[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 105 (Thursday, July 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5025]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEBT CEILING/JOBS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Mississippi (Mr. Nunnelee) for 5 minutes.
Mr. NUNNELEE. Mr. Speaker, last week we learned that the economy
added a meager 18,000 jobs and the unemployment rate went up to 9.2
percent, far from the 6.7 percent that President Obama claimed it would
be today if the stimulus bill had been signed into law. Far too many
Americans are looking for jobs. Yet the President insists that tax
increases are the way to fix Washington's spending problem. Tax hikes
that will destroy jobs and destroy the confidence that our job creators
need to hire new employees. To keep American jobs here we don't need to
raise taxes. We do need to get our fiscal house in order.
Twenty-two million Americans search daily for full-time work, the
worst sustained unemployment streak since the Great Depression. To
these Americans, there is no end in sight. For them, unemployment's not
a rate, it's a reality. Our job crisis has everything to do with our
spending crisis and our debt crisis.
If we hit the August 2 deadline, the United States Government will
face what many Americans have felt: Too much month left at the end of
our money. We simply won't have enough money to pay our bills.
Americans have had to make that decision time and time again. At the
end of the month, they have to decide what to pay first--the mortgage,
the electric bill, the grocery bill, or the car payment.
Now, I will be very disappointed if, in making those decisions, the
administration chooses to play politics. We need to make sure we pay
Social Security, interest on the debt, Medicare, and our troops that
are standing in harm's way. The American people want real solutions,
and the House of Representatives has committed to a long-term plan. We
voted for a budget that would make Washington start living within its
means. Even the President's own chief of staff has said that in 5 years
Medicare is going broke.
However, it's been 800 days since our friends in the Senate have
passed a budget. And they have nine House-passed jobs bills sitting in
their hands, but they refuse to act on any of them.
A recent poll shows that only 17 percent of mothers believe that
their children will have a better life in the future. At every townhall
meeting I ask participants whether they think their grandchildren will
live a better quality of life than they live. The response is slim.
If Congress is going to be asked to raise the debt ceiling, we must
have a long-term plan to fix Washington's spending problem. House
Republicans have made our demands clear. We will not raise the debt
ceiling without spending cuts larger than an increase in the debt
ceiling. We will not raise the debt ceiling without structural reforms
that restrain further spending and guarantee that we don't get into
this mess again. And I am not interested in a temporary band-aid. We
have already voted ``no'' on raising our debt limit without significant
cuts and reforms.
{time} 1030
We will not support a plan that raises taxes on hardworking
Americans. We didn't get into this problem because taxes are too low.
We are in this situation because of runaway spending and the failed
economic policies of this administration.
We need to move forward and solve this crisis in a responsible way.
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