.
The CBC Budget support the President's targeted investments towards
education programs, but also restores the proposed cuts to the
Community Services Block Grant and the $7.6 billion cut to year round
Pell grants.
[[Page H2851]]
JOB CREATION & SOCIAL SAFETY NET
In the name of cutting spending, Republicans in Congress have
recklessly swung the axe at programs that help vulnerable Americans.
The blade did not spare Community Development Black Grants, food
assistant programs, etc. The Republican budget all but wipes out these
necessary programs at the time when more and more families are being
pushing into poverty.
CBC budget provides states with the resources necessary to continue
to preserve the social safety net while promoting sustainable job
creation and economic growth. This proposed investment in
infrastructure is supported by business, specifically the United States
Chamber of Commerce.
CBC budget also provides $16 billion for H.R. 589, the Emergency
Unemployment Compensation Expansion and $2.5 billion for the TANF
Emergency Contingency Fund.
DEFICIT REDUCTION
For FY 2012, the CBC Budget sets aside $283.4 billion for deficit
reduction. Over a 10 year period, the CBC budget sets aside $3.96
trillion of deficit reduction. Compared to the Republican budget, the
CBC budget save $172 billion on the deficit in FY2012 and $1.34
trillion over the next decade.
TRANSPORTATION
The CBC budget provides $20 billion for Transportation Investment.
COMMUNITY & REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
The CBC budget provides $5 billion for Community & regional
Development.
CONCLUSION
By investing in infrastructure and other job creating areas, the CBC
Alternative Budget offers the best and most fiscally responsible
proposal to take America forward to economic prosperity.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. I continue to reserve the balance of my time.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, in closing, I am not accusing anybody of
being mean-spirited and wanting to hurt people. I am absolutely
convinced that those who support the Republican budget are good and
decent Americans. They want the best things for this country. I will
never stand on this floor and do that.
But what I am saying is I believe and our caucus believes that their
program, their budget, is one that does damage to the vulnerable
population of this country. We believe that somebody must stand up and
speak for those who are hurting and cannot speak for themselves.
{time} 2210
A budget is a moral document. It is a photograph of what we believe.
It is a look into the somebodiness of the United States of America. And
when we look at this budget that this Congress will ultimately approve,
some budget, it is who we are. It is a biography of who we are. And I
am absolutely convinced that the wrong budget--and I think that the
budget that is before us is the wrong budget--could create a gash on
the soul of America and leave a scar for a long, long time.
Madam Chair, this is a time that we must be careful because if we are
not, great damage will be done to the people who can afford the damage
the least. I'm talking about children. I'm talking about the elderly.
And I'm talking about Americans who live next door to us, people who
sit on the pew with us in church. These are people who are going to be
hurt by this budget. And I think that the American public, when they
come to understand this budget, will come to the conclusion that we're
right.
The Acting CHAIR. The time of the gentleman has expired.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chair, the United States of America is the
greatest country on the face of the planet. We have overcome challenge
after challenge for hundreds of years.
What makes America great is that entrepreneurial spirit, that can-do
attitude, that idea that was inspired in the Constitution. See, I
believe that the Constitution is an inspired, sacred document. But if
we are going to continue to maintain our being the world's economic and
military superpower, we're going to have to change the trajectory in
which we are doing business.
Taxing, spending, borrowing money--that is not the pathway to
prosperity. The American Dream is built upon the ideal that people need
to take care of themselves. There is a proper role of government. And
what we truly need in this country is fiscal discipline, limited
government, accountability, and a strong national defense.
The Republican budget that has been put forward puts us on that
trajectory, to retain and regain that fiscal sanity that we so
desperately need in this country. Not only does our budget balance over
the course of time, but it actually pays off the debt. And that, I
think and I believe, is what we should be doing and what this budget
that is put forth by the Budget Committee on the Republican side of the
aisle truly does.
We have a moral obligation to leave this country better than how we
found it. And if we are going to truly drive jobs and the economy
forward, we are going to have to recognize that we need to empower the
individual. We need to empower the entrepreneur so that they can be the
very best they can in a very competitive global climate.
So, Madam Chair, I would urge the passage of the Republican budget,
and I would urge my colleagues to vote ``no'' on this alternative that
has been put forward during this last half hour.
I have enjoyed the debate. That's what makes this country great.
Ms. RICHARDSON. Madam Chair, I rise today in support of the
alternative budget of the Congressional Black Caucus. This budget makes
smart investments in our future by focusing on education, workforce
training, and advanced research and development for clean energy
technologies.
As you all know, minority communities took the hardest hit during the
economic recession. In my district, we suffer from rates of
unemployment and home foreclosure that are significantly higher than
the rest of the country. Although our nation's economy is showing
positive signs of growth, we must continue to make critical investments
in our communities to facilitate our recovery. The CBC's alternative
budget does this by investing $20 billion more than the President's
Budget in education and job training programs that will prepare our
young leaders to win the future.
While the CBC recognizes the importance of creating a budget that is
fiscally responsible, we cannot slash spending and investment on the
backs of the most vulnerable Americans. The CBC's alternative budget
reduces the deficit over the next decade and makes smart investments in
education, job creation, and transportation and infrastructure. Without
these investments, the United States will lose its competitive edge.
Unlike the Republican budget proposal, the CBC's alternative budget
protects Medicare and Medicaid, and ensures that the most vulnerable in
our society have access to quality healthcare services. The CBC's
alternative budget also restores cuts to programs like the Low Income
Heating Assistance Program, Community Development Block Grants and Pell
Grants for students.
The CBC's alternative budget will also provide $20 billion more than
the President's Budget for needed transportation and infrastructure
projects. These investments will help to create jobs, facilitate the
movement of goods, and help keep our economy moving forward.
I urge my colleagues to support the CBC's alternative budget plan,
which reduces our deficit responsibly over the next decade and invests
in the future prosperity of every American.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. I yield back the balance of my time.
The Acting CHAIR. The question is on the amendment offered by the
gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Cleaver).
The question was taken; and the Acting Chair announced that the noes
appeared to have it.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Chair, I demand a recorded vote.
The Acting CHAIR. Pursuant to clause 6 of rule XVIII, further
proceedings on the amendment offered by the gentleman from Missouri
will be postponed.
The Chair is advised that amendment No. 2 printed in part B of House
Report 112-62 will not be offered.
Mr. CHAFFETZ. Madam Chairman, I move that the Committee do now rise.
The motion was agreed to.
Accordingly, the Committee rose; and the Speaker pro tempore (Mr.
Chaffetz) having assumed the chair, Ms. Foxx, Acting Chair of the
Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, reported that
that Committee, having had under consideration the concurrent
resolution (H. Con. Res. 34) establishing the budget for the United
States Government for fiscal year 2012 and setting forth appropriate
budgetary levels for fiscal years 2013 through 2021, had come to no
resolution thereon.
____________________