[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 127 (Thursday, July 27, 2017)]
[House]
[Pages H6470-H6471]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE GOP'S FAILURE TO GOVERN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Maryland (Mr. Hoyer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. HOYER. Mr. Speaker, it is now 7 months since the start of the
115th Congress, and 6 months since Republicans have controlled all the
levers of power of our government, and all we have seen are broken
promises.
Donald Trump and our Republican colleagues in Congress ran on a
platform that included healthcare for everyone, massive investments in
infrastructure, tax reform, and a dramatic increase in jobs.
On all four of these, there has been zero progress, zero legislation
sent to the President, and zero effort to work with Democrats to
achieve any of those objectives.
Donald Trump promised voters that he would be ``the greatest job
President that God ever created.''
{time} 1015
Yet neither he nor the Republican congressional leadership have put
forward a comprehensive jobs bill. Instead, he and his Republican
allies in the Congress have proposed budgets that would slash
investments in education, infrastructure, and research, all areas that
directly help our economy create jobs.
In fact, jobs that the President claimed to have saved are going
overseas. Forecasters are now predicting slower economic growth, and
manufacturing average weekly earnings have
[[Page H6471]]
only grown half as fast as earnings across the private sector as a
whole over the past 6 months.
When it comes to healthcare, it hasn't just been the broken promise
of insurance for everyone. It has been a nonstop roller coaster of
legislative proposals, all of which would strip coverage away from tens
of millions of Americans, raise costs, and deny coverage for those with
preexisting conditions.
On tax reform, all we have seen is a one-page outline and a budget
proposal with reconciliation instructions setting up a process for
jamming a partisan tax reform bill through Congress. That is a
nonstarter, because to be successful any tax reform legislation must be
bipartisan, as was the 1986 tax reform under President Reagan and
Speaker O'Neill.
To top it all off, we considered and are considering this week an
appropriations minibus without even having had a budget on this floor
some 88 days after it was due. The Republicans promised regular order.
In fact, they are pursuing no order. Republicans haven't even bothered
to pass a budget, which is what we are supposed to do in the House
before moving to appropriations.
So, Mr. Speaker, at the 6-month mark, we have only seen gridlock, no
progress, chaos, and broken promises. Even some Republican Members--and
perhaps many Republican Members--are growing as frustrated as the
American people their party has failed.
Representative Steve Womack from Arkansas said late last month that:
``We'd better get our act together. We're not governing right now. We
are stuck.''
And Representative Tom Reed of New York said: ``The fact that we are
not getting to these issues--healthcare, budget, tax reform--is
frustrating. We came here to move the needle.''
So what I am saying has been said by my Republican colleagues as
well. Perhaps Representative Tom Massie put it most succinctly when he
tweeted about his Republican colleagues: ``They confuse activity with
progress.''
Republicans, Mr. Speaker, have failed to address the challenges
facing the American people, and they have done nothing to improve the
lives of those working hard to make it in American.
We should be considering legislation to create jobs and grow the
economy. We should be working to improve and strengthen the Affordable
Care Act, not replace it. That would be consistent with some three-
quarters of Americans who believe that is what we ought to be doing. We
should be working in a bipartisan way to reform our Tax Code and
promote competitiveness for our American businesses that are competing
in world markets.
Growth, job creation, as well as fiscal sustainability, that is what
we should be seeking in a tax bill. We should be investing in
infrastructure that lures jobs back home from overseas. And, Mr.
Speaker, we should be returning to regular order and an open process
that Republicans have abandoned to the detriment of legislation and to
our country. There have been more closed rules in this 7 months than
have occurred in my 36 years in the Congress of the United States.
Mr. Speaker, the American people need a better deal, a better deal
than they have gotten over the last 7 months. Seven months into this
Congress, it is clear that House Republicans are not on the side of
working people. In the words of New York Times columnist David Brooks,
one of the most conservative columnists at The New York Times, last
week he said this: ``Republicans offer nothing but negativity,
detachment, absence, and an ax.''
Democrats, on the other hand, are offering the American people, as I
said, a better deal, one focused on helping all of our people--Make It
In America--better jobs, better wages, and, yes, a better future. It is
what Democrats have always done when Democrats have been entrusted to
lead. There is a history, a track record to back it up.
Mr. Speaker, I want to show my colleagues that rhetoric is cheap--or
talk is cheap, as we say--but performance is really what we ought to
look to. I want to bring some charts here to the attention of our
colleagues--and, indeed, to the American people as well--to what
Democrats have always done.
This chart, number one, shows that Democrats perform better on
economic growth. Now, that is easy to say, but this graph shows exactly
from Truman to Obama, the blue. You can see under Eisenhower, economic
growth was about a third, or maybe 40 percent. Kennedy-Johnson and
Johnson much greater than Nixon and Nixon-Ford. Carter, greater than
either Nixon or Nixon-Ford. And Carter, to the surprise of many, had
just about the same GDP growth as Reagan, of which my Republican
friends proudly talk. And then what happened under Bush I? Down. Then
what happened under Clinton? Up, GDP growth. Under Bush II, down; under
Obama, up.
That is not campaign rhetoric. Those are the statistics that show
that the economy has performed better under Democrats.
Now, Democrats perform better on the stock market, the stock market
whom, Mr. Trump, likes to point to today. It is doing well. Why?
Because the Obama economy, as you just saw, was doing well and the
expectations were good.
If you look at this chart, things were better on the stock market
under the Democrats. Truman, greater growth in the stock market,
Eisenhower less. Kennedy-Johnson, Johnson up; Nixon down. Nixon-Ford--
Nixon-Ford had negative growth in the stock market, and then Carter,
growth. And, yes, Reagan and Bush I had growth, but guess what. Then
Clinton had better growth. And then guess what. Bush II, again, like
Nixon-Ford, negative growth in the stock market.
What did that mean? That meant 401(k)s were worth less for retired
people, and their security was less secure because the stock market
went in the tank. And then what happened under Obama? The stock market
went up.
Now, lastly, I wanted to show this statistic. And this is a stark
statistic because it shows that, under Democratic Presidents, every
segment, every wage level in America saw appreciation. Now, this only
goes back to 1967.
So if we go to the lowest quintile, it went up higher under Democrats
than Republicans in every quintile. And guess what. The highest
quintile did better under Democrats, just as the lower quintile did
better. But what you see is everybody did better. The only negative, of
course, was under Republicans, where the second quintile went down over
their years in office.
So if you compare all of these, Mr. Speaker, it is not campaign
rhetoric. It is not rhetoric on this floor, but it is economic facts,
economic statistics. Economic reports show that, when we promised a
better deal, we delivered a better deal.
So as we look back on the past 6 months of Republicans' broken
promises and failures to govern, let's remember there is, indeed, a
better deal to be had. Democrats are ready to work with our Republican
colleagues and with the administration to make progress.
Mr. Speaker, I have been here 36 years, and one of the things I am
proudest of, my Republican colleagues, many of them say: ``Hoyer will
work with us in a way to compromise and make progress for our
country.'' But if our Republican colleagues continue to be unwilling to
work in a bipartisan way, we are going to offer a clear and proven
alternative--a proven alternative.
I hope my Republican colleagues will return from the August district
work period ready to ensure that the American people get a better deal
and work with us constructively to get them that better deal.
____________________