[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 83 (Thursday, May 13, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2500-S2501]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                                 CHINA

  Mr. McCONNELL. Mr. President, on an entirely different matter, while 
Senators were back in our home States last week, the Washington Post 
ran this headline: ``Chinese greenhouse gas emissions now larger than 
those of developed countries combined.'' Let me say that again. 
``Chinese greenhouse gas emissions now larger than those of developed 
countries combined.''
  China is out-emitting the United States, India, and the entire 
European Union combined. They are now responsible for more than one-
fourth of the entire world's emissions. Beijing admits they aren't even 
planning for their emissions to start declining for another decade.
  It is a clear reality check: No matter how much self-inflicted pain 
the far left might want to impose on American workers and families, it 
would barely make any dent in the global calculus. Remember, with the 
United States outside the Paris Agreement, our emissions fell on our 
own even as our economy grew. Meanwhile, countries inside the deal, 
like China, have kept roaring right on by.
  Strangely, this didn't stop the Biden administration from rushing to 
rejoin the failed deal. This is just one of the ways in which American 
competitiveness has recently seemed to take a back seat.
  This White House canceled a pipeline project that would have 
increased energy security and supported thousands of American jobs. 
They froze exploration of domestic resources that helped our Nation 
become a net energy exporter for the first time since the 1950s.
  After we just spent 4 years beginning to rebuild and modernize our 
national defense, this administration indicated they will propose to 
cut defense spending after inflation--fewer resources for our troops, 
fewer tools to keep pace with China. They want to play year-to-

[[Page S2501]]

year games while our adversaries and competitors plan years and decades 
in advance.
  As former Defense Secretary Bob Gates put it in an interview this 
week, cutting spending on our military would be ``a terrible mistake.'' 
That is President Obama's Defense Secretary, Bob Gates.
  There could not be a more dangerous approach for the United States--
shortchanging the Pentagon and making America less competitive.
  The first draft of the so-called jobs bill that the White House put 
forward would play into the same dangerous dynamic. I am talking about 
the multitrillion-dollar proposal that spends less than 6 percent--less 
than 6 percent--on roads and bridges, the plan that Ivy League 
economists say would cost hundreds of billions of dollars more than the 
White House says; push American workers' wages down; and somehow manage 
to shrink our economy despite taxing, borrowing, and spending trillions 
more dollars. That is not a plan to make America stronger and more 
competitive; it is a plan to pile up debt to leave us even weaker. It 
would be better news for Beijing than for our own citizens.
  That is the bad news. The good news is that the Senate can do better. 
This body has long tackled real infrastructure on a commonsense, 
bipartisan basis and ended up with bills that passed by big, lopsided, 
bipartisan votes. That is what we Republicans are prepared to do again. 
That is the path I discussed with President Biden at the White House 
just yesterday. It was a good meeting. That is the road that the 
practical proposal from Senator Capito and a number of my fellow 
Republican Senators would begin to take us down.
  If our Democratic friends are finally ready to reach across the aisle 
and work together to locate common ground, I am hopeful we can do a lot 
of good for the country and compete with China for real

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