[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 113 (Tuesday, July 26, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5493-H5494]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STOP PLAYING GAMES WITH THE DEFICIT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, there is an air of unreality here on
Capitol Hill. There are some people with no experience in government,
little knowledge, and less regard about the outcomes who are
pontificating, lecturing, and threatening. The disconnect between the
rhetoric, the reality between governance and an ideological agenda is
in large part why we are in the conundrum we are in today with the debt
ceiling, something that has routinely been increased year after year
for decades.
It was on full display in the Republican-controlled House yesterday
as we debated the Interior appropriation bill. Now remember, last week
Republicans took to the floor with a so-called ``cut, cap, and
balance'' proposal, which is their answer going forward with the
economy. It would impose an 18 percent of GDP limit on the amount of
spending that the Federal Government could employ in any one year. Now
remember, that is not what we have done for years. Ronald Reagan never
proposed a budget that was even as low as 21 percent of gross domestic
product. So it's a dramatic reduction, more than 14 percent less than
anything Ronald Reagan ever proposed.
Well, yesterday in the debate my colleague from Kansas offered an
amendment, an amendment that I personally found destructive and
unbalanced that would have done terrible things, singling out for
elimination the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment
for the Humanities, zeroing out important resources for construction
for fish and wildlife, construction and acquisition of land. It would
be a 30 percent reduction in water infrastructure. Overall, it would
have been an 11 percent reduction. But at least it was honest.
This is where in fact some of my Republican colleagues want to go. In
fact, it is less than what they would have imposed with their proposal
the week before. As I argued against the amendment on the floor, I
predicted that it would fail overwhelmingly, that many Republicans
would vote against it because even though they are willing to make
reckless proposals disconnected from reality if the only consequences
are polls and politics, when it really comes down to basics, even they
don't want to impose it.
Remember what happened on the floor of the House when we were
debating Republican and Democratic alternatives to the budget? The
Republican Study Group offered up their proposal that went even further
than my friend, Paul Ryan's. And when it was passing, we watched
Republicans start to twist arms to get people to vote against it
because, again, it was something they thought was great politics and
theater; but if it came closer to reality, they understood that it
would hurt them if the American public understood the real agenda.
Well, we are now at a very serious stage dealing with the debt
ceiling. Actions matter. Too many are still acting like they're on the
campaign trail or at a Tea Party rally or on a Fox TV shout-fest. There
have already been negative consequences from the reckless action of
holding the debt ceiling hostage--American businesses are paying more;
there are threats that we're going to be paying more for interest in
the international bond market.
It's past time to stop this dangerous posturing. There is enough
irresponsibility displayed already, we should avoid putting the
rhetoric, in effect, into a budget.
Now is the time to stop playing games on the budget deficit. We've
seen this movie before. The last time the Republicans took control in
1995 there was a debate on imposing a balanced budget amendment. It
failed by one vote in the Senate, and it failed with the single
Republican ``no'' vote, Mark Hatfield from Oregon. Senator Hatfield, in
a profile in courage, stood up and made clear that he was all in favor
of balancing the budget, but not with a gimmick long into the future.
He was chair of the Appropriations Committee. He invited his colleagues
to make the action by reducing the budget, not playing games with
gimmicks. That's what we should do today.
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