[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 96 (Thursday, June 30, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4243-S4244]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEBT CEILING NEGOTIATIONS
Mr. REID. Mr. President, this weekend we will celebrate Independence
Day and 235 years of this country's very proud history. This Nation was
founded on the notion of liberty and justice for all. As we celebrate,
we should remember that the pursuit of liberty is not just a journey
with a destination but, rather, a quest to which we must recommit
ourselves every single day. As we commit fully and firmly to liberty
and justice, we must commit just as fully and firmly to the idea that
the liberty and justice should be truly for all.
It is often said that with liberty comes responsibility. We should
take that responsibility seriously. I am confident we do. That is why
the Senate will reconvene on Tuesday, the day after the Fourth. We will
do that because we have work to do. We will be in session that week--
that is next week--with our first vote on July 5. We will determine
what time that vote will be on July 5, likely in the afternoon because
of the travel problems with the Fourth of July the previous day. There
is still so much to do to put Americans back to work, cut our deficit,
get our economy back to work. It is very important we do this. That
moment is too important, the obstacles too steep, and the time too
short to waste even a moment.
I hope my Republican colleagues will put politics aside and help
Democrats fulfill Congress's responsibility to the American people.
There are some Republicans in Congress who say the U.S. Government has
less responsibility to pay its bills than struggling families
[[Page S4244]]
all across our great country. As a default crisis approaches,
Republicans are saying we should simply stop cutting checks for the
national equivalent of the home mortgage, the credit card, the car
payment. Republicans say this crisis is about spending more or growing
government. They are wrong. This crisis is about paying the bills for
things we have already bought--for example, a decade of tax breaks for
millionaires and billionaires, our war of choice in Iraq, the war in
Afghanistan, those tax cuts for billionaires and millionaires and the
wars unpaid for. What they are not saying is what the consequences
would be of such an irresponsible decision to not pay our accrued
bills--remember, the bills we already accumulated, have run up. If we
did not pay our bills, it would plunge the United States not into a
recession, not into the so-called double-dip recession, but into a
full-blown depression. That is without a doubt. Without exception, the
respected financial voices of our time have said the effects of a
default crisis would be felt across the globe, not just here in the
United States. I repeat, this would create a worldwide depression.
Many respected voices could not have spoken in clearer terms. From
the private sector, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase, a man by the name of
Jamie Dimon, said default would be ``catastrophic.'' He went on to say
raising the debt limit is our ``moral obligation.''
What does that mean? It means the world should ``know that the United
States is good for its money. Period.'' That is what Jamie Dimon said,
and I agree.
He is not the only one saying this. Business leaders have said it,
economists have said it, banks have said it, and Republican advisers to
Presidents Reagan and the first George Bush have said it. Perhaps more
importantly, credit rating agencies have said it. Credit rating
agencies Standard & Poor's and Moody's have said that if the United
States misses even one payment, the Nation will immediately lose its
high credit rating, interest rates would increase. Remember, for every
1-percent increase in the interest rates it would cost our country $1.3
trillion--not million, not billion, trillion.
That is one more reason why defaulting on our debt to make a point
about fiscal responsibility makes so little sense. If we default, it
will actually cost our Nation more to meet our financial obligations in
the future, and that is a gross understatement.
Democrats believe we must create jobs and get our economy moving
again. We must cut spending and live within our means. We all know
that. We must eliminate tax loopholes for millionaires, billionaires,
and oil companies. Republicans must not put the economy of this country
and the world at risk for the sake of protecting special interests and
the big donors. It is time we returned to the type of fiscal discipline
Democrats brought to Washington in the 1990s, when Democrats in
Congress and the White House balanced the budget and used the surplus--
to do what? To pay down the debt. We were being criticized for paying
down the debt too fast. President Bush changed that very quickly.
But a default crisis would do nothing to get our fiscal house in
order. Instead, default, in effect bankruptcy, would derail our fragile
economic recovery and plunge this Nation and the world back into not
just a recession but a full-blown depression. I said that earlier. It
is the truth. It would also risk millions of Americans' jobs, tax
refunds, Social Security checks, Medicare payments, and paychecks for
our troops.
There was a nice report written the day before yesterday by Alice
Rivlin and one of George Bush's Assistant Secretaries of the Treasury
and they said the same thing but in much more detail. Frankly, reading
that was very frightening. Those risks are simply not worth taking.
Today, middle-class families in America are struggling to survive
economically. They are living paycheck to paycheck in many instances.
Meanwhile, Republicans walked away from the negotiations. Why did they
walk away from the negotiations that would have cut the deficit and
averted a catastrophic default? They did it in order to protect tax
breaks for millionaires and billionaires. That is obvious. Republicans
are willing to risk our economy to keep tax breaks for corporations and
ship jobs overseas. Meanwhile, average Americans are struggling to find
work here at home. Republicans are willing to risk our economy to
protect tax breaks for owners of corporate jets and yachts and oil
companies, while the average Americans are struggling to afford gas for
their cars. Republicans are willing to risk our economy to protect tax
breaks for millionaires and billionaires and average Americans are
struggling to meet their mortgage payments for their homes.
I have said it before. Republicans simply have the wrong priorities.
They have made it their mission to stand and shout for the richest few.
We Democrats consider it our responsibility to stand and shout for all
Americans. That is what this debate is all about.
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