[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 133 (Friday, September 9, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S5472]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE ECONOMY
Mr. CORKER. Mr. President, I certainly appreciate the courtesy of the
Senator from Utah. I will be very brief. I will actually be propitious
in many ways. I am here at a time when the Senator from Virginia is the
Presiding Officer.
Last night there was a focus on a short-term stimulus. I wish to
thank the Senator from Virginia and the Senator from Georgia who have
led efforts over the course of the last many months to focus on trying
to deal with our longer term issues. I think there are many of us in
this body, as well as in the House of Representatives, who believe the
best way for us to deal with our short-term economic situation is to
deal with the long-term structural issues that are affecting our
country so much.
So I am here today to express hope and to say I feel a tremendous
consensus building. I know the Presiding Officer and I were in a
meeting earlier this week where I think there was demonstrated a lot of
consensus by Republicans and Democrats in the Senate toward using this
supercommittee and encouraging the supercommittee. There was tremendous
optimism expressed about what this supercommittee is getting ready to
do. But we wish to encourage them to look at a number of deficit
reduction ideas which may be twice or even more than the original
charge and, secondarily, to encourage them to use this tremendous
opportunity for tax reform, much like was laid out in many of the
Bowles-Simpson concepts, and to have Medicare entitlement reform as
part of that; and, thirdly--and this is me speaking individually,
although I think there is consensus building around this too--to do
something longer term as it relates to infrastructure, such as having a
6-year highway bill. I feel that momentum building in the House. I
think it exists in the Senate.
The reason I am on the Senate floor today is to say one thing. We
have a tremendous opportunity to deal with our long-term issues which
will immediately affect our economy now and stimulate it, if we will do
that. I hope what we will not do is become sidetracked on issues that
are more around the edges, more around the fringe, issues that are
short-term in nature. The Presiding Officer, who has created jobs in
his lifetime, and I have done the same thing in my lifetime, and I
understand it is important to create a long-term environment where
people have confidence that we have actually dealt with this country's
problems. There is nothing--nothing--that could be more stimulative in
the short term than for people to see that this body and the body
across the way on the other side of the Capitol have dealt with these
issues in an appropriate way.
I am encouraging us to stay focused, to stay focused on the
supercommittee, to continue to encourage them to do even more than what
is their charge. I think there is a lot of consensus around that, and I
am thankful to be a part of that encouragement.
With that, Mr. President, I yield the floor and thank again the
senior Senator from Utah for his tremendous courtesy and certainly his
leadership on so many of these issues. I thank the Senator very much.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Utah.
Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I thank my colleague. He is one of the more
prescient people in this body, and we all care a great deal for him. I
appreciate his leadership in this great body.
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