[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 132 (Thursday, September 8, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H5971]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
PROVEN POLICIES RATHER THAN POLITICAL POSTURING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Virginia (Mr. Connolly) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CONNOLLY of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, America needs jobs, and it's
time we focused on proven policies rather than political rhetoric and
posturing.
We need a real jobs program that builds on actual successes. The
President tonight will be putting forward his job creation proposal.
Unfortunately, some of our colleagues on the other side of the aisle
have already decided that they are not even going to come and respect
the President's joint appearance tonight. Talk about closed minds.
According to reports, he will call for infrastructure investments and
middle class tax relief through an extension of the payroll tax cut,
policies we know can create jobs. I look forward to working with the
President and those who are willing to work with us on the other side
to jump-start our economy and create American jobs.
To that end, I have introduced two bills to incentivize private
sector job creation. They include tax cuts and private sector tax
incentives, ideas that work, ideas that Republicans traditionally have
supported.
I introduced H.R. 11 to extend the successful Build America Bonds
program to leverage private sector investment to facilitate needed
infrastructure improvements. Repairing bridges, building hospitals,
renovating schools create jobs now. During the last 2 years under the
Build America Bonds program, for every Federal dollar we invested, we
leveraged $41 of private sector support for more than 2,000 projects in
every State and created hundreds of thousands of jobs. Build America
Bonds is the kind of public-private partnership that Republicans
generally support, and we know from the Recovery Act that they create
jobs.
I have also introduced legislation to expand the tax deduction for
business startups. Lending and venture capital investments in small
businesses, especially startups, continue to lag significantly behind
traditional levels. Extending this tax deduction for startup expenses
gives entrepreneurs greater certainty for their financial planning and
greater incentives to start creating jobs. These tax cuts and small
business startups will enable the private sector to do what it does
best--create jobs.
Make no mistake: The challenge is daunting. The Great Recession was
the worst economic collapse in 80 years. At its height, America was
losing 700,000 jobs a month; so Democrats in the last Congress took
action. We passed the Recovery Act, which cut taxes for 95 percent of
all Americans and increased infrastructure investment, saving and
creating hundreds of thousands of construction jobs. We provided
educational support to train a more highly skilled workforce. We
enacted a hiring tax credit to spur private sector hiring of recently
laid off workers, and we saw results. After months of horrific job
losses, America began more than 1 year of monthly private sector net
job growth, peaking earlier this year with 3 straight months of more
than 200,000 private sector jobs created. In fact, in the last 18
months, we created 2.4 million private sector jobs. The public sector,
however, has lost jobs every single month this year. Isn't this the
result for which the Republicans actually advocated?
{time} 1020
Didn't they tell us that cutting government will free up the private
sector? Then why did we have just 17,000 private sector jobs created in
August? In fact, the job results this August, with the Republican
economic plan in action, continued cutting and zero net jobs created.
It's time we acknowledge that the Republican ``cut to create''
philosophy cuts the job market and creates only uncertainty. The choice
is simple: Politics versus job creation. We're all going to be
listening with great attention tonight to the President, and I hope all
of us attend.
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