[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 6 (Wednesday, January 18, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H34-H35]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1030
POVERTY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. LEE of California. Mr. Speaker, first of all, let me just say to
the prior gentleman who spoke, Mr. Jones, that I appreciate him
continuing to call for the end of the war and occupation of Afghanistan
and bringing our young men and women home because, of course, we know
that this war has created undue hardship, so many deaths, and really
has been the longest war in our lifetime. And so thank you, Mr. Jones,
for your leadership.
I am the founder of the Congressional Out of Poverty Caucus, and I
just have to rise today on behalf of the caucus to continue to talk
about the tide of poverty that is sweeping our country.
As we begin now the second session of the 112th Congress, we must do
more to help the millions of Americans living in poverty, looking hard
for a job, and working hard every day to move up the ladder of
opportunity and earn their share of the American Dream.
Mr. Speaker, on January 4, The New York Times reported that economic
mobility--the ability to work hard and make your fortune from humble
beginnings, which is the fundamental cornerstone of the American
Dream--is getting harder and harder to achieve in America. Americans
have fallen behind and are increasingly cut off from their dreams of
having a job and supporting their families.
How in the world did this happen? The failed policies of the past
administration only helped the richest among us become richer and
concentrated greater wealth into the hands of a wealthy few. And today,
House Republican leadership has failed to address the needs of most
Americans.
The only way that our economy can recover and reduce poverty is to
create jobs and to expand access to the economic opportunities. We find
that the lack of opportunity and economic mobility is worse at the
bottom, and without a real commitment to change, it will only get
worse.
The Republican-led Congress has been too beholden to their extremist
Tea Party base to reach the necessary compromises to move our Nation
forward and to begin the hard work of rebuilding and growing our
economy for all Americans.
Now, President Obama did stop the economy from going off a cliff, and
Congress must work with the President to put our Nation back on the
road to recovery and growth.
We continue to have unacceptably high unemployment, and we all know
that the rates of unemployment and the rates of poverty in our minority
communities continue to be about twice the national average. But even
these painful and these shameful statistics may not completely show
just how much Wall Street has focused their efforts on stripping
communities of color of the little wealth that they have managed to
accumulate over the last few decades.
The Pew Research Center found that minority households were hit
disproportionately hard by the housing and financial crisis. The Pew
Center found that from 2005 to 2009, median wealth fell by 66 percent
among Hispanic households and 53 percent among black households,
compared with just 16 percent among white households. As a result of
these declines, the typical African American household now has, mind
you, just $5,677 in wealth; the typical Hispanic household has $6,300
in wealth; and the typical white household has $113,000 in net worth.
So the facts speak for themselves. Wall Street targeted minority
homeowners and minority communities, and we must respond accordingly.
It is long past time that we as a Nation enact bold programs and
policies that ensure that we are a Nation that truly does provide equal
opportunity and access to the American Dream rather than allowing, for
example, minorities to be targeted for policies and programs that
undermine their ability to achieve the American Dream. We
[[Page H35]]
must begin immediately to have an up-or-down vote on a clean bill that
extends vital emergency unemployment benefits for the 99 weeks for the
millions of job seekers who continue to struggle to find a job and are
no longer eligible for unemployment compensation.
Mr. Speaker, the majority of Americans who are struggling to find a
job now are already no longer getting unemployment benefits due to the
99-week wall. But people want to work. There are four people, however,
looking for one job, and that is a fact.
So we need to pass H.R. 3638, the Restore the American Dream Act, for
the 99 percent, a package of job-creation measures and policy reforms
introduced by the Congressional Progressive Caucus. This bill would
significantly boost employment and create jobs in the short term and
improve the fiscal outlook in the long term. It's the right thing to
do. Instead, this Tea Party-led Congress has wasted an entire year
without any jobs bills, without extending any new help to the millions
of Americans in need.
We can't wait and neither should Congress. Let's help to make sure
that the poor and the unemployed Americans find good-paying jobs and
make that our number one priority. We must remove these obstacles to
reignite the American Dream.
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