[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[House]
[Pages H1806-H1807]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FAILURE TO PASS A BUDGET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Connecticut (Ms. Esty) for 5 minutes.
Ms. ESTY. Madam Speaker, last Friday, this House blew right through
the statutory deadline to enact a budget resolution.
Let's set aside, for a moment, the fact that passing a budget last
Friday was required by law. The real injustice to the American people
is that Congress has once again failed to fulfill the most basic
responsibilities that the American people sent us here to carry out.
A budget is supposed to reflect the values of the American people. It
should be a roadmap of Congress' plan for supporting working families,
creating middle class jobs, and strengthening our education system. It
should be a roadmap for lifting barriers to opportunity, supporting our
Nation's innovators, and helping startups and small businesses to get
off the ground. It should be a roadmap for keeping Americans safe at
home and abroad.
Now, let's be clear. The proposal that came out of the Budget
Committee did none of these things. Dismantling Medicare won't improve
our economic security. Abandoning public schools won't lift barriers to
opportunity.
But the way forward is not to simply throw up our hands and abandon
the budget process entirely. A budget is not a political exercise. We
don't pass budgets when doing so is easy and walk away from our jobs
when it gets hard.
Republicans and Democrats need to come together to craft a budget
that reflects the priorities of the American people, a bipartisan
budget that envisions a smarter, leaner government, one that creates
predictability and support for good-paying jobs and increases
opportunity for all.
{time} 1015
We need a budget to rebuild America by investing in our
transportation and infrastructure. I worked very hard to successfully
pass the 5-year highway bill that was signed into law late last year.
But according to the American Society of Civil Engineers, the United
States needs to invest more than $3.6 trillion by 2020 to bring our
infrastructure up to basic standards.
Nowhere is this truer than in my home State of Connecticut where we
have some of the oldest infrastructure in the country and where we rely
on Federal funding to fix crumbling roads, bridges, and transit
systems.
Our budget should encourage innovation and entrepreneurship.
Connecticut has a long, proud manufacturing tradition. We are home to
5,000 manufacturers, many of them small and family owned, and I know
they can compete with anyone if they have a level playing field. We
need a budget that helps us create one.
Supporting innovators means investing not just in infrastructure, but
in
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infostructure, our electrical grid and the physical building blocks of
the Internet, which are vital to the success of startups and small
businesses throughout the country.
Madam Speaker, in Connecticut and around the Nation, we need a budget
that invests in STEM education and 21st century jobs, commits to
growing our manufacturing sector, and provides the resources we need to
fight the opioid epidemic that is tearing apart so many families.
The American public wants to see Congress take bold action. Our
budget should set us on a path to leadership in today's and tomorrow's
global economy.
A budget is much more than a statement of principles. It is a roadmap
to lifting barriers to opportunity. It is an investment in our
infrastructure and in the research and development we need to power
21st century careers. It is an investment in the American people.
It is time that we in this House put our responsibility to the
American people before partisanship and political games. When the
people we represent at home stop doing their jobs, they don't get paid.
In Congress, we should work the same way. We should pass the No
Budget, No Pay Act because Members of Congress should only get paid
when they do their jobs. If we worked under No Budget, No Pay, I
guarantee you the House would have passed a budget last Friday.
So I call on my colleagues. Let's do the job the American people sent
us here to do. Let's do the job we are paid to do. Let's go to the
table--Democrats and Republicans--and hammer out a budget that supports
good-paying jobs, grows our economy, keeps us safe, and truly reflects
the priorities of the American people.
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