[Congressional Record Volume 165, Number 193 (Wednesday, December 4, 2019)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6832-S6833]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                             National Debt

  Mr. LANKFORD. Mr. President, we have a debt issue in America. For 
some reason, we are losing track of that. The economy is so good right 
now. Unemployment is at historic numbers. The inflation numbers have 
stayed down. More Americans are bringing home more take-home pay, which 
means they can buy more stuff. More job opportunities are out there. In 
fact, we literally have 1.5 million more job openings in America than 
we have people looking for work in America.
  With the economy going so well right now, everyone is losing track of 
the debt and deficit, which are not going well right now. Last year, 
the Federal Treasury received more tax revenues than it has ever 
received in the history of the United States, which is surprising to 
some folks I have talked to who said that there was a big tax cut in 
2017, so that would mean tax revenue would go down. It didn't. It went 
up.
  When that tax cut occurred, more people were able to bring home more 
money and to spend more, which created more jobs. There was more 
investment, and the economy charged up. So we actually have more 
revenue coming in now than we used to have, but we still have a 
trillion-dollar deficit. That is the amount of overspending in a single 
year. We have the highest amount of revenue we have ever had. Yet we 
have epic levels of deficit spending, adding to $23 trillion in total 
debt as a nation--$23 trillion. It is a number none of us can even 
fathom.
  We are approaching a time when it would take the income of every 
single American for the entire year to be collected as taxes to pay off 
our debt. We are at 95 percent total debt to GDP. These kinds of 
numbers can't be sustained, and everyone quietly knows it in the back 
of their mind, but dealing with debt and deficit seem to be something 
we will deal with in the future--someday, someday, someday.
  I am here to encourage this body to say that we should be taking on 
the issues of debt and deficit now. The two things that have to occur 
in order to get on top of our debt and deficit are to get a growing 
economy with growing revenues--we have that now--and then we have to 
deal with Federal spending.
  What would it take to manage Federal spending? We are so far out of 
balance. A trillion dollars--literally we could shut down the entire 
Department of Defense, the Department of Education, the State 
Department--we could close down every single one of those, and we still 
wouldn't balance in a year. And no one would propose doing that. There 
is no 1-year fix to trying to get on top of our deficit; this will be a 
multiyear process.
  Just to state how bad it has become, if we chipped away at our 
deficit for the next 10 years--for 10 years, chipped away at our 
deficit to get us back to just balance--and then we had a $100 billion 
surplus the next year, which would be an enormous surplus, with a $100 
billion surplus--it would take us 230 years in a row of having a $100 
billion surplus in our Treasury just to deal with our debt. It would 
take 230 years in a row of $100 billion surpluses.
  Again, we are not just out of balance; we are way out of balance. 
There is no one secret thing we can do to get us back on track, but we 
do need to get started. That is why our team puts out something we call 
``Federal Fumbles.'' The ``Federal Fumbles'' guide is something we put 
out every single year. It is just a group of ideas. It is no magic 
bullet. It is just something our office puts out that looks at areas of 
inefficiency across the Federal Government and ask: Why is this 
happening the way it is happening, and what would happen if we continue 
doing the same things we are doing? Are there areas where we can save 
money and that we would be OK with as a group?
  We are not trying to put out partisan ideas; we are just putting out 
ideas. Quite frankly, the ``Federal Fumbles'' guide is not a 
confrontation for this body; it is the opening salvo in a conversation. 
We are bringing our ideas. You may have different ideas. Great. Bring 
yours. Let's try to figure out how to solve this together because this 
last year, we paid $371 billion just in interest payments on our debt. 
This fiscal year, we paid $423 billion just in interest. That is $423 
billion that is not going to healthcare, transportation, the basic 
structure of our government, or the national defense. It is $423 
billion spent on interest payments, and it just goes away.
  We are asking questions as we put out this Federal Fumbles guide. How 
do we solve this? What are some ideas?
  We have simple questions such as, why did the Social Security office 
pay $11.6 million to deceased beneficiaries in Puerto Rico?
  We ask questions such as, why did the government pay almost half a 
billion dollars last year on temporary tents--not buying them, renting 
temporary tents--along our southern border? Was there a better way that 
could have been done other than half a billion dollars in cost?
  We have some questions about the 21 government shutdowns that have 
occurred in the last 40 years, including the one earlier this year. 
That shutdown cost the Federal taxpayer over $4 billion.
  We ask straightforward questions about things like tax credits. If 
you like the Tesla that you pull up next to

[[Page S6833]]

at a stoplight and you gaze at its beauty and think that is a beautiful 
car, well, great, I am glad you like it because you helped pay for it. 
All of those Teslas that are on the road--$7,500 of the cost of that 
Tesla was paid by you, the Federal taxpayer. So what you should do at a 
stoplight is roll down your window and say to the person driving the 
Tesla: It is my turn. I helped pay for the car. Why don't you let me 
drive it for the rest of the day?
  We ask questions about grants for such things as sea lions in Russia 
because the U.S. taxpayer gave almost $2 million to study sea lions in 
Russia last year. We spent $600,000 doing a documentary on Joseph 
Stalin. We spent a big chunk of money actually studying the Russian flu 
in 1889. Why did we do that?
  Some of these things are small, and some of them are large.
  We laid out a proposal dealing with prescription drugs because the 
way the tiering is done on prescription drugs now costs the Federal 
taxpayer $22 billion. That is because generic drugs were placed on a 
higher cost branded tier, so the Federal taxpayer and the consumer end 
up paying not the generic price but the more expensive branded price 
when they could have paid the lower price. That is a cost of $22 
billion for just that one piece.
  We laid out a whole set of ideas and said: Let's just look at them 
together.
  This Congress passed $380 million that was sent out to the States to 
help with election security. After the Russians were clearly trying to 
interfere with our elections in 2016, we decided to do something about 
it to help our States. So $380 million was sent out to the States to do 
the work that was needed to be done to upgrade election security 
equipment and to be prepared for 2020.
  As of this last July, of the $380 million sent to the States, the 
States have only spent a little over $100 million. They have literally 
banked the other $250 million and just saved it and said: We will use 
it sometime. The 2020 elections are coming. The money was allocated, 
but it has not actually been spent and used for election security.
  We want to highlight issues and find ways to solve them. We didn't 
try to bring partisan ideas; we just brought ideas.
  This is our fifth volume. We have had other editions that dealt with 
other issues that need to be resolved. In the back of the book, we 
actually put out what we call the ``Touchdowns'' and the forward 
progress. These are some of the things we listed in previous versions 
that we actually looked at and can say we have made some progress on 
these things in trying to actually solve them. That is because at times 
we complain about what is happening in government, but we don't 
identify the good things, and there are a lot of good things that are 
actually happening.
  This Senate passed the GREAT Act. The GREAT Act dramatically 
increases the way we handle data on grants. About $600 billion a year 
in the Federal Government is spent just on grants. We think there needs 
to be greater oversight on that, and this Senate has agreed. This 
Senate has sent the GREAT Act over to the House and has said: Let's try 
to resolve how we can be more effective in how we do grants and be more 
transparent in the process and streamline the data itself to make it 
easier on those requesting a grant, as well as allowing for more 
transparency in where the Federal dollars are going. We don't want to 
just complain about the way grants are done; we want to try to actually 
fix it.
  We highlight multiple other areas where we have made real progress in 
the past year tackling some of the things we have listed in previous 
versions of ``Federal Fumbles.''
  But I do want to remind this body that while we talk about some of 
these hard issues, we often break into Republican-Democratic fights 
over hard issues. America is more than an economy, and while the 
economy is extremely important, we are Americans. We are Americans 
together. While we struggle to deal with hard issues, such as debt and 
deficit and what is going to be done to resolve this, we just can't 
conveniently go into our corners and make speeches and say that we have 
tried; we have to sit down and do hard things and do hard things 
together.
  That is why we are opening this conversation. That is why we keep 
this conversation going, because I do believe that while the economy is 
important, who we are and how we value each other is just as important 
because we have the responsibility to solve this. Again, other offices 
may have other ideas on how to resolve it. Great. Let's bring all those 
ideas together. Let's get 100 books like this, and everyone bring their 
ideas. Then let's actually do the work to solve this in the future.
  We are Americans. We do hard things. This one is going to be hard, 
and it is going to take a long time, but it doesn't get easier if we 
don't start, and it doesn't get done until we begin. So I am 
challenging us today to begin. Let's deal with the ways we have fumbled 
the ball in the past, and let's solve our debt and deficit together 
over the years into the future.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  The Senator from Ohio.