[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 10 (Wednesday, January 21, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S309-S310]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS
Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Mr. President, I am here today to talk about the
President's speech from last night. I think it was very important. It
was a major event. All Members of Congress were there. To me, it was a
call to action. It wasn't just ideas, it was about how to turn ideas
into action. It was a strong speech focused on the middle-class economy
and how we can strengthen our economy. I thought there was a lot of
energy.
I know some of my colleagues in the last few months have predicted
that the President was somehow going to slide down because of the
actions he took on immigration or the actions he took on Cuba, and I
think what we are seeing around the country is quite the opposite. I
think people are excited that there is an energy, and they are
certainly pleased we have seen some major improvements in the economy.
I would say to my colleagues across the aisle, whom I take at their
word when they say they want to work with us to govern this country,
that I think we know--if we didn't know it before, after last night--
that the President is not going to be spending his next year-and-a-half
slouched in an armchair planning his Presidential library. I think what
we saw last night is a President who wants to get things done in his
remaining time in office, and I think we see an energized country that
also wants to get through the gridlock and move forward.
First of all, I think the President did a very good job of laying out
the status of the economy, and I think it is very important, when there
are so many numbers out there and information and people throwing
things out, that we
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step back and look at that. Because when we look at where we are going
to move forward, we need to understand from where we came and how we
ended up where we were a few years back in the midst of a recession.
So as I look at these young pages--thinking about how difficult it
was for so many years for young people to find employment and that we
are now finally seeing hope for young people out in the job market and
how we can build what we have got.
So what do we know? We have had 58 straight months of private sector
job growth. Our national unemployment is below 6 percent. In fact, in
my State it is down to 3.7 percent. Our unemployment rate last year
went down faster than in any other year we have seen since 1984. We are
now No. 1 in oil. This fall we surpassed Saudi Arabia as the No. 1 oil
and gas producer in the world. That is what our country has done
because of the work in North Dakota--I see my friend Senator Hoeven
over there--because of the work going on all over this country.
As the President also pointed out last night, we also are increasing
our renewable energy in wind. I would add, from the State of Minnesota,
that the renewable fuel standard and the fact that we have better gas
mileage standards--all of these things have helped to bring down our
consumption and to raise our production, bringing these prices down in
our country.
I thought one of the most interesting statistics last night was a
fact I had never heard before. Since 2010, America has put more people
back to work than the combined countries of all of Europe, Japan, and
all advanced economies across the world. That shows that our workers
are so good--something we know. It shows that our businesses are so
good. I think this is an opportunity we now have to finally in this
Chamber govern from opportunity, not just be governing from a state of
crisis. That is what we need to do.
One of my favorite parts, of course, was Rebekah and Ben Erler from
Minnesota, who were mentioned right near the beginning of his speech,
sitting right up in the First Lady's gallery in the House, a woman who
had gone through some hard times. Her husband had lost his job in the
construction industry, but because of the strength of our State and the
strength of her family, her personal strength to want to go back to
work and go to a community college, her family is now stabilized. As
the President pointed out, maybe their big treat is getting together
for a pizza on Friday, but the point is that they have gotten through
some very hard times, as have so many resilient people in this country.
So the question we now have is this: How do we get ahead? How do we
keep going? I am going to go through a few of the ideas that the
President discussed last night that are near and dear to my heart.
The first is community college. I would not be standing in the Senate
right now if it wasn't for community college. My grandpa worked 1,500
feet underground in the mines in Ely, MN. He never even graduated from
high school. At age 15 he had to quit school. Even though he was
getting A's in math, he had to quit school to go and help support his
family. Within a few years he was down in those mines. That is where he
worked his whole life. He had dreamed of a life at sea. He had dreamed
of a life in the Navy. He had dreamed of a life where he could use his
education, but he worked in that mine because he believed, more than
anything, in the American dream--in his two young boys, in his wife, in
his family, in the nine brothers and sisters he raised because both of
his parents died. That is why, at ages 15 and 16, he and his brother
went to work. They went to work to help their family. When the youngest
kid, Hannah, had to go to an orphanage for a year and a half, my
grandpa borrowed a car a year and a half after that and went and got
her back, as he promised.
So what did he do for my dad? He saved money in a coffee can in the
basement so he could send my dad to college, and my dad is a proud
graduate of Ely Junior College, a 2-year community college. From there
he was able to go to the University of Minnesota, get a journalism
degree and interview everyone from Ronald Reagan to Mike Ditka, to
Ginger Rogers. That is our family's story.
My sister never graduated from high school. She had some trouble in
high school. So what did she do? She was able to get her GED, go to a
community college, and move on from there to finalize her 4-year degree
and get an accounting degree.
Those stories are all over America. The President's devotion to
talking about these 2-year community colleges and using them as a
launching pad for kids' careers is the right one.
I am hoping, given the support I have seen from businesses across my
State--where we don't have enough welders, we don't have enough people
to work the technology in a lot of the factories. I am hoping my
colleagues will join us because of the strong business support, because
of the need we have in our country to get more people into these jobs.
We have 5 million job openings. We have 8 million people who are
unemployed. We need to match those two numbers. And the way we do it, I
think, is by doing more with these 1- and 2-year degrees and doing more
with kids in high school.
The second topic I appreciated that the President talked about was
the middle-class tax cut. We all know the numbers. We all know the
facts that due to the widening gap we have seen in income distribution,
about 80 percent of families have $1 trillion less in income than they
did during the Reagan time--$1 trillion less than during the Reagan
time. The top 400 people in the country have more wealth than the
bottom half of the country combined. So as we look at where we should
be giving tax cuts and who we should be helping, it is clearly the
middle class of this country.
That includes help with childcare and childcare credits that the
President talked about. We are the only advanced country, as he pointed
out last night, in the world that doesn't have some kind of sick leave
or paid maternity leave. When I go and talk to women all over my State
and I ask them what they most want, so many of them say time. They want
time to be able to be with their kids when they are sick. They want
time to be able to be with their baby when their baby is born. That is
the best thing for our country. So I don't believe the naysayers that
say we cannot work across the aisle to start talking about these
important middle-class issues.
As the President pointed out, he is not running again, and he has
nothing to do but to try to move forward with this country.
I appreciated the words of so many of my Republican colleagues who
talked about governance, who said they wanted to get back to the real
business of government, which is governing. I also appreciated those
who have put out innovative ideas on things such as infrastructure. The
simple idea that perhaps we can get some of these foreign earnings that
are stuck there overseas that are just sitting there, billions of
dollars--why don't we do something to bring that money back and make
sure a portion of it goes into infrastructure? No one knows that better
than our State. Our State is a State where a bridge fell down in the
middle of a summer day--not just a little bridge, an eight-lane highway
eight blocks from my house; a highway my family would drive over every
single day--down into the middle of the Mississippi River on a summer
day. That is infrastructure and that is a problem.
There are 75,000 bridges in this country that have been found to be
structurally not efficient, not able to function. That is what is
happening in this country right now.
So I truly appreciated the fact that the President talked about, yes,
we are going to be defending something, we are going to be arguing
about things in this Chamber. That is what this is set up to do. That
is democracy. That is government. But there are also some very clear
areas of agreement, and one of them is helping the middle class. Let's
move. Let's go forward.
Thank you, Mr. President.
I yield the floor.
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