[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 94 (Tuesday, June 28, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S4164]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE DEFICIT
Mr. JOHNSON of Wisconsin. Mr. President, I realize a number of people
in this Chamber are asking why I am doing this. First of all, I think
it is important for everybody to realize that--and I certainly mean no
offense to anybody in this Chamber--I did not run for the Senate
because I wanted to be a Senator. I ran for the Senate because I
realized we are bankrupting this Nation.
I think the evidence is quite clear, if we take a look at the budget
deficit for just the last 3 years: $1.4 trillion, $1.3 trillion, and
for this year estimates as high as $1.65 trillion. We have incurred
over $4 trillion worth of debt in just the last 3 years, and our
Nation's debt stands at $14.3 trillion. We have reached our debt limit.
Our debt is almost the size of our entire economy.
I have been watching Washington for 32 years from Oshkosh, WI, and I
realized that Washington was pretty broken. I have been here now for 6
months, and I haven't seen anything here that convinces me otherwise.
The Senate has not passed a budget for over 2 years. Of the six
pieces of legislation we have passed--only six pieces of legislation we
have passed from this Chamber have actually become law, and of those
six three dealt with last year's business. They were pieces of
legislation dealing with this year's budget that should have been
passed last summer.
The bottom line is the Senate is fiddling while America is going
bankrupt.
As I mentioned, the debt ceiling has now been reached. What are we
doing about it? The answer is virtually nothing. We are scheduled to go
on recess next week. We should not be doing that. We should be staying
in session. We should be debating. We should be developing a budget.
Bottom line, all we are doing is waiting for the results of a
negotiation between a limited number of people, conducted behind closed
doors, far away from the view of any American citizen.
Is this the process we are going to rely on to prevent the bankruptcy
of America? Is this on what we are placing the future of America? I
hope not.
The Senate needs to get back to work. We need to pass a budget. It
should not be that hard. American families do it every day. They figure
out what their income is and they figure out how to learn to live
within their means. The U.S. Government needs to figure out how to live
within its means as well.
Let me kind of start the process by naming a figure. I would start
with $2.6 trillion. That is the amount of money President Obama, in his
budget, says we will receive in revenue to the Federal Government next
year--$2.6 trillion. It is $800 billion more than we spent just 10
years ago.
It would pay for 100 percent of the interest payment, which is $256
billion. It would pay for all of Social Security, which is $760
billion. That totals $1 trillion. There would be $1.6 trillion to pay
for all other essentials: defense, security, health and safety
spending.
If that is not enough--and, again, that would be living within our
means--then what I believe is required is every Member of Congress,
members of the administration should come down into congressional
committees, and they need to, in the open, justify how much they want
to spend, how much they are willing to borrow, and how much debt they
are willing to pile on the backs of our children, our grandchildren,
and our great-grandchildren because that is what we are doing to this
country.
So tonight I will leave the floor. But unless the Senate gets serious
about addressing the No. 1 problem facing this Nation--our debt and
deficit--I will definitely be back. I will exercise my full rights. I
will do everything in my power to prevent the bankrupting of America.
I yield the floor.
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