[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 17 (Thursday, February 2, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S319-S320]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                    PAYING A FAIR SHARE ACT OF 2012

  Mr. SCHUMER. Madam President, I rise today in support of the Paying a 
Fair Share Act, also known as the Buffett rule. This legislation, 
introduced yesterday by my good friend from Rhode Island, highlights an 
important conversation about fairness and tax policy in this country.
  Now, some of my friends across the aisle have some interesting ways 
of discussing the principle that millionaires

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and billionaires should pay the same percent of their income taxes as 
middle-class families. They call it class warfare; they call it a 
political stunt. But in reality it is neither of those things. The 
Paying a Fair Share Act is common sense--the principle that everyone 
has a right to earn as much money as they can in America, as long as 
they are contributing their fair share.
  We must have a sincere discussion about the distribution of tax 
burdens in this country. I am proud to be an original cosponsor of the 
Paying a Fair Share Act, because it addresses this issue head on.
  New York is a large, diverse State full of very different people with 
very different views--a fact of which I am extremely proud. But all 
across the State people agree on the basic principle that a Tax Code 
which allows the most privileged of our society, people making tens and 
hundreds of millions of dollars a year, to pay less than 14 percent in 
taxes--significantly less than the average middle-class family--is 
broken.
  With the introduction of the Paying a Fair Share Act, we now have 
before us legislation that can significantly reduce our debt and 
deficit without also breaking the backs of middle-class Americans. By 
ensuring that millionaires and billionaires pay at least 30 percent of 
their income in taxes--a rate similar to many average Americans--we can 
reinstitute tax fairness in this country, a principle that our Tax Code 
has sadly lacked since the Bush tax cuts ballooned our debt by cutting 
taxes for the ultra wealthy.
  I invite my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to take part in 
this conversation. I consider the Paying a Fair Share Act as the 
beginning of a conversation, not the end of it. As the co-chair of the 
Senate Philanthropy Caucus, I was pleased to see that my colleague from 
Rhode Island included language that ensures we continue to promote 
charitable giving and I would have liked to have seen a similar 
provision for State and local income taxes. Regardless, I know we will 
have the opportunity to build upon this proposal as it moves through 
consideration in the Senate and I look forward to working with my 
colleagues to improve it.
  The issues of institutional unfairness in our Tax Code and our debt 
are not going away--not until we act. I hope my colleagues on both 
sides of the aisle can take the Paying a Fair Share Act as the 
beginning of a new chapter in the national debate, one that ends with a 
fairer Tax Code, deficit reduction, and a message to the American 
people that their government will not rest until we have created a 
stronger, more prosperous, and fairer American economy.

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