[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 93 (Monday, June 27, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4107-S4108]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET
Mr. REID. Mr. President, last Thursday, Democrats sat down with the
chief executives of three successful corporations. Their companies are
responsible for the jobs and livelihoods of about 100,000 workers. One
company makes medications that help Americans live longer, healthier
lives. Another invests in entrepreneurship, giving inventors the
capital they will need to bring their ideas to the production line.
Another employs scientists and engineers to make more efficient the
things we use every day, from jet engines to home thermostats.
These three CEOs understand what it takes to create jobs, so we asked
them what Washington can do to help. This is what they told us. All
Democratic Senators were there.
[[Page S4108]]
First, we must improve and reform our education system, from
kindergarten through 12th grade, so we produce the skilled workers of
tomorrow. Plus we need to train more scientists, engineers, and
mathematicians so we do not risk falling behind China, India, and other
global competitors.
All three of these executives--all of them--believe we must reform
our immigration system to stay competitive. The brightest students from
around the globe come to the United States to take advantage of our
world-class universities. Unfortunately, our broken immigration system
forces most of those students to go back to their home countries, where
they compete with American companies. We should be keeping the best
here, where they were educated, so they can build companies that employ
U.S. workers.
Of course, we must simplify and streamline our broken tax system,
lowering rates but eliminating loopholes so everyone pays his or her
fair share, including corporations.
This is what three successful CEOs told us we should do to create
jobs for American workers. I know these are big issues. They are
complicated and politically divisive. We cannot tackle them all at
once. But they are not the only solution. These three CEOs we met with
last week said there are smaller, more manageable issues we can tackle
right now. There are things we can do to help create jobs right now.
Mother Teresa urged us to ``be faithful in small things because it is
in them that your strength lies.'' Putting Americans back to work can
and should start with the small things.
This is what these three successful CEOs told us we should do to spur
hiring:
First, reauthorize a program that gives grants to the technology
companies that are inventing new products, such as the electric
toothbrush or body armor for soldiers, so these innovators can continue
to grow and hire. That is what we tried to do with the small business
innovation research legislation. The Republicans stopped it.
Second, they said we should modernize America's air travel system to
make it safer and more efficient to fly American skies. That is what we
tried to do when we reauthorized the Federal Aviation Administration,
which is lost in the Republican-dominated House.
Third, we must reform our patent system and clear a 3-year backlog of
applications. The next laptop computer or iPod could be in that pile,
just waiting to be taken from the basement to the boardroom. That is
what we tried to do with the America Invents Act. The House passed a
version of our bill, but the person--for example, Senator Coburn--said
he is going to stop this bill because it doesn't have the payment
system that was a good idea. We all thought that here. We voted for
this 95 to 5. But, again, it has been stopped by the Republicans; that
is, our patent system.
That is 580,000 jobs just for patents and FAA, and there are tens of
thousands of jobs with small business innovation. These are commonsense
steps we can take today. Each would help put people to work across the
country. That is not just what the Senate says, that is what business
leaders say. Here is the catch. Congress has already taken up, as I
indicated, all three of these measures. Not one has become law. Why?
Republicans have killed or stalled all three of these important pieces
of legislation--legislation business owners say they need to put more
than \1/2\ million Americans back to work.
Putting Americans back to work must be our most important debt-
reduction strategy. Democrats know it is critical that we reduce the
deficit and pay down the national debt, but we will never balance the
budget with 14 million people out of work.
Democrats know how to balance budgets. Remember, when Democrats in
Congress helped President Clinton balance the budget in 1998,
unemployment was 4.5 percent. Now, unfortunately, it is twice that.
That is why we must do two things at once: reduce the deficit and do
whatever it takes to get American workers back doing what they need to
do to bring in a paycheck. The business leaders we spoke with support
this two-pronged approach. Democrats and Republicans do not have to
look hard to find common ground; we only have to be willing to admit it
when we see it.
I met with the President earlier today. We had a productive meeting.
My Republican counterpart will meet with the President this afternoon.
I hope my Republican colleagues will put the economy ahead of politics
and join us to create jobs and set aside their desire to please the tea
party and defeat President Obama. This is the way forward. Neither
party should confront this crisis alone, and no one will be successful
unless we confront it together.
We owe the country our commitment to do at least the small things.
Again I repeat Mother Teresa when she said it is in them; that is, the
small things, that our strength lies. And they, in turn, will inspire
faith that the big things will follow.
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