[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 45 (Thursday, March 9, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S727-S728]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                                 BUDGET

  Mr. SCHUMER. Madam President, on the President's budget, today, as we 
all know, President Biden will release his budget for fiscal year 2024.
  As promised, the President's budget is set to be a bold, optimistic, 
and serious proposal for strengthening our economy and creating 
opportunities to climb into the middle class as well as helping people 
stay there once they get in the middle class.
  The President's budget succeeds where Republicans have failed by 
presenting a realistic blueprint for lowering the deficit without 
cutting benefits tens of millions of Americans rely upon. Unlike the 
Republicans, the President's plan actually protects Social Security, 
Medicare, and Medicaid while building on Democrats' work to lower 
prescription drug costs and save taxpayer dollars.
  Again, Republicans love to talk about deficit cuts and saving tax 
dollars, but Democrats are the ones actually getting it done.
  The President's budget prioritizes a strong defense. It offers robust 
support for Ukraine, which, after last night's brutal missile barrage, 
remains as urgent as ever.
  Unlike Republicans, the President's plan invests in America instead 
of starving it. The President's budget invests in advanced 
manufacturing and high-tech jobs and scientific research, job training, 
education, and apprenticeships.
  The President's budget asks the wealthiest Americans to pay just a 
little more of their fair share in taxes so that programs like Medicare 
remain solvent for decades. Just about all Americans think this is just 
plain fair because there is no justification for the ultrawealthy to 
have a lower tax burden on a percentage basis than teachers and nurses 
and cabdrivers and firefighters.
  I want to thank President Biden for laying down an optimistic, 
forward-thinking vision for our country. This is what Americans want. 
They want real stuff. They want positive thinking about the future, 
help for those in the middle class to stay there, and for those 
struggling to get to the middle class, to make it a little easier to 
get there.

[[Page S728]]

  But I really want to thank my Republican colleagues who have done a 
great job in highlighting all of the ways they want to cut health 
programs and give the ultrarich yet another payday. I am impressed at 
how effectively Republicans are making the argument on Democrats' 
behalf because, while Democrats want to help average Americans, a group 
of House Republicans is working right now with former Trump Budget 
Director Russell Vought to carry out a budget outline with drastic cuts 
that would harm tens of millions of people. Vought is a hard-right guy. 
He hates government even when it helps people.
  According to the New York Times, Republicans in the House are 
considering proposals that would cut hundreds of billions from 
everything from the FBI to things like Pell grant eligibility and even 
Medicaid.
  I recently saw--catch this, Madam President. I recently saw one House 
Republican frame spending cuts as a matter of courage. That is what one 
House Republican said. Well, there is nothing courageous about taking 
SNAP benefits away from hungry kids. There is nothing courageous about 
cutting national security or constricting Pell grant eligibility. There 
is nothing courageous about cutting housing and funding for police and 
firefighters while doing nothing--nothing--to get wealthy Americans to 
pay their fair share. How dare Republicans say it is courageous to make 
those cuts.
  Finally, the ball is now in Speaker McCarthy's court. Today is March 
9, and there is still one big question all of us are asking: Speaker 
McCarthy, where is your plan?
  The debt ceiling must be raised soon. House Republicans say they 
won't do it without painful cuts to our country, which Democrats 
fiercely reject, but to this day, Americans have no idea where 
Republicans truly stand on Federal spending cuts, whether it is dealing 
with the debt ceiling or proposing a budget itself. All we have are 
various proposals like Mr. Vought's, which, if passed, would wreck our 
country and do huge damage to working families.
  Speaker McCarthy, again, where is your plan? Where is your plan in 
regard to the debt ceiling? Where is your plan in regard to the budget?
  The President has done his job by showing where Democrats stand. 
Speaker McCarthy needs to come clean with the American people and spell 
out precisely what cuts he plans and explain how these cuts will put 
the pain on average families.

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