[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 174 (Tuesday, November 15, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7588-H7589]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Georgia (Mr. Woodall) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WOODALL. Mr. Speaker, thank you very much. I appreciate the time.
I'm coming to the floor today with joy in my heart, and candidly I
would like to come to the floor every day Mr. Speaker, but I don't
always get to. But today, I'm here because we're voting on a balanced
budget amendment this week. The first time in 15 years.
Now, I'm a freshman in this House, Mr. Speaker. I've been watching
the process for a long time, but I've only had a voting card for 10
months. And I came to this Congress to do the big things, not to argue
about the petty things. And I tell folks, Mr. Speaker, that very rarely
are we arguing about the petty things, that there's a constituent focus
to absolutely everything that we do. But the big things. The big things
that change the direction of this country that ensure that this
experiment in democracy, that our Republic, survives for another
generation.
Fifteen trillion dollars in debt, Mr. Speaker.
Do you remember, Mr. Speaker, you don't have the gray hair that I do,
but back in the days of Ronald Reagan we were running $200 billion and
$300 billion annual deficits. And folks thought the world might be
coming to the end. Now, it put the Soviet Union out of business, but it
was big money. Who'd of thought we would come to a day where we're
actually running $1.4 trillion, $1.5 trillion, $1.6 trillion deficits
every year?
Mr. Speaker, as you know, in the people's House where the people's
will gets done, we have choices here. In my district, for example,
folks want to tax less and spend less. I hear it every day. Rob, tax
less and spend less. I'm sure I've got some colleagues on the other
side of the aisle whose constituencies want to tax more and spend more.
That is a legitimate debate for us to have in this House. We should
have it. But we ought to be able to agree that spending money we don't
have harms the future of this Republic. That spending money we don't
have mortgages the future of everyone under the age of 20 and threatens
the security of everyone over the age of 60.
A balanced budget amendment is one of those things that we can agree
on, one of those issues that is not Republican, it's not Democrat, it's
not conservative, it's not liberal--it is American.
Thomas Jefferson said if he could have added but one amendment to the
Constitution, it would have been one to abolish the power of the
government to borrow, because with that one amendment alone, he would
be certain of the security of these United States.
Mr. Speaker, that chance is here with us this week for the first time
in 15 years.
Now, I confess when I came to Congress, Mr. Speaker, I didn't expect
to
[[Page H7589]]
have to vote for a balanced budget. I just thought we were going to be
able to do the right thing and balance the budget on our own. I thought
that's the job of the Congress. Do what you're supposed to do. Do
what's right. Why do you need an amendment to the Constitution to do
what's right? Mr. Speaker, it turned out to be a bigger job than I
anticipated. The disagreements turned out to be more fundamental than I
anticipated, and the desire of constituents back home turned out to be
more complicated than I anticipated. This is our opportunity, though.
I have a copy of the Constitution that we have here. It's right
behind my job creators card. And I keep it behind the job creators card
because balancing the budget in this country has everything to do with
preserving economic opportunity in this country and everything to do
with growing our economy in the generation to come. My copy of the
Constitution has a little space right there after amendment number 27.
A space right here, Mr. Speaker, where we can put amendment number 28
today and ensure that our Republic survives for another generation.
You see what's going on in Europe. There but for the grace of God go
we. This is our opportunity. It is not a divisive issue.
{time} 1110
It is not an issue that divides north or south, east or west,
Republicans or Democrats. It is an issue that unites America. It was a
huge bipartisan vote in 1995, and it will be a huge bipartisan vote
today.
I hope your telephone lines, Mr. Speaker, are ringing as are mine. If
not, why not, Mr. Speaker? Why hasn't everyone in your district called
to say, Please support the balanced budget amendment? Why, Mr. Speaker,
hasn't everyone in my district called to say, Please support the
balanced budget amendment?
Raise taxes, lower taxes; cut spending, raise spending--that's an
American decision that we get to decide, but borrowing and putting off
those tough decisions to another day is immoral. We have a chance this
week to change that.
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