[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 24, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S56-S57]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET
Mr. ISAKSON. We are back. Tonight, I understand, the Presiding
Officer and I will be sitting together at the State of the Union event,
which I am pleased to do. It is always a historic and seminal moment in
our legislative process when the President of the United States talks
about and lays out his plans for the future.
From watching this morning on television and from reading some of the
accounts of what is thought will be said tonight--I don't know what is
going to be said yet--one of the overriding themes is going to be that
of fairness. I think that is an important point for us to focus on in a
second, particularly with regard to our spending, our debt, and our
deficit, about what is fair to the American people.
Last night--and I brought some notes--I did a telephone townhall
meeting back to Georgia. We had thousands of people listening in on the
call. I was able to take 17 questions in the course of an hour and one
of the questions was from Fred in Barnesville, GA. Fred is a small
businessperson. He asked this question: Senator, you were a small
businessman; I am a small businessman. We had to operate within a
budget. Why is it the U.S. Government doesn't have a budget? I think
today is the 1,000th day we have been operating without a budget.
That was a fair question. So if we want to talk about fairness for a
minute, my contribution to fairness is going to be: What is fair to the
American people, the American businessman, the American employer, the
American employee? Let's think about it for a second.
A budget is a guide by which we try to live under. It is an
appropriation of our priorities for the future based on what we think
we will need to accomplish our goals. But if we are without a budget,
then we have the tendency to do what America has done over the last 3
years; that is, exponentially increase its debt and its deficit. What
that has done is put a pall on the recovery and a pall on the economy.
I would suggest the fairest thing we can do in the Congress and the
fairest thing the administration can do is to see to it that we have a
budget submitted, that it come to the floor of the House and Senate,
that it be adopted, and then, more important, that we change our pace
around here and live within that budget.
I have some suggestions as to how we do that, but first and foremost
I urge the White House to submit a budget this year. I understand, from
this morning's announcements, it will be delayed until February 13.
That is fine with me. But the quicker we get it to us, the better we
are. Then, let the Budget Committees of the House and Senate act, and
let us end up with a framework--not just for 1 year but, as the
Presiding Officer knows, for 10 years--because we forecast out those
budgets and those complications of those budgets for 10 years.
But we have a broken system. We also have a broken will to do what is
most important for the American people when it comes to spending their
money. I wish to suggest how we change our habits and become a fairer
legislative body and a fairer governing body for the American people.
Senator Jeanne Shaheen and I introduced a bill 1 year ago called the
biennial budget. It amends the Budget Control Act of the United States
of America and changes the way we do business. It portends that, in the
future, instead of appropriating and budgeting for 1 year, we will do
it in 2-year cycles, and we will always do our appropriating and our
budgeting in the odd-numbered years so, in the even-numbered year of
reelection, we are doing oversight and fiscal responsibility.
I think everybody in this room will admit we make an effort at
oversight, to a certain extent, but practically speaking not near the
oversight the American people have to do.
It is ironic that our country, our people, our families, our
retirees, our business folks, our employees the last 4 years of the
recession have sat around their kitchen table lots of times. They
reprioritized what they could afford and what they couldn't. They
reallocated their resources to take care of their family and their
children and they have been frugal and they have been conservative
because they have to. They can't deficit spend. They can't borrow
themselves into oblivion. They can't print the money and they can't
write the checks. Don't you think the government of the people who are
having to do that ought to have to at least live under the same set of
circumstances?
We need for this room to become a big kitchen table, big enough for
100 people of good will to sit down together. We need a White House
that will submit a budget we can then argue about and set the
priorities of this country and try and put a governor on what we are
spending, try and put some type of accountability for where we are
going, try and forecast into the future what it is the American people
can expect of all of us.
So when tonight the President talks about fairness, I hope one of his
quotes will be: It is only fair to expect me, the President, to submit
a budget to the Congress, and it is only fair for me, the President, to
expect the Congress to act on that budget--because, after all,
everything else flows from that. In the absence of budget
responsibility, budget restrictions, budget projections, and a calculus
for the future, we are spending without any governor or guide. It is
akin to trying to drive from here to Alaska without a roadmap. I
couldn't get there. I would probably have a wreck. I would probably run
off the road because we don't know where we are going and we don't know
how we are getting there.
Unfortunately, of all the institutions in America, there is only one
that doesn't know where it is going and how it is getting there, and
that happens to be the government of the United States of America.
So my message, this day of the State of the Union and this statement
of fairness, let's be fair to the American people. Let's ask of
ourselves what they are having to ask of themselves because of high
deficits and high debt. Those living on fixed incomes are seeing
interest rates of 0.25 percent--almost negligible. Markets have been
flat in terms of investment. Real estate values are down 33 percent
nationwide. I saw last night in Tampa, where the Presidential debate
was, it is 52 percent. The worst it got post-1929 was 31 percent.
We have the most significant, serious financial crisis in the history
of the United States of America, and it is impacting our families and
our people.
So let's ask of ourselves, let's ask of our President what every
American family has had to ask of itself--sit around our kitchen table
and budget and prioritize. I would submit Senator Shaheen and I have a
roadmap that works for process. It says do it in 2-year cycles, so we
are committed to spending in 1 year and we are committed to savings,
efficiency, accountability, and repealing out-of-date programs the
other year.
Wouldn't it be a great change in the body of politics for you and for
I to be
[[Page S57]]
campaigning in even-numbered years, talking about what we are looking
to save and cut, rather than what we are going to do to bring home the
bacon?
I think the day of bacon coming home reckoning is here, and it is
time for the next bacon to be brought home to be a sound budget and
fiscal policy for the people of the United States of America.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from South Dakota.
Mr. THUNE. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call
be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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