[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 100 (Thursday, July 7, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H4684]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEBT CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Woodall) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WOODALL. I came down to the floor today to talk about the fiscal
crisis that we're having in America. There are those when I open the
front page of the paper, Mr. Speaker, and I read the headline, it talks
about having a debt limit vote crisis in this country. I went back, I
looked, and apparently we've raised the debt limit over 70 times with a
vote right here in this body. Apparently having a vote isn't
particularly a complicated thing to do.
What we're having is a debt crisis. I think that's an important
distinction. I was talking to a freshman colleague of mine yesterday
about that. Understand that we can have the vote, Mr. Speaker. It's
within the House's authority to bring a vote to raise the debt limit
tomorrow. In fact, we brought that vote to the House already: Should we
raise the debt ceiling or should we not? Mr. Speaker, we defeated it.
We defeated it by a wide margin here in this body.
What we have is a debt crisis.
Now, Mr. Speaker, if it were just existing debt, perhaps we could
work out a way to finance that, but it's not. It's continued borrowing
each and every day to the tune of 42 cents of every dollar that we
spend. In other words, if we paid for Medicare, Medicaid, Social
Security, interest on the national debt, those other mandatory spending
programs, just those, Mr. Speaker, we've already spent every nickel in
Federal revenue.
That means every nickel that we spend for education, every nickel
that we spend for transportation, every nickel that we spend on
national defense, on homeland security, on the environment, on the
courts, every other nickel we borrow, with absolutely no plan, Mr.
Speaker, for changing that going forward.
If the President were here today, Mr. Speaker, I would say we do not
have a debt limit vote crisis. We have a debt crisis, and there is only
one body in this town that has put together a budget that will address
it. I am proud to say as a freshman in this Congress, as a freshman in
this House, it was the U.S. House of Representatives that took on that
responsibility, Mr. Speaker.
It's been 799 days since the United States Senate last passed a
budget. Hear that. Three years ago since the Senate last passed a
budget. Not a balanced budget, mind you, Mr. Speaker, but a budget at
all.
These are serious challenges that require serious people to offer
serious solutions, and the only one that has been offered in this town,
Mr. Speaker, came from this body. I encourage the President to go back
and take one more look at that, because when we come down to game day,
come down to the crisis--understand what we're talking about when we
talk about a crisis, we passed the debt limit back in May, Mr. Speaker,
as you know. We've just been shuffling the books in this town because
that's what Washington does so well: raiding this fund to pay that,
raiding this fund to pay this, over and over and over again. Apparently
the games just run out on August 2.
Mr. Speaker, the games cannot continue. The games must stop, and they
must stop here, and we must lead as we have always led in this body.
We do not have a debt limit vote crisis. We have a debt crisis that
is driven by our addiction to borrowing and spending. The borrowing and
spending stops here, Mr. Speaker, and I thank you for your leadership
on that.
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