[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 47 (Wednesday, April 10, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H1864-H1865]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE PRESIDENT'S BUDGET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. I welcome the President's budget submission, which
will mark the first time since 2009 that the House, the Senate, and the
President have all submitted budgets. It's an encouraging development,
but the larger question is whether Congress can actually use the
budgeting process to show how we will do business differently.
Despite the media sideshows about the artificial sequestration
crisis, the major issues we have to address to fix the budget and our
current deficit are spending on defense, health care, and the tax
system itself.
Although the administration has started us down a path to manage
Pentagon spending in the future, we have barely scratched the surface.
There are too many unnecessary bases at home and abroad that should be
phased down or closed. There's far too much invested in an antiquated
nuclear arsenal that we haven't used in 68 years and contains many,
many times more weapons than we would ever need for deterrence. The
$700 billion scheduled to be spent over the next 10 years must be
reduced dramatically. We have yet to come to grips with the long-term
costs of an all-volunteer Army and the right balance between reserve
and regular forces. Until these fundamental issues are addressed, the
challenges of the future are going to be difficult to face because we
spend too much time and energy and money preparing for the conflicts of
the past while we avoid hard budget reality.
Health care expenditures continue to be the greatest overall threat
to the budget, but not because the United States doesn't spend enough
money on health care. We spend more than anybody else in the world--
twice as much as many countries. But even spending far more than
anybody else, we're still not able to deliver quality health care for
most Americans. Instead of fighting health care reform, we should be
working together to accelerate that process so that we can reward value
over volume of health care. If the Oregon model of health care that we
are working on diligently to implement were applied on a national
scale, it could save over $1 trillion over the next 10 years--as much
as was fought about in the battle over sequestration.
We must also reform the Tax Code, which is unfair, complex, and
costly, with over $160 billion just to administer it. I would suggest
that we think about implementing a carbon tax, which has the potential
of reducing the deficit and tax rates for individuals and business in a
fair and comprehensive form. The carbon tax has the added benefit of
being the most direct way to reduce the threat to the planet caused by
extreme weather events promoted by carbon pollution.
It's very encouraging that the President's budget again speaks to
infrastructure improvement and investment, but we need to be bolder and
more comprehensive in our approach, especially at how we deal with
funding rebuilding and renewing America. At a time when 17 States have
stepped up to increase transportation funding, it's unacceptable that
we pay for the highway trust fund with a gas tax that hasn't been
increased since 1993 and is increasingly collecting less money as fuel
efficiency improves.
The introduction of the President's budget is an important step
forward. It
[[Page H1865]]
will hopefully spark an earnest, thoughtful, focused discussion about
how we do business differently, how we pay for the needs of a growing
and aging America, and how we can get more value for the investments we
are already making, all while laying the foundation for a more
prosperous future.
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