[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 72 (Tuesday, May 21, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3653-S3654]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUDGET CONFERENCE
Mr. LEE. Madam President, earlier today we were asked to give our
consent to go to conference on the budget resolution. This is an
important matter because we have now gone more than 4 years without a
budget. This has been of great concern to many of us. I do not think
there is one Member of this body who would not want Congress to pass a
budget this year. We would like to see that happen. We need that.
We do, however, have a concern--some of us--with the request that we
go to conference without certain assurances. Most important, we want a
very simple assurance that any conference report that results from this
conference will not be used to raise the debt limit. The reason for
this is simple. This is an important matter. At a time when we have
racked up about $17 trillion in debt, we want some assurances that this
important decision will be made under the regular order of the Senate;
that the normal rules of the Senate will apply; that this will not be
negotiated behind closed doors in a backroom deal. The American people
deserve more. They demand more.
Those who may have questioned our motives in connection with this, I
ask them a very simple question: Will you give us an assurance that you
are not going to use the conference report to raise the debt limit? If
they can answer that question to our satisfaction, if they can simply
give me an assurance that is not what they are going to use it for,
then I will gladly give my consent. So I invite that to be the topic of
discussion.
All this begs the question. Why would they not give that assurance?
What on Earth is wrong with the regular order? What on Earth is wrong
with giving an assurance that, in connection with a conference report
on a budget resolution, they would not be willing to say: If we are
going to raise the debt limit, we are going to do it under the regular
order.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Ms. LANDRIEU. Madam President, I was going to talk about the
tornadoes, but I will take a moment to respond to my colleague from
Utah.
There are Members objecting to going to regular order on the budget,
and he is one of them. The Senator from Utah himself is objecting to
regular order, which would allow us to go to conference on the budget.
He was one of the critics when he was running for office. He made
numerous statements while he was on his way to becoming a Senator by
saying that the Senate and the House needed to have a budget.
Well, the House has passed a budget, the Senate has passed a budget.
Yet the Senator from Utah is the one--along with the Senator from
Kentucky, and I understand earlier today, the Senator from Arizona,
Senator McCain--objecting to going to conference to resolve the
differences.
I know the Senator from Utah has read the Constitution, just as I
have. The Constitution and the laws that created the Senate of the
United States give great strength to the minority--and he is in the
minority. However, nowhere in the Constitution does it say one Senator
from one State has the right to write the rules and laws for the whole
country. I read it lots of times, and I have never seen that. Evidently
that is what the Senator from Utah wants. He said if we would just do
what he wants, we could proceed.
Well, I have news for him and the Senators who are objecting. It is
not about what they individually want. It is collectively what we want.
We represent all the people of our country: Republicans, Democrats,
conservatives, and liberals.
For 4 years this same group yelled and screamed about not having a
budget. Now that we have a budget, they are yelling and screaming that
they don't want to work out the differences. I honestly don't know how
to please colleagues like this. We had to literally listen to them
ranting and raving for years about how we didn't have a budget. We
worked extra hard. At the time we said--and I was one of them--that
technically they're right, we did not have a budget. As the Presiding
Officer knows, we had something that was stronger than a budget. We had
spending limits that had the real teeth of law.
What people might not realize is budgets are aspirations. Just as
when someone does a budget at home, they can say: My budget this year
is going to be set at $25,000. It is an aspiration. They might spend a
little more or a little less. There is no mechanism for control; it is
just an outline, and that is important.
We thought what we had, as the Democratic leadership, is better than
a budget. We had actual spending controls, but that wasn't enough for
the Republicans. They knew we had spending controls, but they still
went on ``Fox News'' and everywhere else explaining to people that we
had no budget and inferred there were no controls. And that is patently
false. We had spending controls. We have spending controls now. We have
spending limits which are agreed to by Republicans and Democrats,
except there are a handful of Republicans who don't agree with those
limits. They decided because they represent half of four States that
they want their way or the highway, and now the whole Congress cannot
go to a conference on a budget.
I don't understand this. I understand minority rights need to be
protected. I understand it is important to make sure everyone's voice
is heard. I understand everybody cannot get everything they want. I
don't understand when my colleagues--the Senator from Utah, the Senator
from Kentucky, and the Senator from Arizona--say: No, we can't go to a
conference to work out the differences on the budget so the United
States can move more quickly to a balanced budget. They have complained
year after year that we didn't have a budget. It is the height of
hypocrisy, and their position is completely unexplainable and
unacceptable.
I am glad I was on the floor. I came to talk about the tornado, but I
am glad I had a chance to make a statement for the Record about why not
many--but there are a few--Republican leaders have stopped the entire
budget process until they get their way exactly the way they want it.
That is not the way our government works. We don't have kings anymore.
We don't have dictators anymore. We don't have people with special
powers. We are all humans, and we are all on equal footing. We are all
elected to represent our constituents. No one in this Chamber is
entitled to write the budget exactly the way they want it.
If I wanted to do something, I could say just as easily as he could:
Well, I am going to object unless you promise me that X, Y, and Z are
going to be in the budget. I could say that, as could
[[Page S3654]]
the Senators who sit next to me, Senator Sanders and Senator Carper.
Every Senator could say that. We all have things which are very
important to us and our constituency, but if we act like that and we
don't act in a mature and sensible way, we will never get anything
done, and that is where we are now.
We have a handful of Republican Senators--maybe less than five, I
don't know--who are objecting every day so we cannot take our budget to
conference and have it reconciled. They have yelled at everybody for 4
years about how we didn't have a budget.
The only way we are going to get a budget is to go to conference,
have regular order, and work out the differences in a public meeting
with public votes. It cannot happen behind closed doors or in some back
room somewhere. It has to take place in a public meeting, during a
conference so we can talk about what programs or what levels of funding
should be reduced, such as what revenues could potentially be raised.
Then, according to our process, those directions are given to
appropriations committees. At that point we can do our work on building
an appropriation for defense, building an appropriation for education,
building an appropriation for health, and for our veterans.
If we don't have a budget, we cannot even go to regular order on
appropriations. As an appropriator, it is getting frustrating around
here to not be able to go to a regular appropriations meeting and sit
down as we used to do before this new crew showed up and talked about
meeting our budget caps and how we wanted to allocate the taxpayer
money in a public, open meeting instead of cramming things in an
omnibus bill and doing deals in the middle of the night.
If they would let us get back to regular order and do the people's
business, I promise that the people of Utah would be happy, the people
of Arizona would be happy, and the people of Kentucky would be happy.
They want us to get back to regular order so we can try to negotiate a
budget that the majority--and not even the regular majority. We have to
have 60 votes to do anything around here. Before a conference committee
can come back, there has to be a broad understanding of what was going
to be in that conference.
I have one final argument. I could understand a little trepidation on
the part of the minority if they were not in control of the House, but
the Republicans have control of the House, and the Democrats have
control of the Senate. I mean, I could understand their concern if one
party had the majority in both the Senate and the House. They might be
concerned that what comes out of conference could get rammed down and
the minority could be caught off balance. The minority controls the
House. This is as fair a fight as they are going to have with one party
controlling one and one party controlling the other.
Yes, the President is a Democrat, but he has indicated what I think
is very open-minded support for entitlement reform when it is
appropriate and additional revenues that are being raised. The
President has not put any particular line in the sand that I am aware
of. He has been quite reasonable, but he cannot sign a budget unless we
can get it to his desk.
We have three or four Senators, if they can't get it exactly the way
they want it, who are going to hold up everything. I don't think that
is what the American people want, and I am disappointed in our
colleagues.
I yield the floor.
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