[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 84 (Monday, June 13, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3714-S3716]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE ECONOMY
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I had the opportunity this morning to
catch the CNBC program that had Jack Welch, former CEO of GE on, and I
thought he made a number of valuable points. He is very worried about
our economy. He believes we are facing serious troubles, and we need to
take action to do something about it. As a corporate leader of great
renown, one of the more respected corporate leaders in America at this
time, he evidenced a real frustration at the lack of leadership this
administration is showing with regard to our financial crisis.
He said a number of things. One of them was classic leadership,
classic thought by a manager, a man who has managed a very large
corporation worldwide with many moving parts. He said we have to have a
strategy, and we have no strategy. I think that is correct. I do not
believe the American people sense that this country is able to
articulate a serious strategy to confront the difficulties with which
we are now dealing.
He said everything needs to go through a screen, and in his opinion
the screen should be what our strategy is and our strategy should be,
in general, to create an economy that is productive, innovative, and
growing; creating jobs, creating wealth, creating prosperity, and
everything ought to be judged by that.
One of the points he mentioned was drilling for oil and gas in
America. We have all kinds of government agencies here, all kinds of
regulations and a permitorium, a blocking of the giving of permits,
that has substantially reduced the ability of this Nation to produce
oil and gas at home, a critical factor if we are going to be
competitive and economically prosperous.
We need to quit buying so much abroad, sending wealth abroad, and
keep it at home. He just threw that out as one of the things that would
never get through a screen. Instead of helping this country to be more
prosperous and create jobs and growth, it does just the opposite. Yet
in this massive government, we take contradictory actions, and as a
result we are muddling along at a very unhealthy rate, and the American
people are worried about it.
Last week was the sixth consecutive week that the stock market fell.
We were told in January, when things were progressing, that everything
was just doing great and that we are creating a lot of jobs; we are
creating jobs, and the market is doing better. But in fact it is not
moving very well. If we read the financial pages, we see that the
people who spend their lives dealing with the economic threats we face
are uneasy about our future.
Just read those articles in Barron's that just came out over the
weekend about the roundtable of worldwide economic experts. It was very
troubling to me. Many of them had serious concerns about the future.
Would we have a doubledip? Some seem to say yes. The Presiding Officer,
Mr. Coons, is on the Budget Committee and knows the numbers we are
dealing with and has heard the testimony that Mr. Bowles, former Chief
of Staff for President Clinton, and Alan Simpson, in their Fiscal
Commission Report, said we are facing the most predictable crisis in
our history, and it could cause economic difficulties for us soon. Mr.
Bowles said 2 years, give or take. Not just for our grandchildren, but
soon.
This is why the experts say we have a problem. I do not believe we
have from the White House any call to the kind of action necessary to
alter the unsustainable debt trajectory we are on.
I do not think the American people fully understand, but they
understood enough to punish the Congress in this last election. I am
afraid they are going to punish us again because no Congress can defend
itself from the criticism that we have presided over a government that
is borrowing 40 cents
[[Page S3715]]
of every dollar and spending $3.7 billion and taking in only $2.2
billion and borrowing the rest. We are on a path that does not alter
that. The President's budget is the most irresponsible ever submitted
and would make our debt path worse rather than better, so I am worried
about it. So the majority leader announces: Well, it would be foolish
to have a budget. Senator Reid said it would be foolish to have a
budget, at a time when we have never faced a greater threat to the
integrity of our economic system than we face today.
Let me repeat that. We have never been in a position in which the
economy could do as much harm to our Nation as it can today. We are
heading to the wall at warp speed. It is a dangerous circumstance. But
we can get off this path. We have to do some things that are not very
pleasant, but not impossible, that are being done by mayors and county
commissioners and Governors all over America and in countries around
the world. The British made some very substantial cuts to their overall
spending program, far more than we are discussing, and some people
pushed back and said, We are cutting too much. That debate will happen
here, if we cut spending here.
The International Monetary Fund, certainly no bastion of conservative
economic thought, said, No, U.K., stay the course. Don't weaken now.
You set a good, tough path for constraining and reducing spending, and
if you stay the course you will be more successful than if you give up
and quit under the pressure that you might be under today.
So how do we get there? How do we get to the point where we deal with
these issues? Harvard economist Alberto Alesina, drawing from his and
others' research on large fiscal adjustments across multiple nations,
said this:
Spending cuts are far more effective than tax increases in
stabilizing the debt and avoiding economic downturns. In
fact, in several episodes, spending cuts adopted to reduce
deficits have been associated with government expansions
rather than recessions.
Goldman Sachs has also done a study that indicates that. We have
empirical evidence that countries that have taken firm steps to get
their financial house in order have found that, maybe almost to their
surprise, they have had economic growth quicker than many had
projected.
So where are we today? Apparently, we are not going to have any kind
of regular budget process in the Senate, to my great disappointment. I
believe Senator Conrad, the chairman of the Budget Committee--I am the
ranking Republican on that committee--was prepared to have a markup,
but the Democratic leadership has decided not to. Senators can't call a
Budget Committee markup; only the chairman and the leaders can do those
kinds of things. They have decided not to. Under the Congressional
Budget Act, the Budget Committee should have marked up and passed a
budget resolution by April 1 of this year, and Congress should have
passed it by April 15. We are now getting close to July 4 and we have
had no real public discussion, no national debate, about the challenges
this Nation faces.
First we had the Gang of Six. They have been meeting in secret, and I
don't know who advised them. I don't think average Americans, in their
struggles--maybe they have lost their job or haven't seen their pay
increase or have seen their overtime eliminated--were in the room with
them. They are good people. I was kind of getting anxious for a month
or so to hear something from them. Maybe it would be a good deal. Maybe
it would be something to get us moving. I don't know. I had my doubts
about it, and I expressed that, but I expressed my support to see what
they could produce. Maybe it would be worthwhile. I am withholding
judgment. So now we are not hearing from them, although they apparently
have enough work product--maybe even a plan--that they met with 10
other Senators, I understand, to discuss what they are planning on.
They haven't let anybody else in on the deal.
But now we hear, Don't worry about the Gang of Six. If that doesn't
work, we have the Vice President. President Obama has asked him to have
meetings with a very small group of Senate and House leaders, and they
are going to write us a budget. There are some good people meeting in
that group, I don't have any doubt about that. But weeks have gone by.
We had a week recess and apparently it was over 2 weeks that they
didn't even meet.
The President is traveling around the world making speeches, raising
money, and this country has not had a budget in 775 days. This Senate
has not passed a budget in 775 days. The Budget Act requires us to pass
a budget. It can't be filibustered. It can be passed with a simple
majority. If it is going to be a partisan effort--and sometimes it is a
purely partisan vote--53 Democratic Senators here ought to be able to
pass a budget. We passed a budget when Republicans had a one-vote
majority. Sometimes you can get a bipartisan agreement on a budget.
That is the best thing. Sometimes it is done with a simple majority. So
we have the potential to do that.
But, oh, no. Weeks have gone by and we are waiting on these meetings
at the White House. Nobody knows exactly what is happening there. It is
supposed to be secret. Normally a budget is brought up, it is brought
before the Budget Committee, the chairman lays down the chairman's
mark, everybody gets to offer complete substitutes, gets to offer their
whole budget or technical amendments or significant amendments to that
budget, and they get voted on, and the matter is discussed. The
American people can get a copy of the chairman's mark and the
amendments offered by the other members of the committee. That is how
we do business in a democracy, the last I heard, and then we are
accountable, right? By how much do you think we ought to raise taxes on
the American people? By how much do you think we are going to cut
spending? Are you going to dare to make any changes in Medicare? I will
not vote for it if you make any change in Medicare. Or: You have to do
something about these entitlements. You didn't do anything about the
Medicare entitlements? You are going to let them go broke? Those are
the kinds of good discussions we would be having, and the American
people could see it. Then it comes to the floor of the Senate. It has
an expedited process, but there is a real opportunity to have
amendments--even hundreds of amendments--to offer to the Budget Act,
and we then have something that at least is seen by the American people
and at least they will know if their representatives voted for or
against it. But I think this idea of doing it in some other order, not
the regular order, is an unhealthy process, and I hope we can do
better.
I wish to conclude by saying that in 775 days, I don't believe we
have fulfilled our responsibility. We obviously have not fulfilled our
statutory responsibility under the Budget Act, which says we should
have a budget by April 15. It also says we should have held a markup by
April 1. Well, it is tough business, standing before the American
people in this crisis we are in, and proposing the kinds of severe
actions that are going to be necessary to put our country on the right
path--not the path to decline, not the path to debt crisis, but the
path to prosperity. It is going to take some effort. It is going to be
painful in some ways. But we are not moving in that direction at all.
What about the House of Representatives? They passed a budget. They
passed a bold budget--a budget that goes 10 years and then even
further, and it laid out a historic plan. It confronted the growth in
entitlement programs that is a threat to their very viability. It
encouraged economic growth. It reduced spending, which has surged in
the last several years. Indeed, in the last two cycles, we have
increased nondefense discretionary spending 25 percent. People act as
though if we cut spending, we are going to sink in the ocean. That
growth could be eliminated and we would be no worse off than we were 3
years ago.
So the House did their duty. And what happened? Our Democratic leader
over here in the Senate, instead of producing his own budget, calls up
the House budget and he wants to talk about how horrible it is and then
vote on it. It got quite a number of votes in the Senate--certainly not
enough to pass. We got a lot of votes. So I offered the President's
budget, the one he submitted a couple months ago and that I call the
most irresponsible budget ever to be presented to this Nation--and I
[[Page S3716]]
stand by that. We are in a systemic crisis that has to be confronted
with serious decision making, and the President's budget comes nowhere
close to doing that. So I offered it. The President's budget failed 97
to 0. Not one Member of this Senate, Republican or Democrat, voted for
that budget.
I think this is irresponsible. We have seen 775 days pass. We didn't
have a budget last year. We didn't pass a single appropriations bill
last year. Everything was cobbled together in this monumental CR we
heard about, the continuing resolution. It is a totally ineffective
method of governing this country and spending money. Congress ought to
do its 12 appropriations bills properly every year. First, they should
have a budget that tells all the committees how much money they have to
spend and then they should pass the 12 appropriations bills. Each one
should be brought up subject to amendment and voted on.
We have been in this irresponsible circumstance. My request is to our
colleagues who are working either in the White House with the Vice
President or whatever they are doing over there, the Gang of Six or
Five or whatever--whatever they are doing--how about getting busy. How
about let's see some numbers so we can get to work. I don't think it is
going to be well received by Members of the Senate to have plopped down
in our lap, on the eve of some important matter such as the debt
ceiling, a budget proposal that nobody has had a chance to study and
that the American people don't know the details of. I thought that was
one of the things we learned in the last election. I thought we learned
the American people want transparency. They want accountability. They
want to know what their representatives are doing, and they want to see
them working in the light of day, not the dark of night. I think that
is reasonable. That is the way our Congress was set up to work. That is
what I wish to see.
I think it is time for these meetings to start wrapping up. I think
it is time for us to start seeing some numbers. What are they going to
do, wait for the last possible day to raise the debt ceiling and then
waltz in here with some sort of agreement we are all supposed to
rubberstamp in a state of panic? I don't appreciate that. I don't think
the American people will either. It is not good government. If they
have a plan, let's start seeing what it is. Let's bring it up and let's
start having a public discussion on it and vote on it. I think that is
the right way to go about our business.
I am very concerned that we have gotten away from the regular order.
I believe we have gotten away from our august responsibility to pass a
budget, to decide openly and publicly how much we think we can spend,
how much we are going to tax, how much debt we are going to have. We
ought to do that publicly and openly. I believe that will be held
before the public and it will help the American people understand how
deep a hole we are in. It is far deeper than most of us realize. I have
looked at the numbers. They are very grim indeed. We need to get
started sooner rather than later.
I thank the Chair.
I yield the floor, and I note the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. COLLINS. 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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