[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 28 (Wednesday, February 27, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H667]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JUMP-STARTING THE ECONOMY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Wisconsin (Mr. Pocan) for 5 minutes.
Mr. POCAN. Madam Speaker, as a lifelong Wisconsinite and a proud
resident of Madison for the last 30 years, I am deeply humbled and
honored to represent Wisconsin's Second District in the House of
Representatives. The Second District is home to a world-class
university, innovative small businessowners, and hardworking dairy
farmers and cheese makers who produce the best milk and cheese you can
find.
I ran for Congress because I wanted to ensure these voices, the
voices of south central Wisconsin, are heard, respected and represented
in Washington. And I am committed to serving their needs by working
with my colleagues--all of my colleagues--regardless of party
affiliation. But I hate to say it, Madam Speaker, right now the people
of Wisconsin's Second District are frustrated, and I understand why.
When I went home last week, I met with people from all kinds of
professions and all walks of life, and their concerns could not have
been more different from what we talk about right here in Washington.
What they care about is what all families care about: how can they make
a living so they can pay their bills, provide for their loved ones, and
create opportunities for their children.
They don't care about political finger-pointing. They care about how
we in Congress can support an environment where businesses can attract
more buyers for their products, hire more workers, and increase wages;
in other words, how do we grow the economy.
What I told them, and what I'll repeat here today, is that the
sequester and its irresponsible, indiscriminate and across-the-board
spending cuts is the exact opposite of what we need to be doing right
now to grow our economy. Taken as a whole, these spending cuts
represent a harsh austerity policy that I fear could only move our
country backwards.
We've seen in Europe the severe effects austerity policies have had
on fragile economies working their way back from recessions. Four years
after the global economic crisis, our friends across the ocean are at
risk of a triple-dip recession. Unemployment is climbing; and even with
these massive spending cuts, countries have seen their debt loads
increase. Is this the model we want to follow in our country?
Madam Speaker, we must remember that the biggest threat to our long-
term economic security is not the deficit. It's the economy. It's a
lack of jobs, and it's about the more than 12 million people who are
unemployed in this country.
I own a printing shop in Wisconsin; and as a small businessowner, I
can tell you that it's about the lack of access to capital because of
economic uncertainty, it's about a lack of consumer confidence, and
it's about people needing to get back to work. These are the issues we
need to address, not austerity; and we are not going to create jobs or
help spur spending by gutting critical government programs without any
thought to the consequences. To people in Wisconsin, that's just
politics as usual.
We need to change the conversation right here in Washington. We need
to be talking about what people are talking about in Beloit, in
Baraboo, and in Sun Prairie. Instead of asking about how much we can
cut, we need to be asking ourselves how we can jump-start the economy,
how we can invest in our future, and how we can support our local small
businessowners who are the backbone of our communities. That's how
we'll fix the economy.
We need to support education, infrastructure projects, research and
development, and new industries such as green energy that will help
lead to job growth and bring our unemployment rate down. And by growing
the economy, we will fix our fiscal problems.
Now, that doesn't mean I don't see a place for responsible restraint.
As the former chair of the Joint Finance Committee in Wisconsin, I
understand that when you put together a budget, tough decisions have to
be made, and you can stay up all night agonizing over the smallest
details, the tiniest programs, because these programs make a difference
in people's lives. It's a lot of work, and it should be, because our
budget priorities have a direct effect on our middle class families and
on long-term economic growth. But the sequester trades in the tough
work and replaces it with massive, indiscriminate, and irresponsible
spending cuts. It's like taking a meat cleaver to the budget instead of
a scalpel.
It could cost 750,000 jobs nationwide, including 36,000 jobs right in
Wisconsin. It could mean 70,000 students across the country, and 1,000
in my State, would see their Head Start services eliminated this year,
and it would mean $900 million less in loan guarantees to small
businessowners nationwide, including in Wisconsin.
Now, I'm a cosponsor of a plan put forward by Representative Van
Hollen that would avert these disastrous spending cuts and replace them
with a balanced approach that promotes economic growth while
responsibly reducing the deficit. I strongly urge my colleagues to come
to the table, stop this irresponsible sequester, and then refocus our
efforts.
The time has come to stop talking about harmful spending cuts and
start talking about getting the people of Wisconsin and of America back
to work. We need less austerity and more prosperity. We don't have time
to waste.
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