[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 86 (Monday, June 17, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4497-S4498]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUDGET CONFERENCE
Mr. REID. Mr. President, it has been 86 days since the Senate passed
its budget. We have been through this on several occasions. We have had
Republican Senators come and criticize the Republican leadership here
for not letting us go to conference. They talked about their wanting
regular order so we could move forward in dealing with the financial
crisis facing this country, but they have ignored us.
We are proud of the budget we passed. It was hard, but it reflects
our priorities: protecting middle-class families and growing the
economy. Even though that is the case, we are still willing to work out
a compromise with our Republican counterparts.
We are not going to get everything we want. That is what conferences
are all about. They have been going on in this country for more than
two centuries. But we believe our sound fiscal policy would stand out
as being so much better than what they have done in the House. We could
do this through the regular order of the budget process. Unfortunately,
Democrats and Republicans are not going to find common ground if we
never start negotiating. As I said, for 86 days Republican leaders have
objected to a conference with the House of Representatives. In
conference, Democrats and Republicans could work together to work out
our differences--differences between our budgets as well as our
priorities. But Senate Republicans have objected to a conference time
and time again.
Today, I read in the Hill newspaper called Politico that the House
Republicans are more than happy for their Senate colleagues to obstruct
and delay. They know a budget conference would only put the spotlight
on divisions within the House Republican caucus. Here is what the
article said:
Going to conference to match the House and Senate-passed
budgets--or making any movement on the budget right now--
could open up a schism in the [Republican] caucus on spending
that for months leadership has managed to keep mostly at bay.
So what they are saying is the Republican leadership over here is
protecting the House. The House Republican leadership understands they
cannot agree on anything--nothing. Therefore, objecting to this is the
right thing to do because they will never get out in the open as to how
crazy their budget priorities are.
But as Senate Republicans cover for their dysfunctional House
colleagues, the country inches closer to another crisis: a default on
the Nation's bills.
Reasonable Republicans are just as concerned as I am about this last
manufactured crisis--a crisis that would undercut the economic progress
of the last 4 years. Those reasonable Republicans have come to the
floor repeatedly to call on Republican leaders to stop blocking
bipartisan budget negotiations. I hope those reasonable Republicans
prevail. I hope Republican leaders in the House and in the Senate will
stop bowing to tea party extremists and listen to the more reasonable
Members of their caucus.
I repeat, Republican Senators have arrived here on the floor on more
than one occasion and criticized our not being able to go to
conference. So if past is prologue, using the full faith and credit of
the U.S. Government as a political hostage will not only be bad
[[Page S4498]]
for the economy, it will also be bad for the Republican Party.
It is time Republican leaders acknowledge that compromise--not
reckless brinkmanship--will put America on the road to fiscal
responsibility.
____________________