[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 146 (Thursday, November 15, 2012)]
[House]
[Pages H6375-H6376]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
{time} 1040
POISONOUS PARTISANSHIP
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Missouri (Mr. Cleaver) for 5 minutes.
Mr. CLEAVER. Mr. Speaker, one of the reasons I rarely come to the
floor to make such comments is that it is so troublesome to me that we
will have fact-free debates. One of the problems is that we are talking
in a parallel universe. There are small businesses that will pay more
taxes, but I think it is important to say to you that the top hedge
fund managers last year earned $22 billion and then paid a 15 percent
tax rate as small businesses. So I am troubled when we are not being
accurate and factual with the American public.
Mr. Speaker, my concern today--and I believe it is the concern of
many Americans--is the situation in which we find ourselves. The
American people have elected a government wherein only cooperation can
bring progress. We have a House of Representatives that is
predominantly Republican, and we have a Democratically controlled
Senate. It would not take a 3-year-old a great deal of time to figure
out that the only way we can do the work of the American people is if
we stop this ridiculous partisanship--this poisonous partisanship--that
is damaging the country and creating a level of anger. There are State
legislators in at least 13 States who have introduced legislation for
secession from the Union based on the fact that they didn't
particularly like the President who was elected. One of the reasons, I
think, is that we are exporting hate. If it's not hate, it's certainly
anger, and ``anger'' is just one letter short of ``danger.''
The American people gave us a mandate to do the simple things, and
that is to lead. We understand that the challenge before Congress in
the coming weeks is no simple task. I would be wrong if I said that
what we need to do is simple. We have some major challenges:
The Postal Service is losing $25 million a week, and we are running
around here acting as if the most important thing in the world is
remaining faithful to our ideology. Ideology, tragically, has trumped
logic in this place, and that cannot continue. Right now, we are facing
hundreds of billions of dollars in expiring tax cuts. It might be
important, Mr. Speaker, for all of us to keep in mind that, if we fail
to deal with the sequestration issue, 90 percent of the people in this
country will have their taxes raised.
But there is another problem.
We have three major credit rating agencies in this country--actually,
for the world, essentially--Standard & Poor's, Moody's and then Fitch.
We have been warned as a Congress and as a Nation that if we walk up to
this precipice again as we did two Augusts ago that we will suffer
another downgrading of our credit rating. The
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United States of America--the most technologically powerful and
economically powerful Nation on the planet--will have a credit
downgrading.
This should cause every American to be angry enough to put aside
petty partisanship and understand that this body will not function and
that our government will not function unless we work together. We've
got to come to the conclusion that compromise does not equal
capitulation.
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