[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 160 (Wednesday, December 12, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7757-S7758]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MIDDLE-CLASS TAX RATES
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, the House of Representatives is back,
and we welcome them. It is good to have them back in business in
Washington. I hope the first order of business this week is to pass a
bill that we enacted in July of this year which would protect 98
percent of American families from any increase in income taxes because
of the fiscal cliff. I hope both Democrats and Republicans in the House
agree these working families don't need a tax increase. Those who
should pay an additional amount are those in the highest income
categories. That is what President Obama said.
When we voted in the Senate, we said those families making $250,000
or less should have no increase in income tax. I appeal to Speaker
Boehner--before he takes another recess in the House--please call this
measure and pass it. It will give peace of mind to literally millions
of American families who are wondering what is going to happen January
1. These are many families who struggle from paycheck to paycheck. I
have several letters.
From Lansing, IL, Linda wrote:
Please vote to keep middle class taxes from rising. $2,000
will help me to keep food on the table and gas in my car. It
could even help me help someone else. Please vote for the
middle class.
I will.
This letter is from Jeremy in Princeville, IL:
I am reaching out to you to ask you to continue to push for
extensions of middle class tax cuts. We are a family of four
making one hundred thousand annually. A two thousand dollar
increase will hurt our family in many ways. Our family is
trying to better ourselves but a $2,000 tax increase will
hurt our bottom line and the chances of enhancing our
children's lives.
Joan from Naperville writes:
[[Page S7758]]
Very high earners should pay more in taxes. And as a former
small business owner, I know this will not hurt small
businesses--very, very few of us make over $250,000 a year .
. . I know the gap between the rich and everyone is the
greatest it's been since the Gilded Age. Smart, brave
politicians helped give the middle class a chance--and we
need that from you now.
She wrote that to my office. I support her, and I think she and the
President are right. I am waiting for Speaker Boehner to finally break
out of this back-and-forth as to whether the wealthy in America should
pay a little bit more in taxes. For goodness' sake, that is obvious to
everybody in America but the Speaker.
Mr. Speaker, get back to Ohio and ask some of those families about
whether middle-income families should pay higher taxes come January 1.
The answer is clear: They should not. It is within the power of Speaker
Boehner to bring to the floor of the House today a measure that passed
the Senate in July that will protect families making $250,000 a year or
less.
What I hear from the Speaker is, We won't protect middle-income
families until you agree to raise the eligibility age for Medicare.
I have said to all who have asked, I believe in entitlement reform. I
believe Medicare going broke in 12 years is a serious challenge to all
of us, but I am loathe to see us make a policy change in Medicare in
the closing days of this month that we have to live with and cannot
explain.
Here is the part we cannot explain: If we increase the eligibility
age for Medicare from 65 to 67, what is a person to do who retires at
63 or 64 with a medical condition? Where are they going to go for
health insurance, the insurance exchanges created by health care
reform? Remember the Republicans and their blood oath to kill that the
first chance they got? Is that going to be the only rescue, the only
option for a senior waiting for Medicare eligibility? Are the
Republicans prepared to say they will now stand behind the insurance
exchanges and make sure there is an affordable, accessible health
insurance plan that covers seniors until they are Medicare eligible?
That is the key question. Until they answer that, I basically think the
proposal of raising that Medicare retirement age is one that cannot be
supported in good conscience.
Let's get down to business. Let's protect the middle-income families
in America. Let's do it now. Let's do it before January 1. Let's make
sure they have the confidence of knowing their income taxes are not
going up. One person has the power to do it, and that is Speaker John
Boehner. If he calls the bill that passed the Senate, as he is being
urged to even by Members of his own party, we can give a good holiday
gift--if not a gift, at least a holiday reference--to families all
across America who are looking for some help not only in this holiday
season but beyond.
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