[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 113 (Tuesday, July 26, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4903-S4905]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE DEBT CRISIS
Mr. SESSIONS. I thank the majority leader, and I appreciate his
courtesy, as always, in so many issues that come before the Senate.
I wish to say a couple of things. One is fundamental, and that is
that the crisis we face--and I think my Senate colleague from Tennessee
would agree--is not the debt limit, it is the debt. It is the surging
debt. The debt limit is Congress's power, and it says to the
administration: You can't borrow any more money. We only authorize so
much money to be borrowed. Like a 102-degree mark in our thermometer,
it is not the thermometer that is the problem. It is the underlying
fever that the thermometer indicates. So reaching the debt limit so
soon after we raised it is an indication we have something unhealthy in
our system that needs to be dealt with.
Senator Reid has very difficult challenges before him. It is not
easy. But as I like to remind him, he asked for the job and, hopefully,
he can make progress at this point in time.
But to raise the debt ceiling, the majority leader knows a couple of
things must be done. He knows, one, the Republican Congress and the
American people want to see changes in our spending. It is on a
reckless path. We cannot continue on this path. So the idea is,
shouldn't we change what we are doing that has put us in a situation in
which 40 cents of every $1 we spend today is borrowed?
This year we will pay $240 billion in interest on our national debt.
Under the budget the President submitted to us--which was voted down, I
will acknowledge, 97 to 0 in the Senate; but it indicates the debt path
we are on--it would cause in the tenth year interest to be paid in 1
year of $940 billion--a stunning figure. The Federal road program is
about $40 billion. Federal aid to education is about $100 billion. We
would be surging from $240 billion to $940 billion in interest on this
rising debt, according to the Congressional Budget Office, our experts.
I would note also that President Bush's last year was an
extraordinary deficit of $450 billion--but President Obama's deficits
have been $1,200 billion, $1,300 billion, and it is expected this year
to be $1.5 trillion--$1,500 billion--in 1 year. These are the 3 years.
In the first 2 years of President Obama's administration, his
nondefense discretionary spending surged 24 percent. This does not
count the stimulus of almost $900 billion that we sent out the door
that was supposed to stimulate the economy.
Speaker Boehner, and I think with the support of the American people,
has said: Well, we can do a long time. We can do a fairly large
increase in our debt ceiling to allow the country to continue to borrow
or we can do a short one, but we in the House, in the Republican House,
believe we have to confront our problems. So I would propose, and he
has stated, that the House would vote to raise the debt ceiling but
only to the extent to which spending has been reduced an equal amount.
If you reduce spending enough over 10 years, you get an immediate
increase in the debt ceiling of an equal amount now. If you reduce
spending over 10 years a larger amount, you could increase the debt
limit a larger amount. It has become a vehicle, an opportunity for the
American people to understand how we are spiraling out of control, and
how it is Congress that needs to figure out a way to rein this in. It
is unsustainable, the path we are on. So this $1 increase in the debt
ceiling for $1 reduction in spending kind of caught on. People seem to
be going along with that. It seems to be fairly reasonable.
Senator Reid claims he has a plan that would reduce spending $2.7
trillion over 10 years and this would allow him to raise the debt
ceiling about that amount, and this would allow us to, in effect, raise
it enough that we would not have to talk about this again for almost 2
years--about 22 months.
Well, OK. That sort of seemed to meet what Speaker Boehner had
suggested. But I am the ranking member
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of the Budget Committee. I have been a real critic of what has been
going on. I have been predicting we were going to end up at the last
minute and a bill was going to be thrown on the floor, and I was
concerned it was going to be filled with gimmicks. It was not going to
be honest, and we were going to be told if we do not pass it, the
Republic is going to fall, and no matter what is in it, we have to pass
it. And do not worry about it, trust us on these numbers.
Unfortunately, that is where we are getting. Senator Reid, in his
$2.7 trillion in claimed deficit reduction--about $1.2 trillion of that
is savings from the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Well, that has not
ever been projected to stay at the current level of $158 billion a year
for 10 years.
Speaker Boehner, when he proposes to reduce spending for a shorter
term, does not count savings from the declining war expenditure because
that is not a baseline expenditure and we have never extended and
planned to do that. We never planned to spend $158 billion a year in
the next 10 years. This is inevitably going to drop. Some say it could
go to zero, some say to $50 billion, saving $100 billion or a little
more a year for the next decade. So the Budget Committee Republican
staff calculates this is over $1 trillion in inaccurate estimations of
spending reductions. It just is. It should not be counted. Speaker
Boehner does not count it in his numbers.
Senator Reid also claims $1.2 trillion in deficit reduction from
spending caps by capping discretionary spending. Well, those caps are
counted from a baseline that ignores the savings that were enacted in
the full year CR that we did the year we are in.
What happened was, we had a higher level of spending. There was an
election last fall. A new Republican House was elected--huge numbers of
people who were elected who said: We have to do something about
spending. So we had a fuss over what our spending levels should be this
year because we were operating not under authorization of
appropriations bills but a continuing resolution, and that number was
reduced. So the spending level for this year now is not the same as it
was when the year began. The current level of spending is the number we
ought to be talking about when we say we are going to save money.
Correct? It should not be the number that was higher but has been
abandoned and been reduced. That reduces the amount of legitimate
claims in discretionary savings to less than $800 billion. Then he
claims $100 billion in mandatory savings. But it is likely--from our
staff looking at them--it would amount to no more than $60 billion.
The bottom line is, we have looked at this a lot of different ways. I
believe the numbers I am going to repeat to you today will be sustained
in any competitive argument about it. I believe these are honest and
true numbers. The bottom line is that the total real savings that are
proposed by the Reid plan are not $2.7 trillion but $1 trillion. If you
do $1 trillion in savings, and you raise the debt limit by $1 trillion,
then that would extend to 6 or 8 months or so into early next year,
which is, I suggest, where we ought to be. Because this amount of
savings--$1 trillion--is nowhere near what we need to do to get off the
debt course we are on.
As Senator Corker indicated, most of the financial experts tell us we
need at least $4 trillion in savings, not $1 trillion. So if we are
just going to get $1 trillion so we can vote in this crisis period to
raise the debt limit before August 2 so the checks can go out and
everybody can be paid and the government can operate--and I hope we can
do that; we need to do that--but if all we are going to get is $1
trillion, this is just an interim step. This is not a real fix at all,
but it is an interim step. If so, we need to be right back on this
issue soon. That gives us an opportunity to do so early next year or
late this year because we have not solved the problem.
Mr. President, $1 trillion is not enough. Madam President, $4
trillion is not enough. Depending on how you calculate the debt that
has been projected to accrue over the next 10 years, it is somewhere
between $9 and $13 trillion. So $1 trillion is not going to do anything
to change the disastrous debt course we are on.
By the way, the President--I want to say this because he was pretty
tough last night blaming Republicans for all kinds of problems. Let me
say, the Republican House passed--and I voted for in the Senate--a
budget for 10 years that changes the debt course of this Republic. It
puts us on a sound financial path. It reduced spending by as much as $6
trillion over 10 years. It even reduced taxes to create more economic
growth and make us more competitive in the world marketplace. It was a
thoughtful, long-term, serious budget that would do real, positive
things for America.
The Senate has not passed a budget, not had one marked up in the
Budget Committee. The leadership here in the Senate refused to allow it
to happen. Senator Reid said it would be foolish to pass a budget. We
have gone now over 2 years without a budget. It is unthinkable in the
debt course we are on--how disastrous it is, how unsustainable it is,
how unlike anything that has ever happened in our history--to have this
kind of debt path and we do not have a budget.
The President said a few weeks ago: Well, I have a plan that cuts $3
trillion. Is it like Senator Reid's $2.7 trillion plan? It was never
made public. It was never spelled out. If he has a $3 trillion plan to
cut spending, well, let's see it. Maybe we could extend the debt limit
more, if he is going to cut $3 trillion in honest numbers. If he has
those numbers, as he says he has--in between attacking Republicans for
causing all the problems--let's see them. Maybe that would be a basis
for something.
But I suspect it is no more accurate than this plan because when the
President proposed his budget, as the law required him to do, early in
the year, he said: My budget calls on us as Americans to live within
our means and to not increase the debt, when according to the
Congressional Budget Office, the lowest single budget deficit that
would occur under his 10-year budget would be $750 billion--nowhere
close to a balanced budget--and in the out years that deficit would be
going up. So I will challenge the President, if he has a $3 trillion
plan, let's see it.
Some people say we need to raise the debt limit for a longer period
of time and we cannot afford to have a short term increase. They say
this is somehow a wrong thing to do, and so forth. I would point out to
my colleagues, it is not unusual at all. A $2.7 trillion increase in
the debt--if that were to occur--would be very high. It would be a 19-
percent increase in the current debt limit, putting the debt limit 50-
percent higher than when President Obama took office. It would be the
largest debt increase in history, the fourth debt limit increase during
President Obama's tenure in office, the fourth time it has been raised.
So this is not unusual.
I warned from the beginning that if we skirted the legislative
process in favor of closed-door White House meetings and so forth, we
would find ourselves in the eleventh hour with gimmick-filled
legislation being rushed through a panic-driven Senate. This is not
responsible governance from our leadership here in the Senate.
As I feared and as I have just described, the majority leader's bill
has not achieved close to the promised savings he says it would. From
the $2.7 trillion in cuts claimed, the troop-spending cuts in the
proposal are closer to $1 trillion over 10 years--less than a third of
what was advertised--while he is asking for a nearly $3 trillion
increase in the debt limit. Spending cuts next year would be only $3
billion less than the enacted amount for 2011. This falls short of the
idea that a dollar in cuts should accompany a dollar in debt limit
increase. Senator Reid's proposal is structured in a way that is
clearly designed to further degrade and undermine the budgetary process
of the Senate, and it allows the majority not to have to come forward
and produce a budget plan.
Given the late hour, rather than rush through legislation to the
President--the largest debt ceiling increase in history--we should
pursue a more responsible approach, a short-term extension with real
cuts through the immediate time period the extension covers, not 10
years down the road. Then, using the extra time we have, Congress
should pursue a binding framework, such as the cut, cap, and balance
plan, to bring these gimmicks to an end and to alter
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our debt course. We should try the one thing we refused to do from the
beginning: open hearings, regular order, and a real legislative process
and public participation.
I yield the floor.
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