[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 81 (Tuesday, June 7, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3518-S3519]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUSH TAX CUTS
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, the Senator from Rhode Island spoke about
the 10th anniversary of the George W. Bush tax cuts. These were tax
cuts that primarily benefitted the wealthiest people in America, and we
recently renewed them. There was a decision made that to keep the
economy moving forward we were not going to raise taxes, even on the
wealthiest people.
But it is worth reflection for a moment about what happened when we
cut the taxes 10 years ago. The promise then is the same promise we now
hear from the other side of the aisle: If you will cut taxes on the
wealthiest people in America, our economy will flourish.
Well, it turns out that was not the case at all. In fact, what
happened is that we saw the economy suffer. Ten years ago, President
Bush signed into law the first massive tax cut. He said that this tax
relief would create jobs. The month the first Bush tax cuts were signed
into law, in June of 2001, the American economy had 132 million jobs--
132 million jobs. Three years later, we were down to 131.4 million.
Cutting taxes for the wealthiest people in America was not a job
stimulator. The economy lost jobs in the 3 years following the Bush tax
cuts. Over his 8 years in office, job growth under President Bush was
4.8 percent, compared to 16.2 percent under President Clinton.
Before I defer to my colleague from Vermont, I will tell you one
other fact that is worth noting. First, when President Clinton left
office and President George W. Bush took over, we had a surplus, a
surplus that was keeping the Social Security trust fund flush with
money and growing in strength. At that time, the net national debt,
accumulated since George Washington, $5 trillion--$5 trillion when
Clinton left office and Bush took over. Fast forward
[[Page S3519]]
8 years later as George W. Bush left office. What was the situation?
The national debt had more than doubled to more than $10 trillion, and
the projected deficit for the next fiscal year for President Obama--his
first fiscal year--$1.2 trillion, the highest in history.
What happened? We waged two wars and did not pay for them--wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan. We added to the national debt. And President
Bush, for the first time in the history of the United States, did
something no other President had done: He cut taxes in the midst of a
war, which is counterintuitive; you do not have enough money to pay for
the ordinary expenses of government, now you have got the new expenses
of war, and you are cutting taxes?
Not surprisingly, this added dramatically to our national debt. So
now comes the Republican side again, with our economy still
recovering--unfortunately too slowly--and their recipe is tax cuts for
the wealthy. I would say those of us who are fortunate to live in this
great country and have the comfort of a good salary should not begrudge
paying this country's debts and this country's needs. I think it is
part of our responsibility of citizenship.
There are those who are struggling to get by in lower income and
middle-income categories who I think need a helping hand. But those at
the highest levels of income--over $250,000 a year, over $500,000 a
year--should not be angry about accepting more responsibility in trying
to help this Nation move forward.
The Bush tax cuts did not help create jobs, they caused the deficit
to explode and they made it even worse in terms of our inequality of
income. Why would we want to do that again? There are 13.9 million
people in this country who want to work but cannot find a job; millions
more have accepted fewer hours and less income than they like out of
desperation.
We should be focusing now on creating jobs in America, good-paying
jobs that stay right here at home. We ought to be helping middle- and
lower income families who are struggling to get by. We ought to deal
with our deficit in honest terms, cutting spending where there is waste
and misuse of funds, and then saying, we need revenue on the table as
well.
We need to make sure we have a bipartisan approach for this. I will
continue in that effort to try to reach that goal. But I hope we have
learned a lesson over the last 10 years when it comes to tax cuts for
the wealthy. They led us to the highest deficits in our history. At
this point, I am afraid using that recipe again will create even more
economic hardship.
I yield the floor and I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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