[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 108 (Tuesday, July 19, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5159-H5160]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
IT'S TIME TO BALANCE OUR BUDGET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Missouri (Mrs. Hartzler) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. HARTZLER. Mr. Speaker, only in Washington can you hear people
say that it's irresponsible to balance the budget. I actually heard
Democratic leaders on TV this weekend complaining that it would require
a supermajority vote to raise taxes on the American people but only a
majority to cut spending.
Well, maybe some people have been in Washington too long to realize
it, but the American people want to tie Washington's hands and make it
easier to cut spending than raise taxes. They want to cap the growth of
government. They want to require a balanced budget.
For decades we've heard excuses for why Washington's special and
shouldn't be forced to balance its budget. It's time to tell those
people that their scare tactics are over. This is a new day. In America
the people are sovereign, and today the people demand accountability.
They demand a responsible, constrained government. They demand a
balanced budget. Clearly Washington is never going to choose to balance
its budget; so the people demand that we force it to.
Forty-nine out of fifty States have some form of a balanced budget
amendment. If 98 percent of the States know
[[Page H5160]]
this is a wise plan, why do Washington politicians fight tooth and nail
against it? The answer is plain and simple: power. They will try to
scare the American people any way they can to avoid losing power over
this massive, bloated bureaucracy. They will say today that they must
have this power or else they can't keep taking care of people. They
will try to scare seniors to continue their unrestrained power to
borrow. They say they will manage their borrowing power wisely; they
will restrain themselves.
Well, talk is cheap, and I've heard this same line for decades. What
matters are results. How have Washington politicians been managing
their borrowing power? One number will tell you: $14.3 trillion--the
amount of our debt today.
A balanced budget amendment is essential because the government has
shown time and time again that until we restrain its spending with
fiscal handcuffs, the problem will continue. President Obama has only
made our spending problem worse by adding $3.7 trillion to the national
debt in just 2 years. The President has spent more money in less time
than any other leader in American history.
Last week President Obama told Republicans, ``Don't call my bluff.''
Well, I for one think this game has gone on long enough. The power
needs to be restrained. As Lord Acton famously said, ``All power tends
to corrupt; absolute power corrupts absolutely.'' Today we fight back
against this corruption of absolute power. Today we stand with the
American people. Today we vote to return the power to the people.
We invite President Obama to get on board, oppose this runaway
spending, and pass a balanced budget. Five years ago he agreed. On
March 16, 2006, then-Senator Barack Obama stood in the well of the
Senate and said, ``The fact that we are here today to debate raising
America's debt limit is a sign of leadership failure.'' He spoke of the
``commonsense budgeting principle of balancing expenses and revenues.''
But then 5 years down the road, unfortunately, President Obama is
singing a different tune. He has demanded more borrowing authority with
no strings attached. When his own party voted against that proposal a
few weeks ago, he started telling us that we must raise the debt
ceiling and called our commonsense budgeting reforms ``gimmicks'' and
``radical.''
Well, here's what I'm hearing from people in Missouri, my district.
That's where common sense is:
Here's Reggie from Adrian, Missouri: ``Raising the debt ceiling is
like handing five more credit cards to someone who has already maxed
out 50 other credit cards and then sitting back and saying you fixed
the problem. How dumb would that be?''
Here's from Michael in Sedalia: ``Don't give in. As a veteran
receiving a pension, I continue to stand behind you and the House
leadership in expecting meaningful spending cuts before raising the
debt ceiling without raising taxes. Taxpayers don't like what's going
on, and we aren't going to sit by and watch anymore.''
Here's from Margaret from Lake Ozark: ``A minimum of $4 billion over
10 years is a drop in the bucket. We also need a constitutional
amendment since our leaders can't seem to stop spending and do the
right thing. Do the right thing now.''
Here's from Judy from Warsaw, Missouri: ``The very idea of increasing
the debt limit to get us out of trouble is absurd. You cannot borrow
your way out of trouble. Deal with it. Cut the pork.''
Mark from Camdenton, Missouri: ``We have always had to live within
our means, and it is time for the government to do the same. We can't
have everything we want. The government needs to be reduced. I do not
think my children and grandchildren should pay for our lack of
responsibility.''
Larry from Conway, Missouri: ``This is a turning point in history.''
I agree. Let's do the right thing. Today let's pass Cut, Cap, and
Balance.
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