[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 140 (Wednesday, October 9, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H6419-H6420]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
ECONOMIC HARM OF THE GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, the majority party's latest idea is to
create a supercommittee to figure out how to reverse their Republican
shutdown of
[[Page H6420]]
government. Frankly, Congress doesn't need another committee. It only
needs the Speaker to unlock the Tea Party chains put on regular
committee order and their function in this House. Let the
Appropriations Committee do its job as mandated by our Constitution. It
can and will get the job done.
Though it is not my first preference, we can begin by allowing a vote
on a clean continuing resolution, that is, allowing the Senate bill
which contains the Republican budget mark of $986 billion to move
forward. Though the Democrats have expressed deep dismay at that number
as it is not what Democrats had sought in discretionary accounts, it
speaks loudly to which party is willing to compromise. And then if the
majority party does not like the Affordable Care Act, use your real
power in the regular committee structure that you control to change it.
But closing down the entire government is a sledgehammer when what you
need is merely a needle and thread.
Meanwhile, the Republican shutdown is wreaking havoc on our economy.
More and more working Americans and businesses are getting singed. How
can this be good? The Republican shutdown costs the American people
$12.5 million each hour and $300 million a day. As of today, the GOP
shutdown has already cost the American taxpayers over $2 billion. Is
that responsible government?
The Republican shutdown has caused rising uncertainty about our
economy. It has already placed a downdraft on our economic markets and
job creation. Yesterday the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell another
160 points. This is part of a recent precipitous slide which has seen
the financial market lose nearly 400 points this month alone. Overall,
the trend is strongly in the wrong direction--down.
The International Monetary Fund, as a result of the Republican
shutdown, cut its growth forecast for our economy by 0.3 percentage
points to 2.9 percent for this year and 3.6 percent for next year. This
surely will cost the American economy more jobs going forward.
The sapping of U.S. growth will be felt globally, as U.S. economic
sluggishness impacts other nations. Global markets continue to fall as
well, wondering what will happen to the value of our Treasury bonds.
Chaos and uncertainty trigger poor markets. We sure don't need any more
of that medicine.
There are over 800,000 Federal workers who have been furloughed as a
direct result of the shutdown. They are worrying about whether they can
pay their bills, pay their mortgage. NASA, for example, had to furlough
97 percent of its more than 18,000-person workforce due to the closing
of the government.
At NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, only 100 of 3,150 civil
servants have not been furloughed. An additional 10,000 contractors
with the Johnson Space Center will face being furloughed.
According to a local FOX affiliate, the NASA Glenn Research Center in
Brook Park, Ohio, near Cleveland, which I represent, has essentially
furloughed nearly all its 3,000 employees at NASA's key propulsion
center. This absolutely punches down the local economy as well as the
national.
The Republican shutdown has also caused many more contractors who do
detailed work for our government to lose their jobs. Defense
contractors like Boeing and Lockheed Martin have had to furlough
thousands of employees because the shutdown has halted awards and
payments to those companies.
The Republican shutdown hurts government agencies and weakens our
national security. There are currently no death benefits given to
families of soldiers killed in action; medical treatment for those in
the military has been scaled back; and furloughs are creating backlogs
for VA disability claims.
Mr. Speaker, just bring the clean continuing resolution that has the
Republican budget number in it to a vote. Reopen our government. Use
the regular committees to work out any difficulties you have with the
Affordable Care Act. And, please, put America's economy back on an even
keel.
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