[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 10 (Tuesday, January 24, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Page S60]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET
Mr. CONRAD. Mr. President, in listening to some of our colleagues on
the other side of the aisle--both in speeches here and in press
statements they have made--I repeatedly hear them saying we have not
had a budget for 1,000 days. That is just wrong. That is absolutely
wrong. Sometimes I wonder if our colleagues are paying attention to
what goes on here on the floor of the Senate. Have they already
forgotten the Budget Control Act? Here it is. On August 2nd of last
year, the Budget Control Act passed this body 74 to 26. More than half
of our Republican colleagues voted for it. Didn't they know what they
were voting on? The Budget Control Act contains the budget for this
year and for next year. Weren't they paying attention? Don't they know
what they voted on?
In many ways, the Budget Control Act is stronger than a typical
budget resolution, and it is stronger in these ways: No. 1, it is more
extensive than a traditional budget resolution. No. 2, it has the force
of law. Unlike a budget resolution that is not signed by the President,
the Budget Control Act that we passed last August, that provides the
budget for this year and for next year, is a law passed by the House of
Representatives, passed by the Senate, signed by the President of the
United States--the Budget Control Act. It also set discretionary caps
on spending for 10 years instead of the 1 year normally set in a budget
resolution.
So when our colleagues come out here and say we have not had a budget
in 1,000 days, wow, can they really have missed the vote, the debate,
the consideration of the Budget Control Act? Did they really miss all
that or--or--are they saying something they know to be untrue, because
really those are the only choices you are left with. Either they do not
know what they did or they are misrepresenting what we all did.
Not only does the Budget Control Act set discretionary caps for 10
years, it also provided enforcement mechanisms, including a 2-year
``deeming'' resolution, allowing budget points of order to be enforced.
That is what a budget does. It sets the spending levels, it creates
spending caps, and it provides enforcement mechanisms. All of that is
in the Budget Control Act we passed on August 2nd of last year with a
vote of 74 to 26. Not only did we pass it, but the Republican-
controlled House passed it, and the President signed it. It is the law
of the land. It sets the budget for this year. It sets the budget for
next year. It provides enforcement mechanisms. It sets 10 years of
spending caps. And it created a reconciliation-like supercommittee to
address entitlement and tax reforms. That supercommittee did not come
up with a result, but they were established in the Budget Control Act,
and they were given the authority--just like a reconciliation provision
would--to come back with a package that could not be filibustered and
could not be altered and could pass with a simple majority. That is the
fact.
So if we hear colleagues come out and say one more time that we have
not had a budget for 1,000 days, I hope somebody will have the sense to
stand up and say: Really? What was the Budget Control Act about? What
was this legislation that passed not only the Senate on a vote of 74 to
26 but passed the House of Representatives, which is controlled by the
other party, and was signed by the President of the United States?
Republican rhetoric aside, Congress did pass a budget--not through
the normal way of a budget resolution but through an actual law. The
Republican-controlled House passed it, the Democratic Senate passed it,
and the President signed it.
The Budget Control Act set 10 years of spending caps, established a
2-year ``deeming'' resolution to enforce spending levels, and it
created a reconciliation-like process to consider entitlement and tax
reform.
I hope we have laid this issue to rest. So now if I hear colleagues
come out and say that we have not had a budget for 1,000 days--I will
know they have been put on fair notice. Maybe they missed somehow what
they were voting on back in August. Maybe they gapped out. Maybe they
forgot. But you know what, they voted for it. Every Member of the
Senate voted on the Budget Control Act. Seventy-four to twenty-six--add
it up--that is 100. Everybody was here. And if they did not know what
they were voting on, now they do. So if I hear another assertion that
there has not been a budget for 1,000 days, I will know and the
listeners will know that somebody is not telling the truth.
I thank the Chair and yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. LEE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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