[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 151 (Tuesday, October 11, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6372-S6373]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE AMERICAN JOBS ACT
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, this afternoon, the Republican leader of
the Senate came to the floor to talk about a vote we will have later
this afternoon. It is a vote which is historically important. We all
know the state of our economy. We are in a position now with 14 million
Americans out of work, 9.1 percent unemployment and private-sector jobs
going up so slowly, it isn't getting us back into the kind of economic
progress we need. We listen monthly as the unemployment statistics come
out, and we are reminded of the weakness of our economy. We have to do
something. The choices are to allow this economy to languish or decline
or to step up and do something.
President Obama has decided he needs to lead on this issue and bring
together Democrats and Republicans for that purpose. He spoke to a
joint session of Congress which we all attended. It was widely
reported. He said: I am going to put my best ideas on the table, and I
invite the Republicans to do the same. We cannot stand idly by and do
nothing.
So the President put his proposal forward. It was clear what he
wanted to do, and he reminded the Republicans that many of the things
he proposed were actually ideas they had proposed in the past. Then we
waited and we waited. At the end of the day, I am afraid when this vote
is taken, we will find few, if any, Republican Senators will support
any effort to try to create jobs in the United States, as President
Obama has proposed.
The President has made his position clear. Those of us who will vote
in support of the President's plan have made our positions clear. But
the position on the other side of the aisle is becoming increasingly
clear as well, and it comes down to two things: First, the Republicans
will not countenance, approve or even consider $1 more in taxes for the
wealthiest people in America. For them, that is unacceptable. It is
better to do nothing than to impose $1 more in taxes on people making
over $1 million a year. They have said that consistently, at every
level of the Republican Party.
That position doesn't reflect the feeling of Republicans in America,
with 59 percent of them believing the President is right. It is not
unfair to ask those who are making over $1 million a year to share the
burden and sacrifice of moving the economy forward. Independents feel
strongly about it, and obviously Democrats do as well. The only
Republicans who don't share that belief happen to serve in the Senate,
and they believe $1 more in taxes to pay for the President's jobs
programs--if it came from the accounts of people making over $1 million
a year--is unfair. So we know they are clear on that position.
But there is a second position the Republicans have taken that is
equally clear. They are prepared to oppose any ideas coming from the
Obama administration, even ideas they have conceived and voted for in
the past. I asked my staff to take a look at some of the proposals of
President Obama in his jobs bill, which will come up later this
afternoon, to see what the record on the Republican side has been, and
it is interesting.
Senator McConnell and 32 of his Republican colleagues supported
President Bush's Economic Stimulus Act of 2008. It included tax rebates
for individuals, which we find in the Obama plan; tax cuts for small
business, which we find in the Obama plan--and no offset, incidentally.
It wasn't paid for. It added directly to the deficit. Senator McConnell
and 32 of his Republican colleagues voted for that because it had
President Bush's name associated with it. I am afraid most, if not all
of them, will vote against this proposal because President Obama has
brought it forward.
Republicans have supported a payroll tax consistently in the past.
Here is what Senator McConnell said on FOX News in January of 2009:
If you want a quick answer to the question of what would I
do, I'd have a payroll tax holiday for a year or two that
would put taxes in the hands of everybody who has a job,
whether they pay income taxes or not. And, of course,
businesses pay the payroll tax too, so it would be both a
business tax cut and individual tax cut immediately.
That is the centerpiece of President Obama's jobs plan. It is a plan
that was criticized on the floor this morning by Senator McConnell. The
approach the President is taking is exactly what Senator McConnell said
when he was speaking in the bosom of the lodge at FOX News in January
of 2009. Republicans have supported Federal help to States. I will not
go through the list, but they have in the past.
Incidentally, it used to be dogmatic when it came to building
infrastructure in America--roads and highways and bridges and ports and
airports. It was a bipartisan issue. When the President puts it in his
jobs bill, it is rejected. You know what the Republicans say about the
President's jobs bill? We have tried all this before and it didn't
work, so let's not try it again. So they are summarily rejecting
payroll tax cuts they have supported in the past for families, they are
rejecting tax cuts for businesses to hire the unemployed--even
unemployed veterans, which they have supported in the past; they are
rejecting the notion we need to build America's infrastructure for the
future of our economy; and they have basically said, when it comes to
trying to make this economy move forward, the only thing they want to
do is to pass a trade agreement.
We will consider three of those trade agreements tomorrow. At least
two, maybe all of them, are likely to pass. How quickly do the
Republicans think there will be a turnaround in the economy if we start
increasing our trade with Korea, Colombia or Panama? It may increase
trade but certainly not in the near term and certainly not to the
[[Page S6373]]
benefit of 14 million Americans who are currently unemployed.
It comes down to this. We are going to have a vote later this
afternoon. It is going to be a vote on President Obama's jobs proposal.
He has spoken to it clearly in a joint session of Congress. He has
taken his case to the American people. He has included provisions which
the Republicans have historically supported but that I am afraid they
are going to walk away from on this. The Republican approach to this is
to do nothing--absolutely nothing. Protect millionaires from tax
increases and don't give President Obama a victory.
I will say this. This is not about a victory for President Obama. It
is a victory for unemployed people across America that we would do
something specific, something direct, and something that would have a
measurable impact in creating jobs. I am troubled the Republican
approach, as Senator McConnell described it, is one of ``just say no.''
That is the Republican answer to the weakness of our economy. He
talks about the tax hike that is included in our bill. That tax hike is
a surtax--on those making over $1 million in income--of 5.6 percent. It
is not too much a sacrifice to ask from those who are most well off in
America.
When the Senator from Kentucky comes and tells us the earlier
stimulus bill failed, I would say to him: Remember, over 40 percent of
that bill consisted of tax cuts, something most Republicans usually
support. It also invested in America in ways that will pay off for
years to come. For example, the stimulus bill paid for and built a new
terminal at the Peoria National Airport--a terminal that created jobs
today and will serve that community for decades to come. That stimulus
bill also led to the creation of an intermodal center in Bloomington,
in downstate Illinois, a proposal that will create jobs now for
construction and build for transportation in that community for decades
to come.
So for that stimulus to be dismissed as not creating results, I am
afraid Senator McConnell needs to journey a little north of Kentucky,
and we will show him results in Illinois and all across the United
States.
I yield the floor, and I suggest the absence of quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SCHUMER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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