[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 53 (Wednesday, April 2, 2014)]
[House]
[Pages H2806-H2807]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REPUBLICAN BUDGET MORE OF THE SAME
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, the baseball season begins this week, so I
will quote the great Yogi Berra. ``It's deja vu all over again.''
This year's Republican budget, which Chairman Ryan unveiled
yesterday, is more of the same we have, unfortunately, come to expect.
It is an exercise in partisan messaging, not a serious and honest
attempt to invest in our priorities and pursue compromise toward a
sustainable fiscal outlook.
Their budget rejects the balanced approach of spending reforms, new
revenue, and investments in our economy called for by both the Bowles-
Simpson and the Rivlin-Domenici Commissions, as well as by the Gang of
Six in the United States Senate and by virtually every economist. The
Ryan budget cuts $5 trillion without a single penny of new revenue, not
even a hint of balance.
Moreover, Chairman Ryan's budget once again relies on the magic
asterisk of hundreds of billions of dollars in spending cuts to
important domestic programs. He doesn't say what programs we are going
to cut; he simply says we are going to get the money.
He said that last year, of course, and it didn't happen. He gives
virtually no details about the policies through which he expects to
achieve these savings. To that extent, it is radically different from
the chairman of the Ways and Means Committee's tax reform plan, which
made real choices, showed real courage, and was a real document.
The Republican budget continues their obsession with repealing or
undermining the Affordable Care Act, their 53rd attempt to do so.
However, of course, they keep all the savings and revenues that the
Affordable Care Act is scored as giving.
It would furthermore kick millions off their health insurance and
turn Medicaid into a capped block grant, decimating the program and
making life more difficult for all those millions who rely on it.
Once more, they are seeking to end the Medicare guarantee as we know
it. They will say it is a choice, that at 55 you can make a choice
whether you want to have private insurance with a voucher that you get
from the Federal Government or go into Medicare. That's what they say.
{time} 1015
The reality is, however, they would make traditional Medicare far,
far, far more expensive, driving people out of that program and
eliminating it over time.
Their budget, in addition, would make it very difficult, if not
impossible, for Congress to invest in our economy and our people by
driving domestic discretionary spending well below the sequester's
harmful level.
The American people ought to be outraged but not surprised. We have
seen this movie before, and it never ends well for Republicans or,
tragically, does it end happily for the American people. The new plot
twist in this year's budget is that Chairman Ryan is going where no
budget chairman has gone before, relying on the spurious gimmickry of
so-called ``dynamic scoring'' to pad his numbers with budget savings
that simply do not exist.
We have talked about this a lot. The 1981 tax cuts were supposed to
boom the economy. In fact, we increased the national debt by 187
percent. In 2001 and 2003, we were promised that the tax cuts would
grow the economy. In fact, during those 8 years of the Bush
administration, we had the worst economy that anybody in this Chamber
has experienced and, indeed, I would presume, in the gallery as well.
[[Page H2807]]
While Chairman Ryan claims his budget balances in 10 years, in
reality, his projection for revenues in 2024 is less than his
projection for outlays. In other words, no balance. That is the simple
budget math. The only way Chairman Ryan can pretend his math works is
by using Republicans' dynamic scoring trick.
This is the same trick that paved the way for the Bush tax cuts to
turn record surpluses into record deficits, as I have said. It is sort
of like a family making its budget and projecting: well, we are going
to get a big raise because the boss is going to be doing better, the
economy is going to be doing better, and we will get a big raise, so we
will budget as if we had already gotten the raise. What happens is you
don't get that raise and you are deeply in the hole. Americans get
that. It is a shame their Congress doesn't get that.
Republicans have a bill on the floor this week to force the
nonpartisan CBO to use the Republican math. The virtue of the
nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office was that it would give us
honest numbers, but now the Republicans want to force them to give them
their numbers that they want that make it easier for them to pretend
that things are going to get better with their policies rather than
putting their policies in place and then seeing if it does get better,
and if it does, we have a bonus. Of course, if it doesn't, we run up
large deficits as we did in the last administration, as we did in the
Reagan administration, as we did in the first Bush administration, and,
yes, slightly in the Clinton administration. But in the Clinton
administration, over every Republican's objections, we balanced the
budget for 4 years.
We need a budget, Madam Speaker, that reflects our real challenges
and recognizes that we must compromise to make the difficult choices
necessary to meet them. The American people deserve a budget that
focuses not on gimmicks but one that promotes opportunity, growth, and
security; compromise, not confrontation; pragmatism, not partisanship;
what works, not what sounds good.
Our budget proposal should reflect our priorities and enable us to
rise to meet our challenges. The Republican budget that is going to be
voted on today in the Budget Committee does not do that.
The Wall Street Journal, Madam Speaker, wrote an editorial about the
Ryan priorities, most of which I disagree with because I think their
reliance, as Ryan does, on dynamic scoring is a ``fool's errand'' and
has been proved to be such over the years that I have served in
Congress over the last 33 years. But I do agree with their conclusion,
and they say this:
But the Ryan outline does the service of showing the policy
direction in which Republicans would head if they regain
control of the Senate next year.
I agree with that. I think this is a litmus test for the American
people. They can review the Ryan budget. They can review its
consequences to them, themselves, their families, their children, and
their community. They can see the adverse consequences of a plan that
will not work.
I predict, as I predicted last year, Madam Speaker, the
Appropriations Committee, headed by Hal Rogers, Republican chairman,
will not bring appropriation bills to the floor that will pass on this
floor that will implement the Ryan budget, notwithstanding the fact
that Ryan's party controls this House. I predicted that last year, and
I was right. As a matter of fact, no bills passed this House at the
Ryan budget numbers last year--none, not one. Sadly, I think that is
what is going to happen this year--sadly, for the American people;
sadly, for this Congress; sadly, for our children.
Madam Speaker, we can do better. We can be real. We ought to do the
job that the American people expect us to do and get this country on a
fiscally sustainable path, not with smoke and mirrors but with
sincerity and courage.
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