[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 115 (Thursday, July 28, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4991-S4992]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL DEBT
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Mr. President, I think it is obvious to the world
around us that the atmosphere here is hardly one of comfort or
satisfaction. The public does not see the agony of the debate that is
taking place, as we watch how dysfunctional the discussion about the
national debt has been.
We feel the threat to America's world financial leadership that is
lurking around here, and it is not very satisfying to those people
whose homes are close to foreclosure or the people who need to be
assured that health care is going to be there for them or that their
child who can learn can get an education without mortgaging their
future or cannot even get a mortgage on that.
So we look around and we watch and we listen and we see that the
Republicans in the House and the Republicans in the Senate are in a
search for political gain regardless of the cost to our society and our
Nation.
I do not make this statement casually. But after months of watching
and listening to the targeted goal of politics over the pain that could
follow a default, no other conclusion may be drawn. We want to consider
the evidence. By way of example, Vice President Biden convened a
bipartisan working group to find solutions to get the national debt
problem over with, get it resolved, and let us go on to our normal and
needed debate and business. After that, Republicans walked out. Walked
out.
Next, President Obama offered Republicans what he called a ``grand
deal'' that would reduce the deficit by $4 trillion. Republicans ran
away. Now our majority leader, Harry Reid, has proposed a plan that
includes more than $2 trillion in spending cuts, $1 in cuts for every
dollar the debt limit is increased--and not even insisting on a dollar
of revenues, which has been suggested several times.
But there is no way of getting through the obstinacy on the other
side. Republicans turn their back time after time. Democrats in this
Senate and in the White House have offered the Republicans compromise
after compromise. But they do not see their target. Their target is to
do damage to the Obama administration so that it hurts sufficiently to
discount the progress that has been made for our society under
President Obama.
Time and time again the Republicans have changed their demands to
find reasons to say no. Are we asking the Republicans to do something
radical, something that has never been done before? That is certainly
not the case. Over the past half century, the debt ceiling has been
raised 75 times, almost two-thirds of those occasions under Republican
Presidents. In fact, the debt ceiling was increased 18 times under
President Reagan, and 7 times under President George W. Bush.
Our country has never defaulted. So the question that must be raised
is: What is different about today? Why, at a time when we already face
a real jobs crisis in this country, would Republicans plan for another
economic crisis? Why would they do that? Will destroying the economy
help Republicans win seats next year when people across our country are
already expressing their dissatisfaction with the deadlock they see
being displayed?
We heard the minority leader say his No. 1 priority is stopping the
President from winning another term. What a goal that is. He is our
President, elected by the people of the country. He has a term of 4
years and will be up for reelection. We hope and we pray that he
continues to be the President of our country. What good does it do to
target the system?
Make known what it is they stand for. So far we have seen that they
stand for nothing that is helpful to the average American. So what we
need is a chance to have an honest discussion. Insecurity reigns as
people grow more and more conscious about their inability to afford the
basics of life, jobs, health care, education. They see prices being
raised around them as their purchasing power shrinks. Look at the price
of gasoline. You see a perfect example of what is happening. We had one
Republican Presidential candidate who was asked: ``Does it strike you
that as the unemployment rate goes up your chances of winning office
also go up?''
Do you know what her answer was? She said, ``I hope so.'' Hope so.
What an outrageous thing to say from the halls of government, the high
halls of government. I hope so. I hope that unemployment goes up, says
she, so she might have a chance to win office. How cruel that statement
is.
Make no mistake, if the United States Treasury runs out of cash next
week, the principal burden will fall on middle-class families. But the
effects on our total economy will be devastating as well. We may not be
able to send out Social Security checks to seniors, benefit checks to
veterans, the people who serve the country. Let's stop paying them? Or
paychecks to the men and women who now bear our country's uniform in
Afghanistan and Iraq. Sorry, we cannot pay you. Is that what we are
going to say?
Interest rates could rise almost immediately, greatly increasing the
cost of mortgages, car loans, student loans, credit cards, you name it.
If middle-class Americans think their 401(k) plan suffered during the
Wall Street crisis a few years ago, imagine what will happen to the
markets if the U.S. Government cannot pay its bills, or redeem bonds
that are ordinarily turned in for cash.
[[Page S4992]]
A default will lead to increased job losses at a time when we are
still emerging from a recession and 14 million people are now out of
work. And those are the relatively short-term impacts. A default crisis
will damage our reputation, our credit standing around the world. It
will call into question America's credibility, stability, financial
leadership. It will make our bonds and our currency less attractive to
investors, and we may never recover the exalted status of our financial
instrument.
But in response to this looming crisis, our friends, the Republicans,
are digging their trenches deeper and offering little but circuitous
routes to avoid a more serious plan to resolve this situation. Their
latest trick is to propose a short-term debt limit. That increase will
leave us in the exact same position 6 months from now so they will have
another opportunity to make political mischief.
Imagine. Imagine. All types of tricks, all kinds of devices to try
and cut short something that can be dealt with and left behind. Let's
continue trying to solve the serious problems that our country has.
The Boehner plan poses the same grave risk to our economy as default.
CNN reported that the Boehner plan would probably still lead to a
downgrade of the United States credit rating. Christian Cooper, head of
U.S. dollar derivatives trading at Jefferies and Company, said--he is
an authority:
From the markets' point of view, a two-stage plan is a non-
starter. . . . There is significant risk of a downgrade with
a deal that ties further cuts to another vote only a few
months down the road.
It is time for the Republicans to remember that all of our citizens
are entitled to be heard, not just the wealthy ones, not just the
millionaires, the billionaires, the tea partiers and the powerful,
because they have positions that get attention when they make phone
calls here.
Inherent in our responsibilities is our obligation to preserve our
strength as a democratic society. It is time to get serious. No more
sleight of hand. Honest discourse is essential. The other day we were
reminded--I describe my own reaction. Shock. They had a picture of
lovely looking young people walking away from daddy's airplane that
they had--whether it is a charter or owned I do not know--to go to
camp. I did well in business. I ran a big company. I got there because
I got the GI bill to help me. The GI bill helped me start a company
with two other fellows that now has 45,000 employees--45,000 jobs--
because I was able to get an education under the GI bill. It was
fantastic. So when I see what is being prized as a front-page picture
in the New York Times of this child, looked like a lovely child walking
to camp from daddy's airplane--and to me, I do not object to that. If
they make their money the legal, responsible way, they can spend it any
way they want. But why in the devil would they not want to contribute
something to the underpinnings of this country? I do not understand it.
Why is there resistance from those who have made so much that they can
have yachts and airplanes and this and that? It is said sometimes here
class warfare is what we are witnessing. Class warfare.
The warfare comes from the top down, because average citizens, those
who work for a living, those whose jobs right now are often insecure,
those who watch their 401(k), their precious savings maybe dwindling as
a result of a negative change in the marketplace--saying to young
people and their families, sons and daughters who have the capacity to
learn: I wish that I could afford--says dad or mom--to send you to the
right kind of a school that your ability suggests you can handle, but
we cannot afford it--we do a disservice to that family. We do a
disservice to country when those things happen. So I do not understand
why those who have so much, made not by their own ingenuity exclusively
but made by the fact that we have a foundation in this society of
people who want to go to work every day and do the right thing. That is
what holds up this facility of ours. I am not talking about the
building, I am talking about the facility this country has.
You cannot build a house from the ceiling down, from the chimney
down, and you cannot build a society from the top down. You need the
underpinnings. You need those people who bring their skills daily to
work and hold out hope for their children to succeed. That is what we
need. We need a regeneration of the spirit in this country of ours.
But it is not going to happen when the Republicans' dominant view is:
No, let's get Obama. That is what we have to do. Foul play. It is
almost like desertion. I wore the country's uniform proudly, and that
is what we are talking about, loyalty to country. It says we need
everybody to participate. We are not going to get it with the foul
schemes that are being proposed.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Sanders.) The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum
call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. WHITEHOUSE. I am about to yield the floor to my distinguished
senior Senator Jack Reed. I ask unanimous consent at the conclusion of
his remarks I be granted recognition.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island is recognized.
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