[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 141 (Thursday, October 10, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6458]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VOTE FOR A CLEAN CR AND DEBT CEILING BILL
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Wisconsin (Ms. Moore) for 5 minutes.
Ms. MOORE. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to urge you to turn away from
this destructive path of threatening the full faith and credit of the
United States Government as a means to extort political concessions and
to subvert the democratic principle of majority rule. I urge you, Mr.
Speaker, to become the Speaker of the House and not spokesperson for a
fringe cult within the GOP caucus.
The Affordable Care Act is settled law. In fact, the negotiation for
any change to the Affordable Care Act is possible and perhaps even
desirable under so-called regular order, and that goes for the other
ransom demands that the GOP has made.
Now, of course, the reason for this crisis, this shutdown of the
government and the debt crisis, has now shifted from repealing or
delaying ObamaCare to vague demands for negotiations. We have seen a
laundry list, Mr. Speaker, of other so-called demands: approval of the
Keystone pipeline; concessions on payments to Social Security, Medicare
and Medicaid; tort reform; repeal of job-killing regulations, that is,
protections for clean air and clean water.
The latest demand is Republicans passed a bill to create a
superdupercommittee that includes instructions that the committee can
only resolve our budget crisis by considering spending cuts and
entitlement cuts, but no new revenue. In other words, Mr. Speaker, you
don't really want to negotiate. It is just obvious from your words and
deeds, Mr. Speaker, since you, Mr. Speaker, have blocked negotiations
18 times over the past year.
Mr. Speaker, you are putting the country through this ``shut-er-
down'' theater that you called for in the last Republican campaign, in
the last cycle. ``A nuclear weapon'' is how Warren Buffett
characterized failure to raise the debt ceiling.
Let me say that again. The world's most respected financial markets
expert compared this now familiar Republican tactic as a weapon of mass
destruction, a weapon that is ``too horrible to use.''
Let me quote Yalman Onaran in Bloomberg:
Failure by the world's largest borrower to pay its debt,
unprecedented in modern history, will devastate stock markets
from Brazil to Zurich, halt a $5 trillion lending mechanism
for investors who rely on Treasuries, blow up borrowing costs
for billions of people and companies, ravage the dollar and
throw U.S. and world economies into a recession that would
likely become a depression. Money managers, economists,
bankers and former government officials interviewed for this
story, few view default as anything but a financial
apocalypse.
Yet, Mr. Speaker, you continue to take default off the table.
Meanwhile, even the discussion of default is driving up borrowing costs
for the U.S. as investors demand higher yields to buy short-term U.S.
Treasury bonds. Short-term borrowing costs have doubled and now are at
the highest levels since late 2008. Heaven help us if you, Mr. Speaker,
actually drive the U.S. into default.
Think about this: the $12 trillion of outstanding government debt is
23 times--23 times--the $517 billion Lehman owed when its bankruptcy
sparked the 2008 financial crisis. The full faith and credit of the
U.S. debt is the collateral for banks, financial contracts, and
repurchase markets throughout the world, the collateral that stands
behind global finance and investment. It is why we are the world's
reserve currency. Any default by the U.S. will have very real and
extremely serious consequences and trigger a self-inflicted global
financial crisis.
In my mind, Mr. Speaker, the full faith and credit of the United
States is not open for negotiation. I urge my colleagues to cease using
the debt ceiling and economic calamity as a political tool and vote for
a clean CR and debt limit bill.
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