[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 192 (Wednesday, December 14, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H8909]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPUBLICAN AGENDA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Fudge) for 5 minutes.
Ms. FUDGE. Mr. Speaker, after a year of attempts to eliminate
Medicare and obstruct any kind of jobs bill, the Republican agenda is
clear: eliminate the deficit at any cost, including at the expense of
our most vulnerable, while adversely impacting our economic recovery.
More than 1.6 million American children were homeless at some point
in 2010. These are children under the age of 18 living in emergency
shelters or in shared housing, and many are living on the street. Now,
in 2011, the number of homeless children continues to increase. There
are more homeless children today than after the natural disasters of
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. The recession's economic devastation has
left 1 in 45 children homeless, millions of Americans are out of work,
and we have pushed unemployment rates to levels not seen in decades.
We continue to see poverty soar. In 2010, nearly one in six Americans
was living in poverty. As poverty surged to its highest level since
1993, median household incomes declined, which is why it is maddening
to me that we in Congress can't agree or even come to a point where we
can agree to compromise on policies that will help struggling
Americans.
In the 49 weeks since the Republicans took control of this House they
have failed to pass a single bill to encourage job growth. They pledged
to focus on economic recovery, but they have failed to deliver. I have
sponsored four jobs bills in the last 6 months, but none of them has
been brought up for a vote. What the majority has done is try to
advance their own political agenda. Their priority is clear: eliminate
the deficit at any cost on the backs of the most vulnerable.
This year, Republicans proposed a budget that would privatize
Medicare and make Medicaid a block grant, sacrificing care for our
seniors, our sick, and our poor. The Republican budget slashed more
than $6 trillion--with a ``t''--over the next decade from Medicaid,
SNAP, Medicare, and many other programs supporting low- and middle-
income Americans. The majority suggests these drastic changes while
leaving in place tax cuts for the wealthiest and $40 billion in Big Oil
tax loopholes.
The majority's budget would devastate poor communities and middle
class Americans. It pushes seniors into the hands of private insurance
companies and forces them to pay more out-of-pocket expenses. What we
need is a bold approach, Mr. Speaker, to maintaining these programs
rather than finding ways to defund or derail them.
Almost 6 million workers have been unemployed for a year or more in
this country, so we know there is a strong need to extend unemployment
insurance. What we've seen this week makes me skeptical. Here we are at
the end of one of the most unproductive congressional sessions we've
had in recent history. In this end of the year drama, Republicans play
the role of the Grinch who stole Christmas.
Yesterday, the House passed a bill that slashes unemployment
insurance by 40 weeks in the States that are hardest hit, including my
own home State of Ohio. If signed into law, beneficiaries without a
high school degree would be denied insurance unless they use the
benefits we're giving them to pay for getting their GED. The bill also
allows States to force recipients to take drug tests.
In 2010, unemployment benefits kept 3.2 million Americans--including
nearly 1 million children--from falling into poverty. I don't even want
to imagine the magnitude of the problem if we fail to extend
unemployment insurance now.
During this holiday season more than ever, Americans feel there is no
way out. Last week, a woman in Texas, who was originally from the State
of Ohio, killed herself and shot her two children because they were
denied SNAP benefits. One of those children has died. Mr. Speaker, this
is desperation, homelessness at its worst.
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