[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 192 (Wednesday, December 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H8908-H8909]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HOUSE HOLIDAY HUMBUGS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Maryland (Ms. Edwards) for 5 minutes.
Ms. EDWARDS. Mr. Speaker, as families prepare for the holidays, many
will gather to watch some of our favorite holiday movies. In my family,
we always enjoyed watching ``How the Grinch Stole Christmas,'' tuning
into ``A Christmas Carol,'' and one of my favorites, ``It's a Wonderful
Life.''
Well, Mr. Speaker, it won't be necessary to visit the local Redbox or
scour the TV Guide listings or order the movies on Netflix. Americans
across this country can tune in to C-SPAN and watch our own version of
the Grinch and Ebenezer Scrooge and Henry Potter, our House holiday
humbugs right here on the floor of the House of Representatives.
The American people can only hope, however, that they can redeem
themselves, our holiday humbugs, the way these characters did. But I
fear that's not possible.
Yesterday, House Republicans brought to the floor a payroll tax
credit and an unemployment insurance proposal trimmed in controversial
riders and deceit. The holiday humbugs, the GOP leadership, decorated
the payroll tax credit and unemployment insurance bill with a
controversial Keystone pipeline rider to sweeten the deal for their
caucus. But that wasn't enough. The majority gilded the proposal with
cuts to essential health care reform funding, a freeze in Federal
employee pay for yet another year, and a cut in the length of emergency
unemployment insurance and blocking the administration from moving
forward on environmental protections that will help our families
breathe, drink, and live more healthfully.
Now, today, we heard from the House holiday humbugs that the big
problem facing the unemployed that House Republicans tried to fix
yesterday was drug testing for the unemployed.
{time} 1040
Well, Mr. Speaker, the problem for the unemployed isn't drugs, it's a
job. And in the absence of a job, it's an unemployment check.
So for the holidays, my Republican colleagues put on their list a
proposal that would dip further into the pockets of low and middle-
income families that buy health insurance in the new health exchanges.
And during this holiday season, at a time in our Nation's economy when
consumption has grown by only 5 percent since June 2009, our Holiday
Humbug proposal by Republicans would cut holes in the pockets of
millions of our Nation's consumers.
The legislation passed in the House yesterday would freeze the
compensation of 2.65 million Federal employees all across this country,
Federal employees who are consumers, Mr. Speaker. So while the special
interests and the Wall Street fat cats and the big oil companies are
enjoying their large Christmas bonuses, Federal employees who have
already contributed $60 million in forgone pay for deficit reduction
will be required to give up even more.
The Republican plan hits struggling families even harder. In fact,
the bill passed yesterday by our holiday humbugs eliminates 40 weeks of
unemployment insurance. The funding for this program not only helps
families check off items on their Christmas list--things like rent,
things like childcare, and things like groceries--but the funding
brings money back into the American economy. In fact, the Congressional
Budget Office estimates that every dollar of benefits spent on
unemployment compensation generates about $2 of additional economic
activity. That's money directly into our economy.
The Republican proposal passed in the House yesterday would eliminate
over $22 billion in economic growth and result in the loss of 140,000
jobs in 2012. That's what happened in this House yesterday. My
colleague, Sander Levin from Michigan, recognized that the legislative
``holiday gift'' that the Republicans thought they were providing the
American worker this Christmas is just one big lump of coal. Their
proposal would leave millions of Americans out in the cold this holiday
season while imposing additional barriers to receiving assistance and
diminishing the protections of unemployed workers.
Throughout the day yesterday the holiday humbugs kept trying to point
to places where we could compromise.
[[Page H8909]]
Well, the American people are asking: Why not simply compromise on a
clean extension of the payroll tax credit for 160 million workers and
unemployment insurance? Why not ensure that 160 million hardworking
families can benefit from the average of $1,000 they will receive from
the payroll tax credit--again, right into the economy.
Yesterday the Republican majority decided they would rather risk
raising taxes and digging into the pockets of families all across this
country. Well, Mr. Speaker, not even Scrooge could do what we saw on
the floor yesterday. In the end, our holiday humbugs--the Grinch, Mr.
Scrooge, and even Mr. Potter--learned that there is redemption. It's
time for our House Republicans to do the same. I urge the majority to
instead bring to the floor a sensible and thoughtful piece of
legislation to extend unemployment compensation and the payroll tax
credit.
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