[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 90 (Wednesday, May 24, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H4508-H4509]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BROKEN PROMISES OF THE TRUMP BUDGET
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, yesterday President Trump laid out his budget
request for next year. It represents the most draconian disinvestment
in our country by any President in modern history, and it is littered
with broken promises and fundamental errors in simple math.
It is a budget that makes very clear that this President is not
fighting for working Americans and their families, and, in fact, he is
breaking his promises to make their lives better. It is shockingly
devoid of the basic policy details necessary to back up its deficit-
cutting bravado. It includes an accounting discrepancy so large--over
$2 trillion--that it can only be characterized as willfully hiding the
ball from the American public, an exercise in extreme incompetence, or
both.
The purpose of a budget is to lay out the most complete description
of a President's governing vision for the country. By that measure and
many others, this budget is an embarrassment. It is no wonder that it
has already been panned by Members on both sides of the aisle in this
House. My Republican friend, Representative Mike Simpson, was
absolutely right when he said of proposals like this one that the House
can't pass this budget. Nor will it. It is dead on arrival in Congress
because Democrats and Republicans both understand that we can't provide
economic security to the American people and keep them safe from
threats if we gut our investments in doing both. That is what the
President's budget would do.
As The Washington Post eloquently pointed out, the Trump budget ``is
fundamentally at odds with what Trump told voters.'' President Trump
promised middle class American workers he would fight for them and
their families. If implemented, his budget would make it harder for
them to send their kids to college, access job training to get ahead,
or even just stay in the middle class, and devastate seniors' long-term
care. The dramatic cuts he makes to nutrition assistance, elimination
of heating assistance during the winter months and Meals on Wheels will
hit low-income Americans and seniors hard, particularly in rural
communities.
And those, Mr. Speaker, are just a selection. He is breaking his
campaign promise not to cut Medicaid and Social Security, taking $1.4
trillion out of Medicaid over the next 10 years, without offering a
policy to achieve those cuts, and slashing funds for the
Social Security disability insurance programs that serve 10 million
Americans. Frankly, the President made fun of those with disabilities
during the course of the campaign, and now he cuts billions of dollars
from the ability of the disabled to maintain some degree of dignity and
health.
President Trump also pledged that the American taxpayer would not
pay--would not pay--for the border wall he wants to build. Of course,
his budget asks the U.S. taxpayer to pay for that wall. When it comes
to keeping Americans safe from threats overseas, President Trump's
budget fails miserably as well, cutting the budgets for diplomacy and
foreign aid that complement the work of our military in combating ISIS
and other terror groups. Additionally, it punishes middle class Federal
employees in every congressional district in our country for choosing
to serve their country by cutting their pay and retirement benefits.
One after another, the budget breaks the President's promises. At
every turn, it undermines our long-term security and prosperity by
ignoring the critical lessons from past Republican administrations when
it comes to basic economics. Like past Republican budgets, the Trump
budget relies on discredited theories of how economic growth would
result from tax policies. Unlike past attempts, however, the Trump
budget double counts its fantasy supply side boost in an accounting
error so large it could pay for the Pentagon 3 years over.
Mr. Speaker, we know this budget will go nowhere in Congress. I
believe there will not be a Republican in the House of Representatives,
Mr. Speaker,
[[Page H4509]]
who will offer this budget on the floor of this House. It does tell us,
however, a lot about this President and his priorities. Former Vice
President Biden has been known to say: ``Don't tell me what you value.
Show me your budget.''
President Trump has now shown us his budget, and none of us should be
surprised. So now it is up to Democrats and Republicans in this House
and in the Senate to work together to agree on a budget resolution and
move appropriations bills through regular order. Let us hope we can do
that. The American public would expect us to do that, and our country
needs us to do that.
We must not disinvest in those things that have made America great
and will enable us to lay the groundwork for another century of
American leadership.
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