[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 179 (Thursday, December 10, 2015)]
[House]
[Pages H9266-H9268]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CURRENT ISSUES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of
January 6, 2015, the gentleman from Nebraska (Mr. Fortenberry) is
recognized for 60 minutes as the designee of the majority leader.
Puerto Rico's Financial Crisis and the Way Forward
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Thank you, Mr. Speaker, for the time.
I would like to begin this evening by yielding to the gentleman from
Wisconsin (Mr. Duffy), my good friend and colleague.
Mr. DUFFY. Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the gentleman yielding.
Tonight I rise to talk about our brothers and sisters in Puerto Rico.
If you have watched the news recently, you are well aware that there
is an economic financial debt crisis taking place right now in Puerto
Rico. Our American brothers and sisters are going through an incredibly
difficult time.
The island is $73 billion in debt. That is 100 percent of their GDP,
which is catastrophically high. This debt has had a huge impact on the
livelihoods of those who live on the island.
The unemployment rate is over twice what it is on the mainland. It is
at 12.4 percent. Forty-eight percent of Americans on the island are
living in poverty. Again, half of the island citizens--Americans--are
living in poverty.
Ten percent of the 3.5 million people on the island are leaving and
they are coming to the mainland. It is great because they work hard and
they have an amazing culture. It is wonderful they are coming. But if
you are coming to the mainland, you should be coming because you want
to come, not because you don't have economic opportunity in your home.
We don't want to force people away from their families and their
neighbors and their community because they don't have economic
opportunity.
We have to stand together in this House and stand with our brothers
and sisters in Puerto Rico. We can't turn a blind eye. We have to work
with them. We have to work for them so we can address this crisis.
Yesterday I introduced a pretty simple and straightforward bill that
will help jump-start the Puerto Rican economy, help put people back to
work, grow their economy, better paying jobs, and lift people out of
poverty. It is very simple. It is called the Puerto Rico Financial
Stability and Debt Restructuring Choice Act, and it has two prongs.
Prong number one is we are going to implement a financial stability
board that is going to help the island with the management of its
budget, its tax collection, and its finances.
Prong number two is Puerto Rico can access a chapter 9 bankruptcy. By
the way, every State in America can access chapter 9. It will be the
same rights as every State that we will offer Puerto Rico. It is pretty
simple and straightforward stuff.
I also think it is important to note that no one wants to have a
financial stability board shoved down their throat, and the citizens of
Puerto Rico don't want that either. That is why we give them the
choice. This doesn't go into effect unless the Puerto Rican legislative
assembly approves the financial stability board and the Governor signs
it so that they have a say in their future.
If we do this, we will allow Puerto Rico to restructure their debt,
to get their finances in order, to grow their economy, and to let
people on the island start living the American Dream. If we do nothing,
if we turn a blind eye and say that we are not going to offer the same
bankruptcy option that every State has, we are turning our backs on our
fellow American citizens on the island, and that is not who we are. We
should stand together.
Now, there are others who have proposed different solutions for the
island, and those solutions involve a bailout without real structural
reform. I have got to tell you that, after the 2008 financial crisis, I
think Americans have had it up to here with bailouts. We usually go
with bankruptcy and financial reform, and that is what my bill does.
I would encourage all of my fellow Americans in this institution,
whether you are a conservative or a liberal, you are a Republican or a
Democrat, to note that our brothers and sisters, our fellow American
citizens in Puerto Rico, are going through tough times, and it is our
job to stand with them, not turn our backs.
If we can pass this bill, it is going to be a new day on the island,
economic prosperity and opportunity. And then people have a choice to
say: Do I want to stay on the island, raise my family on the island, or
do I want to leave and come to the mainland?
The choice is theirs. They won't be forced into that choice just
because they don't have opportunity on the island of Puerto Rico.
I encourage all of my colleagues and friends to reach out. Let's be
part of the solution.
Recovering America
Mr. FORTENBERRY. Mr. Speaker, as I walked through the airport
recently, I noticed a young teenager. She was traveling and was
seemingly happy to be involved in whatever activity she was going to.
She wore a button on her lapel. It said: What you do matters. It
caught my attention: What you do matters. I liked it. I am not sure
what was motivating her, but she wanted to communicate an important
value to elevate an ideal. I simply admired her willingness to take a
stand.
Mr. Speaker, I should say this now, though: There is a troubling
statistic out there, and a recent survey highlights this. A majority of
Americans do not identify with what America has become. Many people
feel our country is slipping away. In reality, most want to reclaim the
promise of our great Nation.
Contrary to the barrage of negativity, most people hope for
justifiable goals: to regain power over their own lives, to regain
power over the government, and to regain power over their own economic
prospects.
Mr. Speaker, one of the strengths of America's system of government
is its capacity for constant replenishment. Opportunities sometimes
present themselves unpredictably. That gives us a chance to reassess
and realign in new and compelling ways, both to preserve important
traditions as well as to restore the future promise of our Nation.
A stronger America might be glimpsed through what I call four
interlocking principles, the first of
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which is government decentralization; second, economic inclusion;
third, foreign policy realism; and, fourth, social conservation.
Let's take that first point. A return to a more decentralized
government will restore an important source of America's strength. When
the Federal Government grows beyond its effective purpose, it infringes
upon basic liberty, it stifles innovation, it crushes creativity, and
it impedes our responsibility for one another in the community.
A creeping tendency to nationalize every conceivable problem and
nationalizing every conceivable discussion erodes the community's
input. While the Federal Government does have an important central role
in maintaining the guardrails of societal stability, the rule of law,
and a fair opportunity economy, America's governing system is designed
to operate most effectively at varying levels. Those close to an
opportunity or those close to a problem ought to have the first
authority to seize the opportunity or to solve the problem.
Second: economic inclusion. Economic inclusion should help America
recover from an arthritic economy. You see, Mr. Speaker, when power
concentrates in a Washington Wall Street axis, where the transnational
corporation is an emerging ruling entity and where small business--the
source of most jobs in America--is suffocated under increasingly
complex dictates, the opportunity for a strong and vibrant marketplace
diminishes. A vibrant market actually expands the space for
constructive interdependency and community dynamism, fighting poverty,
and driving innovation.
Third: foreign policy realism. Foreign policy realism should chart a
new course between isolationism and over-interventionism. America has
an important leadership role to play on the world stage. Today,
however, many Americans are alarmed by an exhausted, drifting, and
often counterproductive foreign policy.
After World War II, America was cast in the role of the world's
superpower and at great sacrifice. We, as a country, created the space
for international order. But now we live in a multi-polar world. Other
countries, which we helped empower through our generous sacrifice, must
take a seat at the table of responsible nations.
{time} 1745
Leveraging America's strength through strategic international
partnerships will help us navigate a 21st century that is marked by
ever-shifting geopolitical frameworks.
The fourth point: social conservation. What does that mean? Social
conservation preserves the condition for order, for opportunity, and
for happiness.
We must fight back against dimming hope and diminishing opportunity
and darkening shadows. A healthy society depends upon more than
politics for the promotion of sustainable values. America has many
mediating institutions, as we call it--important civic institutions, if
you will--which uphold greater ideas.
As an example, Mr. Speaker, I am a proud, long-time member of the
Rotary Club in Lincoln, Nebraska. At every Rotary Club meeting across
this country, in which hundreds of thousands of Americans participate,
there hangs a banner at the front of the club, and it reads: ``Is it
true? Is it fair to all concerned? Will it build goodwill and better
friendships? Will it be beneficial to all concerned?''
Perfect. Beautiful. Perhaps we ought to hang the banner right here,
Mr. Speaker. That is a pretty good game plan.
As new leadership emerges on the national stage, perhaps this is the
moment to think critically about how we regain the high ground of
purposeful government, an opportunity economy, a balanced foreign
policy, and a flourishing culture in a good society. We need to play
all four quarters.
Ultimately, both the government and the marketplace are downstream
from our culture; and with a heavy heart, I say this--everyone knows
it--America's social fabric is fraying. Many people are experiencing
deepening anxiety about the future direction of the country. The recent
attack in San Bernardino has only intensified the feeling. A crazed
couple, driven by its twisted religious ideology, murdered
indiscriminately those at a social services center. It is a horrible
tragedy and a grotesque irony, and our hearts feel for those who were
so gravely harmed.
A genuine multiculturalism--long a hallmark of the American
experience--will continue to decay into discord unless two mutually
supporting conditions are sustained: a genuine appreciation of organic
differences and a binding substructure of universal ideals and shared
values. One such value is that we do no harm to others, and a religion
that teaches killing is no religion at all. Other important values
include trustworthiness, thrift, citizenship, courteousness, and so on.
By the way, Mr. Speaker, a helpful list of these ideals, of these
virtues, is found in the Boy Scout Law.
This values crisis is compounding this three-part problem of
government overreach, economic exclusion, and cultural dislocation. A
centralizing government seems decreasingly able to understand, much
less address, the needs of its citizens it should serve. In the midst
of this divisive political season, partisan dysfunction, and
bureaucratic inertia, it is all hindering the proper progress toward
addressing our country's most pressing problems, and it overshadows
important local initiatives where certain problems can best be solved.
Not everything is a Federal issue. A private sector which is
consolidating corporate power, often underwritten by the State, is
disenfranchising the small business sector. A loss of genuine choice
and genuine competition of economic pluralism reduces the ability of
people to participate, own, and innovate in a marketplace that is truly
free and can deliver widespread prosperity.
A culture of contrasting philosophies, more and more inflamed by
caustic rhetoric, is contributing to what some believe are
irreconcilable social divisions. An impoverished account of
individualism, of a liberty reduced to autonomous choice and divorced
of responsibility creates the conditions for social anarchy, which
further creates the conditions for counterproductive government
interventions, lawless overreach, and intrusive market manipulations.
Then add into this mix a confusing assortment of values choices that
are driven more by experimenting elites than by the stability of sound
tradition, and you have the recipe for harmful disruption. No wonder
there is so much sadness in the world.
As politicians and the media debate policy positions, we must
understand that authentic solutions involve a return to essential value
propositions. The application of proper principles to these problems
would enable us in Washington to better assuage widespread and
justifiable angst with appropriate government policy, with appropriate
government decentralization, and with dynamic economic inclusion,
supported by a hope-filled culture. That is our answer.
As you enter my State--I live in Nebraska--the sign reads: ``. . .
the good life.'' A good life is found in freedom and responsibility. A
just and orderly society is founded and sustained by persons who care.
What we all do does really matter, just like my young teenage friend--I
would like to call her a ``friend''--displayed in the airport recently.
Mr. Speaker, late this summer, before school began, I took my younger
children on a family trip to western Nebraska. Near Valentine,
Nebraska, which is in an area called the Sandhills, water from the
underground aquifer--it is called the Ogallala Aquifer--seeps out of
the ground and falls dramatically over rock formations and into a
stream that then feeds into the Niobrara River. The area is called Fort
Falls, and it is a part of the Fort Niobrara National Wildlife Refuge.
The stream's icy cold water flows like a river into the shallow warm
water that is running in the Niobrara. What is even more interesting to
ponder, as you look around, are the steep slopes on both sides of the
beautiful river. On the north bank, rocky hill formations are covered
with pine trees. On the south bank, the trees are much different. You
see the last reach of the eastern deciduous forest, with a mixed
variety of plants and hardwood trees just like you would see here in
Virginia. It looks like California on one side, and across the river
here in Virginia on the other. Right there, where
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I live in Nebraska, we are the geographic center of our country, where
east meets west.
As a part of that trip, we also took a drive northward into the State
of South Dakota, into the Black Hills, to a place called Mount
Rushmore. It happened to be the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally that weekend,
so I and about 2 million other bikers were on the road. Everyone knows
the four faces on Mount Rushmore. Each of the four American Presidents
embodied great qualities and faced significant challenges:
George Washington was a transcendent leader who purposefully walked
away from power, giving our early Republic a chance to grow into a
vibrant democracy;
Thomas Jefferson's life was seemingly full of conflicts and
contradictions, but his efforts gave rise to the Declaration of
Independence, which poetically expressed an understanding of the
dignity and the rights of all persons, which so beautifully still
informs our culture and our government to this day;
Abraham Lincoln made a midcourse correction in his life. He rejected
an early snarky, political, antagonistic attitude and turned toward a
vision of that which is noble and good. His reputation as a skillful
and humble leader extended well beyond the Civil War to many important
endeavors, including the development of land grant institutions all
over this country, like the University of Nebraska;
Theodore Roosevelt had to rebuild his life after his wife died at a
young age. His boundless energy, translating into multiple
accomplishments, perhaps helped him outpace a haunting melancholy from
which he suffered. As an avid hunter, he grew to recognize the
importance of wildlife preservation. Beyond the natural places that he
preserved, perhaps Roosevelt's greatest legacy was one of trust
busting--breaking up concentrations of economic power that locked so
many Americans out of a fair shot at economic opportunity.
Four great Presidents. Four men who sacrificed greatly to give us
what we have today.
Today, Mr. Speaker, many people in the country are experiencing a
serious disquiet about all of these challenges that we are facing. They
feel disconnected from the ability to control their own well-being.
These concentrations of power are overwhelming the capacity of
individuals to shape their own environments. Political and economic and
cultural cartels are growing more powerful, and, in some ways, they are
more hidden and destructive than in Roosevelt's time.
Of course, today, political problems are on everyone's mind. This
concentration of power stifles innovation and creativity; and as money
flows into the political system, it pays for the polarization which
hinders the ability of our body to find constructive solutions. This
transcends, by the way, the current partisan divide.
Our increasingly interconnected world offers significant benefits and
opportunities to us, but globalization also introduces forces that can
leave so many Americans feeling helpless. Transnational corporate
conglomerates, often buttressed by oligarchic political systems, are
shrinking the space for genuine choice and competition in the private
sphere. As I talked about earlier, the stress of small business is very
real. This concentration of economic power endangers true free market
principles, which should be working for the many.
On a deeper level, America's political disrepair and economic malaise
signal an underlying brokenness in our society, in our culture.
Persons--humans--thrive in relationships with our families and
communities in a healthy society, which creates the preconditions for
this human flourishing. Cultural consolidation and social discord have
left more and more people, again, feeling directionless and feeling
alone. Weakening relationships and weakening social institutions
foreshadow and prefigure political and economic problems. Ultimately,
renewing America--restoring America's government and economy--requires
reclaiming a vibrant civil society, which is the true source of our
Nation's strength.
Mr. Speaker, if you have ever driven through those Black Hills, which
I spoke of earlier--the one-lane tunnels and winding hairpin turns--
they form a very beautiful but a very arduous journey, even without all
the motorcycles around you. As you continue that journey, looking for
something, an opening then appears in the trees, and you see it--that
magnificent piece of art, carved in stone, with four of America's
greatest Presidents.
Their likenesses are in the rock, timeless and unchanging; but the
ideals they represent must be reestablished in each generation. The
renewal of America will depend, in large part, on whether or not we can
grasp what these leaders stood for and whether or not we can make the
sacrifices necessary to reclaim our country's potential in this time,
our time.
Mr. Speaker, what we all do matters.
I yield back the balance of my time.
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