[Congressional Record Volume 167, Number 187 (Monday, October 25, 2021)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7325-S7326]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]



                           Build Back Better

  Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, it is possible--it is just possible--
that the Republican Senator from Kentucky, who is the minority leader 
on the floor, has been sitting in on the revenue negotiations for the 
reconciliation. But it is possible--I don't rule that out--it is 
possible that we didn't know it, but he was actually sitting for 
breakfast in Wilmington, DE, with Schumer, Manchin, and other leaders 
as they were hammering out the revenue and tax portions, but I doubt 
it.
  I doubt that the Senator from Kentucky has really been in the inner 
workings and decision process of what is going to be in the revenue 
package when it comes to the reconciliation bill. I couldn't tell you.
  Maybe the Presiding Officer knows more than I do; but it is a matter 
of negotiation, and it is ongoing, and it has not been agreed to. Yet 
when you hear the Senator from Kentucky come to the floor, he is 
announcing what is going to be in the package as if he knows. I don't 
think he does.
  There are a couple of things that we do know for sure. We know what 
the Republican vision of tax policy in America is because they have 
shown it to us over and over again. When Donald Trump was elected 
President, the Republican Senators had a chance to do their 
reconciliation package, and they devoted it to changing the Tax Code.
  And to no one's surprise, they came through with their time-honored 
approach: cut taxes on the wealthiest people in America and the poor 
and middle-class people will be happy as clams.
  Well, they did it and did it again and added to the deficit in the 
process. In fact, under their Republican President, Donald Trump, we 
had the largest increase--36 percent--in the debt than under any 
President in history.
  So when they come talking to us about tax policy, they favor the 
rich; and the impact on the deficit, they don't pay any attention to it 
when they have a President of their own party. I think we know that the 
facts speak for themselves.
  Here is what we do know as well: One of the provisions in the 
American Rescue Plan under President Biden really specifically went 
after helping working families and lower-income families. And it bears 
remembering and repeating that not a single Republican was willing to 
vote for that package in either the Senate or the House. They all voted 
against it.
  One of the things included in it was a tax break for families with 
kids. How about that? A tax break for families with kids instead of a 
tax break for the multimillionaires and billionaires which were part of 
the Republican package 4 years ago.
  So it basically came down to kids under the age of 6, parents 
received $300 a month in a tax break; and those between 6 and 17--I 
think these figures are correct--received $250 a month. That money 
flowing to these families with children was the largest tax cut--it 
really dwarfed anything that the Republicans ever did to help working 
families. And we are trying to keep it on the books. I am, and I think 
you are too, and all of us are.
  Do you know why? Because we have too darn many families struggling in 
America, and they are in poverty.
  And we talk a lot about it, and we say: ``Isn't it a darn shame in a 
great country like this? That you can't afford food for your children, 
you can't afford a roof over your head, you are facing eviction, you 
can't afford the basics to send them to school, you can't afford new 
clothes and a new pair of shoes.''
  We say, Isn't it a darn shame. But now we have done something about 
it in the American Rescue Plan without a single Republican vote, not 
one. So our tax policy helps lower-income families, particularly those 
with children, and if we can do it--I think we can--we can engineer 
that tax cut to make it permanent to help families.
  I just heard President Biden--he was in New Jersey speaking about 
infrastructure and Build Back Better, the reconciliation plan. He said 
that in the State of New Jersey, this child tax credit, which we 
enacted without a single Republican vote helping us, has reduced child 
poverty in that State by 36 percent. I will bet you it has done the 
same thing in my State if it has done it in New Jersey.
  So we are getting practical results that help working families. If we 
have our way in reconciliation, we are going to give the largest tax 
cut in the history of this country to middle-income and working 
families, exactly the opposite of what the Senator from Kentucky just 
said: ``Oh, it'll be the biggest tax increase in history.''
  Well, there will be a tax increase, I hope, for those who can afford 
to pay it, and that means the same people who got a benefit 4 years ago 
from the Trump Republican tax policy.
  A lady named Lydia in my home State of Illinois described what this 
means to her. She wrote to my office, and she said: ``With the child 
tax credit, I'll be able to buy my kids their school supplies, clothes, 
things they need to go back to school,'' and she added, ``be able to 
buy some groceries.''

  Think about the last time that any Senator stopped and thought: I 
wonder if I will have enough money to buy groceries this week.
  Here is a mom in Illinois, with kids, who says that our tax policy--
the one that was just criticized by the Senate Republican leader--is 
helping her.
  Well, if the Republicans were in charge, I am afraid they would take 
that money that Lydia, who wrote to me, is talking about buying 
groceries and put it right in Jeff Bezos' pocket.
  Now, I have nothing against Mr. Bezos. He has done fabulously well. I 
have talked to him once, maybe twice, a long, long time ago. I am not 
opposed to people investing in business, being successful, and making 
money, but I don't believe that his income should be somehow walled off 
from the Tax Code. I believe he ought to pay his fair share. And if I 
remember correctly--and I will stand corrected if I am wrong--I don't 
believe he paid taxes last year.
  So we are looking at that and saying: Mr. Bezos, congratulations. 
Amazon is a big deal. It is making a lot of money, and all of us--most 
of us--are participating in it, but you ought to pay some taxes. If you 
can build rockets and

[[Page S7326]]

take your friends up for a little shot into space, shouldn't you pay a 
few bucks in taxes?
  I don't think it is unreasonable.
  The same thing holds true for these corporations. When we look at the 
biggest corporations and most profitable in America, too darned many of 
them pay no Federal taxes.
  What is going on here?
  We live in a country where success leads to wealth, and wealth leads, 
I think, to some social responsibility, and that includes paying your 
taxes.
  Under President Biden's Build Back Better agenda, we want to extend 
the child tax credit, give working families a little breathing room, 
and reduce child poverty in America. Now, if they want to come up and 
criticize us for reducing child poverty in America, so be it, but call 
it for what it is. We are putting our tax policy on the side of 
families with kids.
  For our Republican colleagues who say families like Lydia's don't 
need any help, they do. And we cannot walk away from them.
  Not a single Republican will vote for this reconciliation bill. We 
know it. They didn't vote for the rescue plan. That is just their 
choice. I'm sorry to say that we are not going to build back America 
better unless we change some policy and tax policy to help working 
families makes a difference.
  I mentioned to you how the deficit skyrocketed during the Trump 
administration. Well, the Senator from Kentucky comes and repeats over 
and over again: Well, they are going to do it again; they are going to 
run up the deficit.
  We have a plan to pay for the programs that we are talking about, and 
it means putting a new tax responsibility on people who are wealthy.
  The President made it clear: I don't want taxes going up on anybody 
making less than $400,000 a year.
  So any tax policy we have will affect the wealthy and corporations 
that aren't paying their fair share. That is our approach. It is quite 
a bit different than the Republican approach.
  Building back better is also going to do something about easing long-
term inflationary pressure and making life affordable for families. The 
things we will invest in, in the Build Back Better agenda, are spread 
over a number of years, and they will pave the way for an enduring 
economic recovery. These policies will help parents get back to work by 
making safe, reliable childcare more accessible.
  I don't know what the final negotiations will be on Build Back 
Better. We know the amount of money involved is going to be less than 
we originally thought. We are going to have to change some things, but 
I certainly hope that this idea of childcare--affordable, quality, safe 
childcare--is part of the final package.
  It means so much to so many working families, particularly to moms 
who can't get back to work unless they have peace of mind and have 
their kids in good hands while they are working.
  Everyone, from single mothers to our Nation's economists, can tell 
you the best way to stabilize the American economy is by supporting 
working families.
  In fact, the report by Moody's concluded that the Republican 
fearmongering about inflation--and we hear it every day on the floor--
Moody's called it ``overdone.'' Moody's is hardly a Democratic 
publication. But the fear of inflation is one of the reasons 
Republicans give for not wanting to even talk about changing tax policy 
in America.
  This pandemic has shown us the cracks in our economy. This Build Back 
Better package will get us to the point where we can start to rebuild 
it in the right way--give families financial relief, invest in our 
Nation's economic potential.
  The President said in New Jersey--and I couldn't agree with him 
more--we have never gone wrong in America investing in the people in 
this country. We have a lot of hard-working people. They do it every 
single day for their families. Those who come to this country keep up 
the tradition.
  But they need the tools to succeed. One of those tools is education. 
I hope we can find a way to expand opportunities in education for 
training for our workers into the 21st century.
  Talk about giving the store to the Chinese, if we don't invest in our 
workers and their training and education in the next generation to make 
sure that it is smarter than the last, then, we are going to lose 
ground to the Chinese.
  I wanted to say one last word here. I see the Senator from Ohio is 
here so I am going to be quick about this.
  It is easy to overlook--take a look at this chart. It is easy to 
overlook computer chips, small pieces of silicon. They power so many 
products and appliances, that we use every day, that we don't pay much 
attention. They are in our computers, smartphones, lifesaving medical 
equipment, appliances, microwaves, and our cars--dozens even in the 
cars that we drive.
  There is a global shortage of microchips. That is one of the reasons 
why it has slowed down production of new vehicles and why the market 
for used vehicles is tighter than usual, because of these little chips. 
And we have become too reliant on foreign countries to produce them.
  In a bill that we considered a few months ago, we put direct 
investment in America in building microchips. I think that is money 
well spent. I hope it works. I think it can. If we can provide these 
microchips, we don't have to wait for some company in Taiwan or China 
to send us this critical element that is needed to build all of these 
products.
  The global shortage of computer chips and the higher cost to 
consumers is one example of how we failed to invest in our Nation's 
resilience. I have to say that education and investment in American 
production and workers is the best way to get this economy moving 
again. We need to have a reserve supply of these chips so that we can 
build the autos and provide for the assembly lines and stabilize prices 
for everything from toasters to tractors.
  It is an important undertaking, and I hope my colleagues will realize 
that Build Back Better, the reconciliation bill, is dedicated to the 
same premise.