[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 131 (Saturday, September 28, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H5925-H5926]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONTINUING RESOLUTION AND DEBT CEILING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, we are here in the Capitol awaiting a
decision by the Republicans in the House about the next step to deal
with the fiscal crisis they have created.
It is not really that complicated. The Monday deadline approaches to
continue the operation of the Federal Government with a shutdown
looming because the Republicans have refused to work on a bipartisan
basis to resolve the funding issues.
The centerpiece of their rhetoric has been objection to the
Affordable Care Act and their childish insistence that a program that
has been approved by Congress, President Obama reelected defending it,
and validated by the Supreme Court, that somehow this bell can be un-
rung.
Billions have already been spent, hundreds of thousands of people are
working to make the reform operational, and it seems to be working.
Better prescription drug benefits for senior citizens are putting more
money in their pockets. Children under the age of 26 have been able to
stay on their parents' policies.
Beginning Tuesday, enrollment starts for the exchanges, and on
January 1 it goes live with better health insurance. People can't be
refused insurance for preexisting conditions. There will be no lifetime
limits on benefits. Health insurance will be more affordable with
subsidies for millions, and there will be more competition for all.
These provisions are overwhelmingly supported by the American public.
The health insurance program will save billions of dollars for the
Federal Government, reducing the deficit. That's the judgment of the
CBO. In fact, isn't it ironic that having campaigned against these
health care savings and losing, Paul Ryan and the Republicans include
those very savings in their budget?
My Republican friends are paralyzed in part because they've adopted a
draconian budget that actually requires savings in the very health plan
they want to defund. They claim to want to reduce government spending;
yet they have refused to allow the House to vote on the spending bills
their budget calls for.
We have been waiting for 2 months to finish the transportation and
housing spending bill. They got halfway through it on the floor of the
House, and they realized that their own Members wouldn't vote for it
because it was so awful, and they stopped. They didn't even bother to
bring the Interior spending bill to the floor.
If their budgets are so bad that their own Members won't vote for
them, they shouldn't throw a tantrum, threaten to shut down the
government, or destabilize the global economy by playing games with the
debt ceiling. If they're afraid to have their own Members vote on their
spending bills, shouldn't they allow a conference committee between the
House and the Senate to resolve budget differences? That's how the
system is supposed to work.
They whine the President won't negotiate with them. How is the
President supposed to deal with people who are unwilling to face up to
the consequences of their own irresponsible budgets or refuse to allow
Congress to
[[Page H5926]]
work the process to establish a consensus budget by having a conference
committee? How are Democrats supposed to deal with the Republicans as
they up the ante, seeking to damage the American people by cutting off
vital services in a shutdown? How do you deal with Republicans who are
willing to default on paying America's debt, breaking our moral and
legal obligations, and risking not just America's, but the world's,
economy?
Earth to my Republican friends: America pays its bills. Always has,
always will. It is the height of hypocrisy to blame this on the
President, the Affordable Care Act, or the Democrats.
We wait breathlessly to see if the Republicans can agree to have
anything to be voted on today; but the American people should insist
that if my Republican friends are serious, they should bring their own
budgets to the floor, allow the process to work to have a conference
committee between the House and the Senate to reconcile our
differences. Then we can act like grownups, not children throwing
tantrums, and we wouldn't need to threaten the global economy over the
debt ceiling.
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