[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 15 (Tuesday, January 31, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S180-S181]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE ECONOMY
Mr. LEE. Mr. President, I rise today to talk about the state of the
Nation's economy. Upon taking office, President Obama encountered one
of the worst recessions in this country's history. He faced tremendous
challenges under any standard. To be sure, it would have been difficult
for any President to make the kinds of reforms that would have had an
immediate effect on an economy this bad. But at the end of the day we
see that although he was handed something that we can fairly
characterize as an economic emergency, he, through his actions and
through his policies, turned that emergency into a national tragedy.
In his first 2 years, instead of focusing on creating jobs and
creating a set of circumstances in which the private sector could bring
jobs to fruition, President Obama and his substantial majorities in
both Houses of Congress used their tremendous advantage to push for
greater government control over America's health care choices, more
burdensome and debilitating regulations on businesses, and a failed
stimulus package that led to record-setting annual deficits.
Just look at America before President Obama took office and compare
it to our economic situation now. For example, unemployment is up 9
percent from when President Obama took office. The price of gasoline is
up 83 percent compared to when he took office. Long-term unemployment
is up 107 percent. The median value of a single-family home in America
is down 14 percent, and the U.S. national debt is up 43 percent. He has
added over $4 trillion to our national debt.
Then, last year, President Obama created a standoff with Republicans
by refusing to accept a reasonable compromise on spending reforms as a
condition for raising the Nation's debt ceiling. He presided over the
downgrading of America's credit rating, the first in our country's
history, and he has taken every opportunity to block the development of
America's energy resources, a source of much-needed revenue and jobs.
Perhaps most troubling, this President has intentionally divided the
country by waging vicious class warfare campaigns separating average,
hard-working Americans by income and then pitting them against one
another. The President's record on this score has been repugnant and
damaging.
Instead of working with Congress to address our genuine economic
challenges, the President has responded by starting his reelection
campaign early. In a series of taxpayer-funded campaign stops, the
President sharpened his divisive message and astoundingly blamed
Republicans for legislative gridlock--never mind that the President's
most recent budget proposal failed to attract even a single vote in the
U.S. Senate, and it was, in fact, Senate Democrats who refused to bring
the President's own jobs plan to the floor for a vote. Even today,
members of the President's own party are lining up against him to
oppose his tone-deaf decision on the Keystone XL Pipeline. This project
would create 20,000 American jobs, it would inject much needed private
sector capital into our economy, and it would increase the country's
energy security, but the President has chosen to block the project as
an election-year nod to his friends in the extreme leftwing of the
environmentalist movement.
President Obama has put the state of our Union in disarray. Certainly
he inherited a poor economy, but the decisions he has made and
implemented since taking office are making it worse. He was handed an
economic emergency, and instead of taking the
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challenge head-on, he chose to ignore it, and then he turned it into a
national tragedy.
There is a void of leadership in the White House. He must end the
divisiveness and start dealing directly and decisively with the needs
of the country. The President has very little time left to show the
American people that he can be the kind of leader who will put the
country before his own personal political interests. For the sake of
all Americans, I sincerely hope he uses that time wisely.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maine.
Ms. COLLINS. I thank the Chair.
(The remarks of Senator Collins pertaining to the introduction of S.
2044 are printed in today's Record under ``Statements on Introduced
Bills and Joint Resolutions.'')
Ms. COLLINS. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. REID. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Tester). Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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