[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 39 (Monday, March 18, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H1551]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GOP BUDGET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, this week, we begin the Republican
charade of pretending to balance the budget in 10 years, without a hint
of how it really is possible. They intend to repeal ObamaCare, which
was the central issue in the last campaign, where you will remember
President Obama was reelected, the Senate went even more Democratic,
and House Democrats gained seats and won over 1 million more votes than
the Republicans.
Normal people would think that the ObamaCare issue might be settled.
Does anybody realistically think it's going away anytime soon?
The Republican fantasy budget reduces taxes dramatically without a
hint of how it would be possible, without exploding the deficit or
dramatically raising taxes on the middle class.
This is consistent with what the Romney-Ryan ticket said on the
campaign trail last fall. The same issue where they dodged, dissembled,
or ignored the perfectly reasonable question: How is it possible? Six
months later, it's back in the budget, but there still is no answer.
During the last 40 years, there have been only four budgets without
deficits: the last three Clinton budgets and the one that George Bush
inherited from Bill Clinton. In each case, taxes as a percentage of the
total economy were over 20 percent. In this Republican fantasyland,
budgets are balanced with revenues at 19 percent of the economy, yet
meeting the needs of 78 million more seniors and an infrastructure
deficit that is growing as America is falling apart.
Clearly, this is not remotely possible if we're going to enjoy
anything like our current quality of life. There is a real-world
intersection of budget-saving opportunities with potential areas of
agreement. Health care reform is one, but not just by shifting the
burden to seniors and the disabled, as the Republicans propose in their
fantasy budget.
My home State of Oregon is in the middle of an exciting demonstration
of how to squeeze out the waste we all know is there and realign
incentives. Instead of the empty ritual of pretending to repeal
ObamaCare, let's work together to accelerate reform for all Americans.
If the Oregon experiment works--and frankly, many of these
efficiencies, by the way, are already achieved in other parts of the
country and with some private health systems--we could save more than
$1.2 trillion that the flawed sequester is supposed to achieve in the
next 10 years.
Another area of irresponsibility in the Republican budget is defense.
Instead of increasing Pentagon spending, we should reform it. The most
obvious target is the nuclear arsenal larger than anything we need for
nuclear deterrence. Ten percent of our nuclear weapons would decimate
Russia. A handful of missiles would wipe North Korea off the map, yet
they propose to spend over two-thirds of $1 trillion over the next 10
years on this bloated arsenal.
Before we increase the Pentagon budget, maybe we should figure out
why the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter is now 7 years behind schedule, 70
percent over budget, and the Pentagon still doesn't know how it's going
to meet the more than $1 trillion in operating and maintenance costs.
Amazingly, the Republicans want to increase spending for the
Pentagon, the only major budget so flawed it can't even be audited.
There are bipartisan opportunities to reduce and reform the military,
but you're not hearing about it in the Republican budget this week.
Instead of a Republican rerun of a bad reality TV show, let's
consider working together on areas to change how the government does
business and give more value to the taxpayer while we get spending
under control.
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