[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 102 (Tuesday, July 10, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H4692-H4693]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPUBLICANS ARE HOLDING AMERICA HOSTAGE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Higgins) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HIGGINS. Mr. Speaker, the Republican majority of this House is
holding the American people and its economy hostage in a cynical ploy
to keep the economy from growing and creating jobs.
In the year 2000, 12 years ago, the Federal budget had a $258 billion
surplus that was a direct result of having created 22 million private
sector jobs under the Clinton administration. New road and bridge
projects were funded and American businesses were providing the labor
and equipment to help rebuild the Nation's infrastructure.
In the year 2001, the new Republican administration came in and
looted a surplus that they didn't create to finance two tax cuts we
couldn't afford and two wars that took over $1 trillion out of the
American economy. They ruined the American economy by losing more jobs
than in any period in the past 60 years and created a financial crisis
not seen since the Great Depression. The Republican Party and their
failed policies took us from record surplus to record deficit.
In 2009, the Republicans handed this mess over to the current
President and have vowed not to help him rebuild this Nation and its
economy. They have created a phony debt limit crisis that reverberated
throughout the American economy and the financial markets. The debt
ceiling crisis cost American investors $18 million and led to a
downgrade of the Nation's credit rating. This debt limit crisis imposed
a tax on the American people that did real and permanent damage.
Default, or the threat of default, will exact more economic damage on
an already fragile recovery, and they're threatening to do it all again
later this year--this, despite the fact that the House Republican
budget resolution spends $1 trillion more than it takes in in revenue.
The logical consequence of their budget, the Republican budget, is to
raise the debt ceiling.
We need to nation build right here in America. Our Nation's roads and
bridges are falling part. You have 69,000 structurally deficient
bridges in this Nation. Every second of every day, seven cars drive on
a bridge that is structurally deficient. The Senate and the House just
passed a $105 billion transportation bill to spend less than $53
billion in each of the next 2 years. While it is something, it's weak--
in fact, it's pathetically weak. It will fill
[[Page H4693]]
a few potholes, surely, but won't reconstruct roads or build bridges.
It will create some jobs but won't put a dent in the unemployment rate.
We need to do nation building right here at home in America. Congress
just spent $65 billion rebuilding the roads and bridges of Iraq, a
nation of 26 million people. You just spent $78 billion rebuilding the
roads and bridges of Afghanistan, a nation of 30 million people. And
all you can come up with is $53 billion for nation building in America,
our Nation, a Nation of over 300 million people.
The American Society of Civil Engineers gave us a D grade, and they
and the United States Chamber of Commerce agree that the poor quality
of America's infrastructure costs our economy hundreds of billions of
dollars in lost growth.
To grow this economy and create jobs, we need to invest in rebuilding
the roads, bridges, water, and sewer systems of this country. According
to the New America Foundation, a 5-year, $1.2 trillion American
rebuilding plan would create 27 million jobs. In the first year alone,
the economy would add 5.2 million jobs, or 433,000 jobs each month, and
the economy would grow by over $400 billion. Unemployment would be
reduced to 6.2 percent in the first year alone and 5.6 percent in the
second year.
This is a real and compelling jobs plan. The best tax policy is to
bring back into the economy lost taxpayers and to buy labor, materials,
equipment, and services from American small businesses.
Austerity didn't work in the United States in 1937, it didn't work in
Japan in the 1990s, and it's not working in Europe and the United
States today. To grow the economy, we need to invest and save. House
Republicans need to stop whining about China and stand up for America.
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