[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 171 (Monday, December 31, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S8575-S8576]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE FISCAL CLIFF
Mr. COATS. Mr. President, I came to the floor before I heard the
announcement that apparently we are closing in, thankfully, on
something which I don't have all the details of as yet. So I can't
simply say hooray, this is exactly what we ought to do. I think neither
side is going to be able to say this is what we wanted to do.
But in recognition of the fact that we are careening now--hours are
ticking--hours away from a devastating impact on Americans all across
the country, every taxpayer--Senator Lieberman announced the statistics
relative to the impact on the average family in his State, and the same
is true for Indiana and for all 50 States, to impose the massive tax
increases which will occur on every taxpayer at midnight tonight,
without addressing that, it is just simply unacceptable.
It is hard for a lot of us to swallow how little we did in addressing
the larger fiscal issue in this country in order to get past this
imposed deadline on something I did not vote for and did not support
because I could see it coming to this end, and it was absolutely the
wrong way to legislate and the wrong way to govern--pushing us toward
this fiscal cliff, laying that dark cloud of uncertainty over every
business in America, every household in America.
Everyone who had any interest in investing or was trying to plan for
the future kept saying: I can't make a decision. I can't make plans. I
don't know what you are going to do. Are we going over the cliff? Are
my taxes going to rise? Are regulations going to increase? What is the
future? And if the future remains uncertain, I can't plan ahead. If it
is bad certainty, I can work around it. I might not like it, but I can
make the adjustments necessary.
So, as a result, we have a stagnant economy as a result of all this.
I am hoping that when we learn the details of what we have finally
arrived at, which we will be learning very shortly, I am hoping it is
something we can swallow hard and accept, knowing--knowing--this fiscal
cliff is nothing compared to the real fiscal cliff. The real fiscal
cliff is the continued excessive borrowing and spending of over $1
trillion a year that is driving this country into a serious fiscal
situation for the future. And it is not just something our children and
grandchildren are going to have to pay for years down the line. It is
something we are all paying for now. It is something that is keeping
people from getting back to work, keeping companies from expanding.
We have an obligation to our generation and all future generations to
address what I believe every American who is paying any attention
whatsoever understands--and certainly everyone in this body and in our
corresponding House down the hall understands, whether they are a
Republican, a Democrat, liberal, or conservative--is just simple math.
It is not even algebra or calculus. It is third grade math. You cannot
raise $2.2 trillion a year and spend $3.5 trillion or $3.4 trillion.
Literally, we have now added approaching $6 trillion in just the last 4
years, and it is unsustainable. That is going to hurt everybody, and it
is hurting our economy right now. That is the real cliff. That is the
cliff we have to continue to address. That is the cliff we were hoping
to address in the leverage of this situation, but we are coming up
very, very short.
Mr. President, I didn't realize we were under a time limitation. Are
we under a time limitation?
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Manchin). The Senator has 2 minutes
remaining.
Mr. COATS. All right. I thank the Chair. I saw some angst on the face
of the Chair, and I thought my time was up.
Let me just say this to my colleagues. Many of us who watched the
[[Page S8576]]
President's press conference--no, it wasn't a press conference; the
President's speech--felt we were seeing a rerun of something that took
place during the campaign. We have all been watching a lot of football,
and for Republicans to sit and listen and watch that, it reminded me of
taunting those people on the other team. It stops you cold. It stands
over you and taunts. It got so bad that now the NFL has made it a
penalty and they throw the flag. It is not something we would expect
out of the leader of this free Nation. It is not statesmanship. It is
not leadership. It is in your face. It was dismissive, it was
insulting, it was belittling, and in the end it was sad.
Now, the natural reaction is to get angry and push back and get
revenge. But that is not where we are, and that is not where we need to
be. We need to set this aside. It is like the coach tapping us on the
shoulder pad and saying: What was done speaks for itself; don't stoop
to that level. So we need to set that aside now and go forward in the
interest of the future of this country, in the interest of America and
the families and people we represent in our States, and look at this
very carefully.
I think every one of us is going to say we haven't begun to address
the spending, we haven't begun to address what we need to do, and so
that has to be our charge in 2013--relentlessly.
And I would say, Mr. President, I think people on the other side of
the aisle were probably embarrassed also by that speech. It was a
campaign speech, and the campaigns are over. The President doesn't need
to run for office anymore. It is time to lead. So let's all get
together.
We have been working together----
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. COATS. I ask unanimous consent for 1 more minute.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. COATS. I want to say this: To make laughter out of this, to
ridicule it--it addresses all of us because I have been working with
Senators across the aisle and they have been working with us. We all
take this very, very seriously. This is not a joke. This is not
something to make fun of. This is not something to politicize. This is
something where we should rise above politics and do what is right for
the future of America even though it is difficult. This is not doing
what many of us would like to do, but we have been working together,
Democrats and Republicans, and I can name dozens of Democrats who think
this is a serious matter and who have been working hard for the last 2
years to try to address it, as frustrated as we are on this side.
So let's understand this is not a game. This is real. Let's work
together to do what we can do and then continue to address the real
issues as we go forward in 2013.
With that, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
Mr. BLUNT. Mr. President, let me first of all join my colleague from
Indiana in expressing my concern about where we are on taxes and
spending and my hope that we get somewhere and get somewhere quickly.
We have certainly brought this down to the last moment. For months,
many people on this floor talked about the importance of certainty as
it relates to our economy moving forward, of certainty as it relates to
family farms and small businesses and whether they can stay in the next
generation of that family. So I hope we can achieve those things in the
next coming hours as we finish this day and whatever it takes to create
that level of certainty at the highest possible levels. How it impacts
American individuals and families will be important.
The kinds of things we are hearing about the agreement--that we might
be able to go forward generally--sound as though, for most Americans,
they will solve problems that have been out there now for decades.
Temporary tax policies--even tax policies that last for a decade,
particularly when they relate to things such as the inheritance tax or
the death tax--create problems that can be solved by just simply
driving that place in the Tax Code and saying: This is what our
policies are going to look like, and here is why they make sense for
the American people. And hopefully we get there.
(The remarks of Mr. Blunt and Ms. Landrieu are printed in today's
Record under ``Submitted Resolutions.'')
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
____________________