[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 96 (Thursday, June 30, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S4249]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE DEBT CEILING
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I rise for a moment during this time of
morning business to talk about what everybody is talking about--the
crisis with our debt ceiling, the approaching deadline, and what we
should do. Last night, as I thought about what I would say this
morning, I thought back to that horrible month of September and October
of 2008, when the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression
hit the United States. I was a Member of the Senate, and I was here the
night the TARP vote came before us to try to salvage and save the
financial system of the United States. That was probably the toughest
vote I ever took. It was the right vote, because we stabilized the
financial system. At that time, we were reacting to a crisis we were
not in control of.
Today, we have a crisis we are totally in control of. It is ironic to
me that 30 or 35 days before the deadline of August 2, we are fiddling
around arguing with each other, when we should be talking to each
other, looking at those things we can do to avert a crisis and move
forward. I see that our leader has come to the floor. I will shorten my
remarks so he can have his full time. This is a crisis of which we are
in control, unlike 2008. We can make a difference.
The balanced budget amendment proposed by the Republican conference
of the Senate is the straitjacket and the discipline we all need. When
I was a State legislator for 17 years, we had a program on drug abuse
that said ``just say no.'' We taught kids not to use drugs. We need a
way for Congress to ``just say no'' to spending, and have the
discipline to have a constitutional restriction on our ability to have
runaway spending without any accountability. It is the kind of
discipline almost every State imposes upon itself.
In Georgia, we cannot deficit spend because our constitution won't
let us. We cannot borrow more than 10 percent of our entire budget
because the constitution will not let us. Those are the types of
disciplines the Congress needs.
Before I yield to the leader, I will end the way I began. When the
financial crisis hit in September 2008, we were dealing with issues
over which we had no control. Today, we are dealing with an issue upon
which we have total control. It is time to put on the straitjacket--the
procedure and process to balance the budget and run our country as
every American family has to run its budget.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The minority leader is recognized.
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