[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 7 (Tuesday, January 12, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S42-S43]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE STATE OF THE UNION
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I appreciate the Senator from Missouri, Mr.
Blunt, addressing some of the issues that the Republican majority has
attempted to accomplish, including the advances made over the last
year, which I think will lay a foundation for the future and for
further successes in the coming year.
Tonight President Obama will come to Congress to deliver his final
State of the Union Address, which raises this question: What is the
state of our Union? The truth is that while the strength and spirit of
the American people remain a beacon of hope for our future, our country
is facing a number of serious challenges. Global unrest has grown over
the course of the President's administration, most notably with the
rise of ISIS, one of the most brutal terrorist groups in existence.
On President Obama's watch, we have experienced the worst economic
recovery since the Eisenhower administration, with stagnant wages and
millions dropping out of the labor force. American families are seeing
their dreams for the future erode as they struggle under ever-
increasing government burdens and a lack of economic opportunity.
Any serious discussion of the state of our Union needs to address
these challenges and offer solutions. That is the kind of speech that I
wish we were going to hear tonight, but unfortunately all indicators
suggest that is not the kind of speech the President plans to give.
Instead, the President apparently intends to take a victory lap despite
the fact that the American people clearly don't think there is much to
celebrate. A recent New York Times/CBS News poll found that 68 percent
of the American people think our country is on the wrong track, and
most Americans believe the next generation will be worse off, not
better off.
In a preview of the President's speech, the White House notes: ``We
have made extraordinary progress on the path to a stronger country and
a brighter future.'' That is not how the American people are feeling,
and it doesn't reflect the reality of the President's administration.
The President plans to talk about his supposed economic successes
tonight. While our economy has recovered to a certain extent since the
recession, it has never fully rebounded. Wage growth continues to lag.
December marked the 77th straight month in which year-over-year hourly
wage growth was at or below 2\1/2\ percent. Underemployment also
continues to be a problem with millions of Americans continuing to work
part-time jobs because they can't find full-time work. Almost 5 years
after the recession ended, the percentage of Americans working full
time has still not returned to prerecession levels.
While the most commonly mentioned unemployment rate is 5 percent, the
U-6 unemployment rate, which measures the number of both unemployed
workers and underemployed workers, is 9.9 percent. Of the unemployed,
those who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more, or those
considered long-term unemployed, make up 26 percent. Labor force
participation remains near record lows. In short, stagnation has become
the new normal for the economy under the Obama administration and
economic opportunities for families have been few and far between.
In addition to the lack of economic opportunity, families have had to
shoulder new burdens thanks to the Obama administration. Chief among
those burdens, of course, is ObamaCare, the President's disastrous
health care law, which has failed to reduce the cost of health care,
ripped away millions of Americans' preferred health care plans, forced
families onto insurance plans they don't want and can't afford, reduced
patients' access to doctors and hospitals, increased taxes, and wasted
literally billions of taxpayer dollars.
Then there are the burdensome regulations the Obama administration
has imposed, which have made it more challenging for businesses, large
and small, to grow and create jobs.
The Obama Environmental Protection Agency, in particular, has done
more than its fair share to make things difficult for Americans. During
the course of the Obama administration, this Agency has implemented one
damaging rule after another, from a massive national backdoor energy
tax that would hurt poor and working families the most to a new rule
that would subject ponds and puddles in Americans' backyards to a
complex array of expensive and burdensome regulatory requirements.
Again and again, I have heard from South Dakota farm and ranch
families, homeowners and small businesses about the difficulties they
are facing thanks to the Obama EPA's massive regulations.
If the President's record on the economy and middle-class opportunity
is
[[Page S43]]
bad, his record on foreign policy is even worse. A White House preview
of the State of the Union touts the President's work to ``redefine
American leadership for the 21st century.'' During the President's last
year in office the White House says: ``We can show the world what is
possible when America truly leads.''
Republicans couldn't agree more that America should truly lead. The
problem is that the President's first 7 years in office have generally
been distinguished by a lack of leadership. Back in June, former
President and fellow Democrat Jimmy Carter described President Obama's
successes on the world stage as ``minimal.'' He said: ``On the world
stage, just to be as objective about it as I can, I can't think of many
nations in the world where we have a better relationship now than we
did when he took over.'' Again, that was a quote from former Democratic
President Jimmy Carter. Well, neither can I.
The White House claims that the President ended two wars. Yet it
neglects to mention that since the United States withdrew from Iraq,
large sections of the country have gone into chaos thanks to ISIS. The
President's failure to enforce his redline in Syria when President
Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons on his own people and the
President's lack of a strategy to defeat ISIS have contributed to a
massive refugee crisis with no easy solution. Meanwhile, Assad remains
in power, and ISIS continues to thrive.
With the terrorist attacks in Paris, ISIS officially expanded its
theater of operations beyond the Middle East. As we witnessed in the
case of the San Bernardino shooting, as long as ISIS continues to
exist, its demented ideology will inspire disturbed individuals to
commit acts of terror. The United States is in desperate need of a
comprehensive strategy to confront the threat posed by ISIS. Yet the
President has so far made no move to develop one.
On another foreign policy front, the President has repeatedly touted
his nuclear deal with Iran as one of the major foreign policy
achievements of his Presidency. Yet the agreement he signed actually
improves Iran's long-term prospects for developing a bomb. In a clear
violation of U.N. restrictions, Iran tested a ballistic missile,
demonstrating once again that it has in no way curbed its aggressive
behavior. Elsewhere, Russian aggression has increased on the
President's watch. North Korea recently conducted yet another nuclear
test.
The Obama administration has left the American people with a host of
problems at home and abroad, but once again, it sounds like President
Obama's State of the Union Address will fail to offer any substantial
solutions. More than that, it sounds as if the President will largely
ignore the problems, and that is unfortunate.
The President is missing an opportunity to offer substantial
solutions before turning the problems of his administration over to his
successors. I don't want to give credence to those Obama administration
accusations that the Republicans are all ``doom and gloom.'' As I said,
I believe the strength and spirit of the American people mean that the
future of America is always bright. But realizing that future requires
understanding and developing solutions to the problems facing our
Nation, and that is something the President has been unwilling to do.
Republicans have worked hard over the past year to make our economy
stronger, our government more efficient and accountable, and our Nation
and our world safer and more secure. But there is a lot more work that
needs to be done, and we need a partner in the White House who is
willing to meet us half way. We hope the President will use the last
year of his Presidency to work with us as we seek to address the
challenges that are facing the American people.
I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for
the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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