[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 150 (2004), Part 6]
[House]
[Pages 7041-7042]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




          THE FAILED ECONOMIC POLICIES OF THIS ADMINISTRATION

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Rogers of Alabama). Under a previous 
order of the House, the gentleman from Illinois (Mr. Emanuel) is 
recognized for 5 minutes.
  Mr. EMANUEL. Mr. Speaker, prior to our recess, the House voted on a 
$2.3 trillion budget with a $521 billion deficit, showing that it is 
impossible to finance three wars with three tax cuts.
  This budget, the budget by the President and Republican majority, 
repeats the same mistakes that have resulted in a jobless economy and a 
health care and wage recession with the lowest growth in wages in the 
period of economic growth in the last 30 years.
  We have 2.5 million Americans that have lost their jobs in the last 3 
years, 43 million Americans without health

[[Page 7042]]

care, 2 million Americans who were once in the middle class and now in 
poverty, 1.6 percent job wage growth in the areas of salaries, and $1 
trillion in corporate and individual foreclosures and bankruptcies. 
That is the economic record of this administration as embodied by the 
budget the President submitted.
  During the 2000 Presidential election, President Bush declared that 
he was opposed to nation-building. Who knew it was America he was 
talking about when he said he was opposed to nation-building. This 
budget and the President's economic vision is really a tale of two 
budgets. We look at his vision for the United States, and we look at 
his vision for Iraq. We spent more than $100 billion in Iraq on the 
occupation, but without promising the same promise and same future here 
at home to the American people.
  I am not opposed to rebuilding in Iraq, but I am opposed to making 
the investments at home while we are making the same investments in 
Iraq.
  Let us take a look at it. Today we provide universal health care 
coverage in Iraq as one of our goals. 44 million Americans are without 
health insurance; 33 million Americans work full time with no health 
care.
  There is universal job training in Iraq, and yet in the President's 
own budget we have cut back on the funds for job training. In health, 
2,200 Iraqis health professionals and 8,000 volunteers are receiving 
free training. In America, health training funds in the President's 
budget were cut by 64 percent. 150 clinics and hospitals have been 
rebuilt to serve 3 million Iraqis, and yet in America community health 
care clinics are cut by 91 percent in the President's budget.
  Under veterans, $60 million has been spent to train Iraqi veterans of 
past wars, but we are cutting veterans medical care here in the United 
States by $257 million.
  In the area of education, we have built or rebuilt 2,300 schools in 
Iraq, but Leave No Child Behind is underfunded by $8 billion in the 
President's budget.
  Iraqi universities are getting $20 million for higher ed 
partnerships; but in America, the Pell grant has been frozen for 3 
years while the cost for education has gone up 10 percent.
  The area of law enforcement, $500 million to train the Iraqi police, 
yet the COPS program in the United States under the President's budget 
was cut by $659 million.
  In the area of public housing, $470 million is being spent for Iraqi 
public housing; yet here in the United States, $791 million is cut from 
section 8 vouchers.
  In the environment, we are paying $3.6 billion for clean water and 
sewage systems in Iraq; and in America, under the President's budget, 
we cut $500 million from the clean water for safe drinking water here 
in the United States.
  In the area of infrastructure, the port of Umm Qasar was completely 
rebuilt in Iraq, yet the Corps of Engineers budget under the 
President's budget was cut by 10 percent.
  Roads, we spent $240 million on roads and bridges in Iraq. Here at 
home, the President has a veto threat on our highway and mass transit 
programs.
  As President Bush seeks reelection, he can say he kept his commitment 
against nation-building. The problem is his opposition to nation-
building is here at home. With this budget, the administration, the 
President is telling the American people that they have two priorities, 
two sets of values, two sets of books: one for the Iraqi people and one 
for the American people. And yet those are the wrong values.
  The American people are the most generous people in the world. They 
are willing to commit to Iraq's future, one of a better tomorrow, but 
not at the expense that comes at the expense of America's tomorrow; not 
that comes at the expense of America's children.
  America can no longer be so generous around the world if the future 
that we hold for the American people is less than the one we are 
promising in Iraq.
  Mr. Speaker, the same values that we hold for Iraq we must pledge for 
all Americans.

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