[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 115 (Thursday, July 28, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5674]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE AMERICAN DEBT LIMIT HELD HOSTAGE--AN UNNECESSARY CRISIS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Massachusetts (Mr. Olver) for 5 minutes.
Mr. OLVER. Mr. Speaker, today we face an unnecessary crisis. The debt
limit has never before been held hostage by any political party,
because it is in every American's best interest to protect the credit
of the United States; but now ideologues in Congress have hijacked this
issue, and have pushed our Nation to the brink of default in rejecting
all offers of compromise.
Calls for massive spending cuts, and spending cuts alone, without
raising any revenues whatsoever are irresponsible at least and
deliberately destructive at worst. They would default on our debt,
causing a global financial crisis, rather than see hedge fund managers,
corporate jet owners or phenomenally profitable oil companies pay
higher taxes. Their call for fiscal responsibility rings hollow, and
the fiscal history of the last three decades shows that.
This chart shows the growth of America's national debt since 1980.
At the end of the Carter administration, the national debt was less
than $1 trillion. Twelve years later, with President Reagan's 8 years
and the first President Bush's 4 years, the national debt had grown by
more than 300 percent--it had quadrupled--and we were mired in debt.
The Reagan-Bush economic policies greatly increased the debt and led to
soaring deficits and rising interest rates. It ended in a recession.
In 1993, President Clinton was under severe pressure from the very
Republicans who had meekly followed the two Republican Presidents as
they raised the national debt by over 300 percent. President Clinton
championed a balanced austerity program with, roughly, equal spending
cuts and revenue increases--the Clinton years. Republicans in both the
House and Senate voted unanimously against that program, arguing it
would cost jobs and cause a recession, but the exact opposite occurred.
More than 20 million jobs were created under the Clinton
administration, and each of the last three budgets of the Clinton
Presidency produced a surplus. Those three budgets were the only
budgets and surplus in the last 40 years, and Clinton's balanced
program is considered highly successful by economists. President
Clinton raised taxes on those who could afford it and reduced spending
to shrink our deficit, and the economy grew by leaps and bounds.
The fiscal record of the second President Bush is a record of utter
irresponsibility. It began with massive tax cuts, skewed sharply toward
the wealthy, and with trillions of dollars spent on two long, unpopular
wars--all of that paid for by borrowing. It ended in the Great
Recession, caused by the collapse of an unregulated housing market
which was fueled by Wall Street greed. President Bush turned President
Clinton's surplus into more than 5 trillion additional dollars added to
our national debt--all the way up to here--almost doubling the debt
again.
President Obama was inaugurated during the worst month of job losses
in the Great Recession and cannot be blamed for what happened before,
but the recovery has stalled, and we're short 12 million jobs.
History has shown us what works and what doesn't. The Reagan-Bush
economics led to hugely increased debt. The Clinton economics
eliminated the deficit and accelerated economic growth, but it required
some sacrifice by all Americans to fix the national problem.
Now Republicans want to slash social programs, gut Medicare and
Social Security benefits, and further reduce taxes for the wealthiest
few. The Republicans threaten default on our debt. The only plan they
offer would add hundreds of thousands of people to the unemployment
lines by eliminating jobs in the public sector. They would protect the
wealthiest few at the expense of the entire country. They offer no plan
to create jobs and no long-term solution. Yet America needs a long-term
solution, and that must include spending reduction and revenue increase
in balanced proportion.
____________________