[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 123 (Thursday, September 13, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H5927-H5928]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
POVERTY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
California (Ms. Lee) for 5 minutes.
Ms. LEE of California. Mr. Speaker, as cofounder of the Congressional
Out of Poverty Caucus, I rise today to call for an immediate response
to the ongoing crisis of poverty in our Nation.
The census numbers released yesterday underscore the urgent need to
act boldly and to create jobs in this country, to protect our safety
net, and to target resources where they are needed--basically, to
communities of color, low-income communities, those communities, rural
areas, who were hit hardest by the economic downturn.
It's really beyond shameful that over 45 million Americans, including
over 16 million children, are living in poverty in the wealthiest
nation in the world. The data also shows a wide racial disparity, with
the poverty rates for whites standing at 9.8 percent, while the rates
for African Americans and Hispanics remain unacceptably high at 27.6
percent and 25.3 percent, respectively.
In 2005, I founded the Congressional Out of Poverty Caucus because of
the rising tide of poverty. Some of us saw this unfortunate day coming.
That was beginning under the failed policies of the previous
administration.
Of course, we also know the terrible economic impact of the massive
financial crisis that they left us on their way out of office. With the
swift efforts of President Obama and congressional Democrats, we are
finally beginning to dig ourselves out of the hole that was left by the
Bush administration and slowly moving the poverty rate in the right
direction.
Mr. Speaker, we must do more and we can do more.
One of the most critical responsibilities we have as a government is
to
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promote and enact policies that keep our middle class strong and
provide opportunities and a safety net for those striving and fighting
to become middle class and to get into the ranks of the middle class,
to enhance their quality of life. But far too many Americans are
continuing to suffer joblessness and have dropped out of the middle
class and into poverty because of this Republican do-nothing Congress.
Republicans in Congress have continually blocked efforts to extend
and expand vital safety net programs which safeguard millions of
American families and children who face stark realities of
unemployment, hunger, and homelessness. Further, their continued
blocking of critical Federal support to our States and localities has
caused widespread layoffs of dedicated public servants like teachers,
police officers, and firefighters in communities all across the
country.
This attack on our country's public servants has had a particularly
hard impact on communities of color and on women across the country. I
just have to tell you, African Americans and women have long found job
opportunities in the public sector, in public employment. African
Americans, in particular, often found work with the city or the State
because of racial bias and barriers and obstacles in the private
sector.
Mr. Speaker, the American people know that you can't have it both
ways. Government spending cannot kill jobs on one hand, when spent on
hiring teachers and police officers, and create jobs on the other hand.
And those services are desperately needed throughout our country. We
need more police officers on the street.
My colleagues on the other side of the aisle must begin to accept the
reality of history. Federal investments in our Nation's infrastructure,
in our schools, and in programs that help struggling families are
critical to boosting our economy and spurring our economic recovery.
Tax cuts for millionaires don't pay for themselves; they create
massive deficits and weaken our country.
Markets don't regulate themselves. Deregulation allows rampant fraud
and creates massive bubbles that inevitably burst and threaten our
entire economy.
We need a balanced approach that ensures that every American pays
their fair share and is invested in a united and prosperous future for
all Americans of every background. We need a balanced approach that
ensures that millionaires and billionaires pay their fair share so that
we can reignite the American Dream for all.
How this Nation treats the least of these is not just a measure of
our Nation's moral priorities, but it will directly impact whether the
American Dream survives and thrives for all. Let us not forget that our
greatest strength is the freedom and opportunity that our democracy
created to allow us to work together to build the largest and most
prosperous middle class the world has ever known.
{time} 1030
But this means that we must reduce and we must eliminate poverty. And
I hope in the few days that we're left that this Congress will come
together and figure out a way to pass the President's American Jobs
Act, because in that legislation we have critical investment to rehire
our police officers, teachers and firefighters who desperately need
their jobs, but also the services are desperately needed in our
communities.
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