[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 32 (Wednesday, March 6, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1149-S1150]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE SEQUESTER
Mr. CORNYN. Madam President, I am not sure where the Obama
administration is getting all of its talking points on the sequester,
but the President might want to consider hiring a fact checker.
Even before the sequester took effect, Education Secretary Arne
Duncan declared that schoolteachers were getting pink slips. A few days
later he had to walk those comments back. He said he was referring to a
single school in West Virginia. But when the Washington Post contacted
the superintendent of that school, he said not one teacher had gotten a
pink slip because of the sequester.
Then President Obama suggested that all of the people who keep the
Capitol clean would be suffering a pay cut. But that wasn't true
either, according to Capitol Superintendent Carlos Elias.
We have been repeatedly told that the sequester would trigger drastic
layoffs of Federal workers. Yet on Monday alone the Federal Government
posted literally hundreds of job advertisements.
Finally, just yesterday, when asked to provide evidence for the claim
that 70,000 children would be denied access to Head Start because of
the sequester, the White House had no details. While the President has
been out there playing Chicken Little, Members of Congress have been
waiting for the White House to send over its budget.
The law requires the President to transmit a budget by February 4,
and we have been now advised his budget will not be forthcoming until
March 25. Ironically, that will actually be after the House and the
Senate have taken up our own budget, and we will have no input from the
President on his proposal.
A few weeks ago I said a second term offers the President a second
chance. I still remain hopeful that President Obama will eventually be
persuaded to adopt a serious approach for long-term deficit reduction
and long-term economic growth.
One of the great tragedies in America today is the fact that our
economy is growing so slowly that unemployment rates remain
unacceptably high--roughly around 8 percent. That is only after many
people have simply given up looking for work. Now more than 20 million
people are either out of work or they are working part time when they
would prefer to work full time. But that is not going to happen until
we get the economy growing again--and that is not going to happen until
we get our hands around our long-term deficit and economic growth.
I realize the President and Democrats want to take the House of
Representatives back in 2014. The President probably remembers the
Halcyon days of 2009 and 2010 when his party controlled the White
House, the Senate, and the House. That got us ObamaCare, a $1 trillion
stimulus, and a whole lot more debt, and the Dodd-Frank law--which was
targeted at Wall Street but which hit Main Street, including a lot of
our community bankers.
There is a time for campaigning and there is a time for governing.
But the 2012 election occurred 17 weeks ago and the 2014 election will
not occur for another 20 months. Now is the time for governing, not for
delivering more partisan stump speeches. In order to govern, the Senate
needs to pass a budget, something this Chamber has not done for more
than 1,400 days. Over that same period our gross national debt has
grown by $5.5 trillion and we have experienced the weakest economic
recovery since the Great Depression.
[[Page S1150]]
Since the official end of the recession in June of 2009, the median
household income in America has fallen by more than $2,400. Meanwhile,
since the President took office the cost of family health insurance has
increased by $2,300. So not only has household income for most
Americans--the median household income, that is--dropped by $2,400,
they are seeing an additional burden of $2,300 because of ObamaCare.
The bottom line is the American people are tired of the ``Chicken
Little'' stories and they are tired of the fear mongering. They look at
what is happening in Washington--I know my constituents in Texas do--
and they almost want to turn their eyes in another direction to avert
their gaze because they understand that Washington is not serving their
interests. If President Obama wants real change, it is time for him to
get behind real tax reform and real reform of Social Security and
Medicare, something his own bipartisan fiscal commission--Simpson-
Bowles--recommended.
After all, the American people did not send us here to kick and
scream over a 2.4-percent budget cut. They sent us here to make some
hard decisions to ensure long-term economic health and economic
prosperity and it is time for the President as the leader of our
country and the leader of the free world to take that message to heart.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Baldwin). The Senator from Kentucky is
recognized.
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