[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 115 (Thursday, July 28, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5667-H5668]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
DEBT CEILING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Massachusetts (Mr. Neal) for 5 minutes.
Mr. NEAL. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to talk about our current fiscal
situation and how we got to where we are today. The thought that
America would default on its obligations is unimaginable.
This afternoon, we're going to begin a debate on Speaker Boehner's
debt
[[Page H5668]]
ceiling legislation, and I'll comment later on why I oppose the
Speaker's approach. But before we begin that debate, I think it's
important to acknowledge, step back, and review how we got to where we
are.
The success of the 1993 Deficit Reduction Act, which was vehemently
opposed by our Republican friends, led to a decade of prosperity and
surplus. President Clinton balanced the budget for the first time since
1969 and ran surpluses for 4 years. Between 1998 and 2000, the publicly
held debt was reduced by $363 billion, the largest 3-year pay down in
American history. Under Presidents Reagan and Bush, the debt held by
the public quadrupled. By the time Bill Clinton left office, the budget
was on track to pay off the entire publicly held debt on a net basis by
2009. Remember, Alan Greenspan warned us that we were paying down the
debt too quickly. The clock in Times Square, which chronicled the
deficit, was actually turned off at the end of the Clinton years. But,
unfortunately, there were those who thought that we should shift
course.
Economic growth averaged 4 percent during those Clinton years,
compared to an average of 2.8 percent during President Reagan's years.
The economy grew for 116 consecutive months, the most in history,
fueled by more than 22.5 million jobs that were created during those 8
years, the most jobs ever created during a single administration and
more than were created in the previous 12 years.
On January 20, 2001, when George W. Bush took the oath of office, the
CBO estimated that the total budget surplus for 2002 to 2011 would be
$5.6 trillion. And their campaign began to spend that surplus in
earnest, despite warnings. President Bush began taking us down that
fiscal path by enacting tax cuts, first in 2001 of $1.3 trillion, and
again in 2003, $1 trillion, that cost the government going forward
almost $4 trillion. The other major expenditure in those years was our
idea that you could simultaneously engage two wars and cut taxes by
$2.3 trillion. Remember the argument about weapons of mass destruction
that took us to the unnecessary war in Iraq.
While some question tax cuts in wartime, including people like Mr.
Lincoln, others thought it brilliant. The Republican leader at the time
or the deputy leader at the time said it was patriotic to cut taxes in
a time of war. Well, I wonder if the 2.2 million more veterans who have
served us with honor and distinction in Iraq and Afghanistan are going
to feel that way when proposals come down the road to draw back on the
benefits that they've earned. During the Bush years, our country spent
$1.5 trillion in Iraq and on national defense.
The turnaround in our budget picture during the Bush years was
remarkable. In October of 2008, CNN reported that the debt clock had
run out of numbers. The debt clock actually had exceeded 13 digits that
had been allotted, so the clock had to be revised.
{time} 1040
According to one report at the end of the Bush term, the number of
jobs in the Nation increased by 2 percent. That's the lowest or most
tepid growth at any time since data began to be collected seven decades
ago. Gross domestic product was at the lowest pace for a period of that
length of time since the Truman administration. And the price that
America has paid for the theology that suggested during all of those
years that tax cuts paid for themselves, you can't find a mainstream
economist in this town today who will acknowledge that argument. And
yet we hear now more tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.
By the time that the Bush years ended, the debt had increased to
$10.6 trillion, setting a record for any administration. And
incidentally, the TARP vote that we hear so often, that took place in
October of 2008, that's a very important consideration. That was during
President Bush's years.
But let me give you a quote that I think sums up much of what we did
during those years. Dick Cheney told the Treasury Secretary at the
time, Paul O'Neill: Reagan proved that deficits don't matter. We won
the mid-term elections, this is our due.
We embraced the prescription D Medicare benefit that we're paying a
price for today.
So here we are. My Republican colleagues try to place the blame for
this situation on the current administration. There were many of us who
saw what was happening with the reckless expenditure during those years
and the price that America paid.
We need to vote to raise the debt ceiling. It's the responsible
position for all of us to take.
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