[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 171 (Monday, December 31, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H7471]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FISCAL CLIFF
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, Congress is here on New Year's Eve with
the people they love: themselves, the special interests, and the
policies of the past.
The overhyped fiscal cliff may well be upon us, and we will find $600
billion of deficit reduction with tax increases and spending cuts, and
then there will be the howls that we are doing it too abruptly from
some of the same people who demanded this system of expiring cuts and
sequestration in the first place.
Make no mistake. There will be some real damage. We will be squeezing
some people who deserve far better, and then we'll be scrambling to
refine the budget reductions in a way that makes sense. And some time
in the hours, days, and weeks ahead, we will get a semibalanced small
agreement, very likely, struggling throughout the new Congress with
budget bluster, especially in the House, moving from crisis to deadline
to showdown.
It's ironic because it doesn't need to be this hard. We could use the
pressure and revenue from expiring temporary tax cuts to enact tax
reform to provide the money that a growing and aging American
population needs, but do it in a simpler, fairer way. We could actually
reduce entitlement spending on Medicare by accelerating the health care
reform, which is what, in Oregon, we've committed to do in exchange for
some flexibility and some upfront funding. We have in place a program
going forward that, if done on a national level, would save over $1
trillion over the next 10 years.
We shouldn't be fooling around with patching an outmoded, unfair farm
bill. Let's reform it to support family farmers and ranchers, beginning
farmers, especially those who grow food, not large agribusiness
producing heavily subsidized commodities. We can save money, protect
the environment, enhance wildlife, the experience for hunters and
fishermen, and have a healthier America.
The military is the greatest source of money. We can start with
135,000 soldiers scattered in over 1,000 bases across the globe. We
have a nuclear arsenal where we are spending several hundred billion
dollars on weapons we can't use, we don't need and can't afford.
Mr. Speaker, the good news is that the public would support us in
these steps. The good news is that, if we ever got the chance to
consider them in a fair and open debate on the floor of the House, we
would find bipartisan support for each of these real saving options.
The good news is that, ultimately, we are going to take these steps,
proving, once again, the wisdom of Winston Churchill when he observed
that you could always count on the Americans to do the right thing
after they have exhausted every other possibility.
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