[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 55 (Thursday, April 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2470-S2471]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING RESOLUTION
Mrs. HUTCHISON. Madam President, we are today making a small
downpayment toward getting runaway Federal spending under control. The
spending bill we will vote on today represents a $78 billion spending
cut from that proposed by President Obama for this year. It will be $38
billion from what the Federal Government spent last year. We must
address the spending binge our country has been on for the last 2, 4, 6
years.
Spending cuts have been actually ignored. We have increased spending
in the name of stimulus. The problem is, that kind of spending didn't
stimulate the economy in the private sector where the jobs are
permanent.
At the beginning of this year, the President proposed a budget that
would spend $3.7 trillion next year, with a $1.6 trillion deficit. The
national debt is now $14.29 trillion. Under President Obama's budget
plan, the national debt would double since he took office and triple by
2020. We then embarked on a vigorous negotiation on this year's budget.
Republicans insisted on cuts beginning now, which is the middle of a
fiscal year, which makes it very difficult because the spending levels
are already in place for half a year. But we said: No, we need to start
right now, even if it is hard, even if it is in the middle of the
fiscal year.
There was a hard negotiation. We know that because we had a series of
1-, 2-, and 3-week continuing resolutions that allowed the government
to go forward but did not make the final decisions on finishing the
fiscal year, September 30, with cuts that were necessary.
Part of the negotiation was to avoid a government shutdown. I did not
want a government shutdown. In the end, that costs more. It costs more
to do all the changes that are necessary to shut down the government
and then to make the changes necessary to come back and put it back
online. We did the right thing by making those cuts, by taking that
first step, and by not shutting down government so that so many people
would have been left in the lurch: Federal employees--most certainly we
were going to take care of our military, but they should not have had
to worry about it--all of the people who had vacations planned, who had
bought airline tickets and who wanted to go to national museums and
parks. All people would have experienced some kind of disruption. It
wasn't necessary if we did the amount of cutting, and we did.
We cannot rest because the real battle is going to be for cutting
trillions, not billions. It is the trillions that are going to start
getting the deficits down and bring our debt back into line.
To do as the President suggested earlier this year and freeze
spending at this year's levels would have been like someone who was on
a diet saying: I am just going to eat what I eat now and no more. But
that doesn't mean that person would lose weight. We all know that.
Today the Federal Government is spending $4 billion every day that we
don't act. We add $4 billion every day that we don't have, that is debt
borrowed from somewhere else. We are borrowing 42 cents on every dollar
we spend. Much of that is from the Chinese. And what are we doing? We
are giving a bill to our children that is unsupportable. That is not
just a problem for our grandchildren in the future; it is a problem for
today.
This year our interest payments on this mountain of debt have already
cost us $190 billion. By 2020, if we go at this rate, annual interest
payments on the national debt will more than double to approximately
$778 billion a year. Now we are going to $\3/4\ trillion just for
interest payments. We cannot allow that to happen.
The President made a speech yesterday. It was a call for action.
Unfortunately, I believe the President called for the wrong action. The
President said we have to have taxes go up and we have to have spending
that goes down together. He proposed raising $1 trillion in tax
increases. That is $1 trillion in higher taxes for small business, $1
trillion in higher taxes for family farmers. That is not going to help
the economy come out of the doldrums. Who is going to be able to hire
people if they are going to have a tax burden and a regulatory burden
that is going to keep them from being able to expand their operations?
Washington has a spending problem, not a taxing problem.
We wasted $1 trillion in failed stimulus spending in the first 2
years of the Obama Presidency. Now he is raising taxes by $1 trillion
in the second half of his Presidency to pay for a stimulus package that
didn't work? That does not make sense.
The President also believes that a stronger Federal Government, a
more powerful Federal Government is the answer to our problems. He
proposed yesterday to address Medicare and Medicaid costs by expanding
upon the health care reform bill that was pushed through on a
completely partisan vote and that already is going to increase
government. It is going to increase costs, and cuts to Medicare are
going to pay for part of that increase. The President would give more
power to the unelected bureaucrats on his new independent payment
advisory board that is there to cut Medicare payments and
reimbursements to doctors. We do not need a bigger, more powerful
Federal Government to address the issues of this mounting debt.
We are going to have a vigorous debate on what is the right answer:
more powerful Federal Government and more taxes versus a smaller, more
restrained Federal Government that promotes growth in the private
sector to make our economy go. We are approaching the limit on the
Federal debt ceiling. That is where we must take a stand. That is where
we have to draw the line in the sand and say: No more. We cannot raise
the limit on the Federal debt without reforms taking place that will
show that over the next 10 years we have a plan, and the plan is to cut
back on the deficit every year.
I think a total of around $6 trillion in cuts over a 10-year period
is a responsible approach. We will debate some of the things in the
proposals that have been put forward: what are the priorities in
spending, what will promote growth, what will promote jobs. But we must
have a plan before we raise the debt ceiling.
Republicans and Democrats can agree on one thing: We do need a
combination of spending cuts with revenue increases to get to the
trillions that are needed to cut this debt. But the way we define
revenue is the answer. The Democrats say revenue means tax increases.
The tax increases are on people who would do the hiring to grow the
jobs. So we are putting a damper on the ability to reinvigorate the
economy.
Republicans are going to argue that the revenue comes from creating
jobs, from having more people employed, so they can help with our
economy and try to help bring revenue in by being employed in the
private sector.
Republicans believe the way to create revenue is by building a
vigorous
[[Page S2471]]
economy, to have people working so they are contributing to the
economy, not having people who are forced to take benefits because they
cannot find a job in this stagnant economy that we all have
acknowledged is here.
Today, I hope all of us will agree to take the first steps on the
responsible spending cuts that will get us through the end of this
fiscal year. I hope we will come together on next year's budget. The
2012 budget is what we are having hearings on. I had a hearing this
morning with the Secretary of Commerce--the FBI Director earlier this
week--to assure that we are spending for 2012 in a limited, responsible
way and covering the needs of our country and also making the
investments that will spur growth in our economy.
But the big debate we are going to have is on increasing the debt
limit. At $14.29 trillion, we must do it with reforms that show the
world that is buying our debt that we are going to have a responsible
way to pay them back. I do not want the Chinese to raise the interest
rates because they are worried about whether we have the political will
to pay them back.
We will have the political will to do it if we cut spending, if we
increase revenue through job growth, not taxes. We will show the world
the debt is good and that interest rates should stay low and that we
should work to have good trade agreements so we can build up our jobs
and buy things from outside, and those economies will flourish so they
can buy our products. That is what would be a win for everyone, and
that is what we will be promoting in the next few months in Washington.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
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