[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 6 (Wednesday, January 18, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H33]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MAKE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT LIVE WITHIN ITS MEANS
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Michigan (Mr. Walberg) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WALBERG. Mr. Speaker, when the 112th Congress was sworn in on
January 5, 2011, I, along with many of my fellow Republicans, voted to
change the status quo.
Instead of escalating spending, we have made and pushed for
significant spending cuts. Instead of forcing a trillion dollar
government takeover of health care on the American people, we voted to
repeal it in the House. Instead of imposing costly and burdensome
regulations on an already struggling business economy, we passed
legislation to reverse overly burdensome regulations so businesses can
get back to hiring again.
These are the vows we made to our constituents when we took office a
year ago. And despite hitting numerous snags in the do-nothing Senate
and with leadership lacking in the White House, we delivered on the
promises.
In the past year, the House has passed 27 job-creating measures as
part of our plan for American job creators. We have remained committed
to removing the onerous taxes and regulations that are crippling small
business and our families and are the cause for so much distrust of
Washington. We have begun an honest conversation about which programs
are in alignment with our constitutional principles and which programs
are wasteful and inefficient.
We have the responsibility to make the Federal Government live within
its means, just like hardworking families across the country. This
means we have to cut spending, stop raising taxes, and eliminate
wasteful spending from our outdated, overreaching government programs.
When we took office last January, we vowed to reduce discretionary
spending to 2008 levels, and we delivered. The House passed a bill to
reduce spending by $5.8 trillion over the next 10 years. We also voted
to cut over 100 programs across government and save billions of dollars
in the process. In May, the House also overwhelmingly voted against
giving President Obama a blank check to increase the debt limit without
spending reductions or reforms.
We have relentlessly fought for policies that will encourage job
creation and free our families from the burdensome economic problems of
government regulation. We acted to undo duplicative permitting
requirements for farmers by passing the Reduced Regulatory Burdens Act.
We pushed back against the President's attempts to implement a cap-and-
trade policy--an energy reduction policy, really--through the
regulatory process by passing the Energy Tax Prevention Act. And we
confronted the EPA's costly and burdensome agenda by passing three
regulatory reform bills that safeguard our environment while keeping
Americans at work.
On November 16, we defeated the 3 percent withholding rule by passing
H.R. 674. This misguided tax rule would have required government
agencies at all levels to withhold 3 percent of their payments to
businesses for goods and services. Any small business that contracts
with the government would have their profit margins wiped out if such a
rule were allowed to take effect.
We passed the REINS Act, to bring accountability to the executive
branch by requiring that government bureaucrats receive permission from
Congress, the elected representatives of the people, before the
implementation of any major regulation.
Just 2 weeks after beginning our work in Congress, the House voted to
repeal the overreaching, costly, and harmful government takeover of
health care that President Obama forced upon the American people. H.R.
2 was one of my first votes after being sworn in. The bill cut new
spending by $1.4 trillion over 10 years and repealed the President's
health care takeover, and I was proud to vote to repeal this job-
killing law which will do nothing to bring stability and certainty to
American families.
Throughout the first session of the 112th Congress, House Republicans
have remained committed to changing the way the government does
business. We've delivered on our promises to pass legislation that
reins in spending and encourages job creation. Going forward, I'm
hopeful that our friends in the Senate and the leadership in the White
House will finally be ready to join us in passing legislation that the
American people want and not let dozens of job-producing bills sit idle
in the Senate.
This year, I look forward to working with my colleagues in the House
as we look beyond the next election and focus on improving people's
lives and creating a brighter economic future with the freedom God
really intended for all of us.
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