[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 163 (Tuesday, September 21, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6561-S6563]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                           Government Funding

  Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, there has been a good discussion already on 
the floor this morning--I was listening to my colleague, the Democratic 
whip--discussing the upcoming challenges that we face this fall. We 
have got to fund the government, we are facing the debt limit issue, 
and of course the Democrats' reckless tax-and-spending-spree proposal 
that we will have to deal with at some point too.
  The issue that has been raised is, why wouldn't Republicans want to 
help raise the debt limit? And I think the answer is very simple. The 
Democrats control the entire government here. They control the House, 
they control the Senate, they control the White House, and they have a 
procedure here in the Senate that enables them to raise the debt limit 
with 51 votes. They don't need a single Republican vote to raise the 
debt limit.
  They keep arguing that, well, in the past, there have been, you know, 
previous times when the debt limit has been a bipartisan issue. And in 
most cases, those were times, of course, when there was divided 
government and there was actually negotiation over these issues, which 
there isn't right now. I mean, this tax-and-spending spree being 
proposed by the Democrats is the largest expansion of government as a 
percentage of GDP, I believe, in history--certainly going back to the 
1930s.
  But there is no question that this is a blowout spending bill that 
the Democrats have decided to do all on their own. Not a single 
Republican will vote for it.
  And so the debt increase that would accommodate all of that 
additional spending--the massive amount of spending, in some cases 
financed with tax increases--but that is another issue, and I am going 
to get to that in just a minute. But the amount of debt that would be 
added as a result of the $3.5 trillion the Democrats want to spend, on 
top of the $2 trillion that they spent earlier this year in February--
again, done all on Democrat vote; no Republicans participated in that--
is a very, very different scenario than when there have been in the 
past attempts to actually work in a bipartisan way.
  My colleague from Illinois mentioned the fact of the increase in the 
debt under the previous administration--what the level had been, 
somewhere on the order of 6 or $6.5 trillion--and I have to remind 
people that 4.5 trillion of that was negotiated in response to the 
crisis of the pandemic. And that was a negotiation between Republicans 
and Democrats, where both sides sat together and said, ``We have to do 
something; we have to react in a quick way, a bold way, to what is 
happening around the country,'' and created programs like the PPP 
program, which helped a lot of small businesses survive, helped with 
payments to healthcare providers for PPE and other costs to get them 
through this, money for vaccines, money for people who had been 
unemployed as a consequence of the pandemic. These were all costs 
associated with the pandemic that were negotiated in a bipartisan way, 
Republicans and Democrats working together.
  What we have in front of us right now is the Democrats proposing the 
biggest expansion of government probably in the history of this 
country. And if you look at what they are calling $3.5 trillion, a lot 
of outside groups, like the Committee for Responsible Federal 
Government, say it is $5.5 trillion. Either way, it is a massive amount 
of spending, all of which would dramatically increase the size of the 
government in this country and people's dependence upon government. I 
call it the ``free everything'' bill because, essentially, that is what 
it is.
  What I would simply suggest to my colleagues on the other side of the 
aisle is that if you want to spend $3.5 trillion or $5.5 trillion--
whatever that number is--and you want to do it with 51 votes, without 
any discussion or negotiation or attempt to even reach out to 
Republicans on this, then, you ought to do it.
  Republicans were in the room. They negotiated a bipartisan 
infrastructure bill, $1.2 trillion, that passed here with 69 votes, and 
would pass overwhelmingly, I think, in the House, unless coupled with 
this massive spending bill, and then it would be signed into law by

[[Page S6562]]

the President. That is an example of what can happen when you sit down 
and negotiate.
  On this other $3.5 trillion they have decided to do, they have 
decided to expand massively the size of the Federal Government, and to 
do that, they are going to add to the Federal debt. And it seems pretty 
straightforward, I think--and I think most Americans would understand--
that if you control the entire government--the House, the Senate, and 
the White House--and it is all your spending that is going to be 
necessary or that is going to be responsible for requiring an increase 
in the debt limit, then you ought to do it with Democrat votes. I think 
that is a perfect way of looking at this that would fit with the views 
of where most Americans are, most of whom, I believe, don't want to see 
their Federal Government going another $3.5 trillion into debt or 
massively expanding the size of the Federal Government at a time when 
inflation is already out of control.
  I want to speak to that because inflation is rapidly becoming a 
serious problem. Currently, inflation is near a 13-year high. It has 
outstripped wage growth for many Americans, including the lowest 
earning workers. In other words, the rise in the price of everything 
from goods to groceries has resulted in a de facto pay cut for American 
workers.
  So why are we experiencing this level of inflation? Well, as I 
mentioned, one reason is Democrats' decision in March to flood the 
economy with unnecessary government spending. President Biden and 
congressional Democrats took office mere weeks after Congress had 
approved a fifth--fifth--bipartisan COVID relief bill. And it was 
abundantly clear that we were not in immediate need of trillions more 
in government spending. But that didn't matter. It didn't matter to 
Democrats.
  Now that they were in control of Congress and the White House, they 
wanted to take advantage of the COVID crisis. So in the name of COVID 
relief, they pushed through a massive partisan piece of legislation, 
filled with unnecessary spending and handouts to Democrat interests 
groups. Schools, which had barely touched the tens of billions they had 
already been given, got billions more. State governments, the majority 
of which did not need more government assistance, got access to a 
staggering--staggering--$350 billion slush fund. Labor unions were made 
eligible for loans that were designed to rescue Main Street small 
businesses. And I could go on.
  At the time, Republicans warned about the bill's level of spending. 
And we weren't alone. More than one liberal economist warned that 
pouring that much money into the economy at that time could result in 
inflation. And 6 months later, here we are. Inflation is near a 13-year 
high, and Americans are, rightly, worrying about whether their 
paychecks will stretch to cover the higher prices that they are facing.
  In the face of that fact, and considering the substantial amounts of 
money we had to borrow to meet the COVID crisis, you might think that 
Democrats would be taking a moment to reflect and perhaps think about 
ways to rein in excessive spending. But you would be wrong. In fact, 
Democrats have decided to double down on their failed strategy and pass 
another massive government spending bill, even bigger--even bigger--
than the last one that I just mentioned. That is right. Now Democrats 
are putting together a $3.5 trillion spending bill to follow up on 
their $1.9 trillion spending bill from this last March.

  And to put those numbers in perspective, the entire Federal budget 
for 2019 was less than $4.5 trillion. Dumping that much money into the 
economy is pretty much guaranteed to continue to fuel the kind of 
inflation that Americans are currently experiencing. In fact, there is 
a good chance it could make things much worse.
  And that is not the only way Americans are likely to suffer as a 
result of Democrats' proposed tax-and-spending spree. Americans are 
going to also feel the pain of the $2 trillion in tax hikes the 
Democrats are contemplating.
  It always fascinates me how Democrats think that you can just pass 
tax increases without consequences. To hear Democrats talk, you would 
think that you can impose $2 trillion in tax hikes and everything will 
just keep going along unchanged. But, of course, we all know that is 
not the way it works. There is no such thing as consequence-free 
taxation.
  Raise taxes by any meaningful amount, and people are most likely 
going to change their behavior. A small business, for example, may 
think twice about hiring an additional worker if it is facing a tax 
hike. A larger business may decide not to open that new plant it has 
been planning or it may institute a hiring freeze or it may decide that 
it needs to encourage some early retirements.
  Democrats' $2 trillion tax hike would be the largest tax hike in 
decades. Democrats are proposing to raise taxes on large businesses, on 
small businesses, on investment, and on retirement savings. And the 
list goes on. And every one of those taxes will have consequences for 
ordinary Americans.
  Democrats are proposing a corporate tax rate higher than the one 
imposed by communist China. That is going to put American businesses at 
a disadvantage on the global stage. And when American businesses 
suffer, American workers suffer.
  Democrats always seem to forget that most Americans are employed by 
businesses, and that, as a result, when you raise taxes on businesses, 
ordinary Americans tend to feel the consequences.
  If Democrats succeed in passing their $2 trillion tax hike, it is 
going to have serious economic consequences for regular Americans--
consequences like fewer jobs and opportunities; slower or nonexistent 
wage growth, especially with higher inflation eroding household 
spending power; and fewer benefits.
  Americans can also expect to see higher utility bills, thanks to 
Democrats' proposed tax hikes on large businesses and on energy 
development.
  I have been talking for a while now, and I haven't even gotten to the 
spending side of the Democrats' tax-and-spending spree. Frankly, it is 
difficult to know even where to start. This proposal reads more like a 
spending encyclopedia. There is spending on pretty much every topic 
from A to Z.
  There are the big-ticket items, of course, the supposedly free stuff 
that Democrats are emphasizing, such as free community college and free 
pre-K. Then, there are the items Democrats aren't advertising as much, 
like the $200 million--yes, $200 million--for a park in House Speaker 
Pelosi's district that features a luxury accommodation and a golf 
course. Given that, I am not sure why this park needs $200 million from 
the Federal Government, but I guess being Speaker ``hath its 
privileges.''
  In fact, one Democrat Representative admitted as much, noting that it 
seems that, and I quote, ``Speaker Pelosi gets maybe a little bit more 
. . . on some of these bills,'' but then went on to argue that she 
deserves it for being Speaker.
  But moving on, there is a nearly $80 billion increase in funding for 
the IRS--yeah, $80 billion. That is enough to nearly double the 
Agency's size. But I guess you have to have a lot of new agents to 
collect all of those new tax hikes.
  Then there are new and expanded subsidies for electric vehicles. 
Under the Democrats' proposal, a couple could be making well over half 
a million dollars yet still claim more than $12,000 from the Federal 
Government to purchase an electric car.
  There is a Civilian Climate Corps--several of them, in fact--at 
various government Agencies, $20 billion for a National Climate Bank to 
subsidize Democrats' pet environmental projects, and--I am not making 
this up--a new tax break to subsidize membership dues to unions--plus 
much, much more.
  And, of course, with all that government spending comes new 
government regulations--a long, long, long list of them.
  The consequences of the Democrats' tax-and-spending spree could be 
devastating--for our economy and for American families. And, 
unfortunately, Democrats have the ability to force this legislation 
through on a solely partisan basis.
  I know there are at least some Members of the Democrat Party here in 
Congress who are uncomfortable with the stratospheric levels of 
spending the Democrats are proposing, and I hope that their cooler 
heads will prevail.
  Meanwhile, I and every Republican will do everything we can to 
protect

[[Page S6563]]

Americans from Democrats' reckless tax-and-spending legislation.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Mexico.