[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 156 (2010), Part 4]
[Senate]
[Pages 4987-4991]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




     CONTINUING EXTENSION ACT OF 2010--MOTION TO PROCEED--Continued

  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I have spoken with Senator Coburn, and he 
and I reached an agreement about which I will propound a unanimous 
consent request.
  I ask unanimous consent that the time between 8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. 
be evenly divided between his side and our side in 15-minute segments; 
the first 15-minute segment will be for our side, the Democratic side, 
for those Members wishing to speak in favor of the 30-day extension; 
the next 30 minutes to Senator Coburn on the Republican side for those 
sharing his position; and the last 15 minutes back to our side until we 
reach the end of this debate at 9:30 p.m.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. DURBIN. Then at 9:30 p.m., there may be some procedural issues 
unrelated to the substantive issue which we will be discussing between 
8:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., but that has to be worked out between both 
sides.
  To initiate the debate on this side, I yield to the Senator from 
Rhode Island, Mr. Reed, for such time as he may consume within the 15-
minute segment.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Rhode Island is recognized.
  Mr. REED. Mr. President, on April 5, the extension that was recently 
voted for extended unemployment compensation benefits will expire. We 
need to at least provide for a temporary extension while we await the 
resolution of a much broader piece of legislation that is in the House 
today which would provide for an extension of unemployment benefits 
from today until the end of the calendar year, as well as FMAP payments 
to the States and other provisions.
  This is absolutely critical. In my home State of Rhode Island, we 
have basically a 13-percent unemployment rate--12.7 percent. We have a 
record number of long-term unemployed people. This is not a situation, 
as in the past, where there was a temporary labor crisis. This has been 
going on in Rhode Island for almost 2 years or more, and people have 
reached the end of their resources and the end of their patience. For 
many, the only thing that is sustaining them--and not particularly 
well--is the fact they are still getting some unemployment benefits.
  So we have to move very aggressively to provide a solution. We have 
never, in the last several decades--reaching back at least as far as 
the 1980s--denied extended unemployment benefits as long as the 
unemployment rate nationally was at least 7.4 percent. It is 10 
percent, and in many States it is higher than that--Rhode Island being 
one of those States. So this would break tradition in terms of 
disrupting, interrupting, preventing extended benefits at a time when 
we have 10 percent unemployment.
  We have persistently seen this, accurately and realistically, as an 
emergency--an emergency that allows us to provide funding without 
offsets. That is something that I think still is compelling. This is an 
emergency. Perhaps one of the ironies that will take place on this 
floor in the next several weeks is that we will call up a supplemental 
budget from the Department of Defense which, as I understand, will not 
be offset totally. One of the ironies is that we will be providing 
benefits--because part of our strategy in Afghanistan and Iraq is civic 
engagement--we will be providing employment opportunities and 
investment in infrastructure for Afghans and Iraqis without offset, 
which is my understanding at the moment. The irony, of course, is that 
for our own citizens we are claiming: No, we can't do that.
  The other side has accumulated, under the Bush administration, a huge 
debt. In fact, in the term of the Bush administration, the national 
debt grew astronomically. Part of it was because repeatedly the 
Republican side refused to provide offsets to the funding for the war 
in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, and Medicare Part D, which was an 
entitlement payment for seniors in terms of their drug prescriptions. 
They thought that paying for things was an undue constraint on their 
plans. But now that we are in a crisis that affects Americans, there is 
the insistence during this emergency of paying for it, which 
contradicts practice and contradicts the real needs out there.
  One final point. We are now beginning to see some very limited 
progress on the employment front. This week's report about jobs caused 
a very positive reaction in the marketplace because the number of 
first-time claimants for unemployment compensation dropped much further 
than they thought. That suggests we are beginning to bottom out. There 
are other reports that suggest we will see some job growth beginning. 
That is because of the stimulus efforts we have undertaken today and in 
the past.
  Part of that stimulus effort has been unemployment compensation 
insurance. For every dollar we invest in unemployment compensation, 
there is $1.90 growth in economic activity. That is the result of 
studies over many years. So when we don't invest in these types of 
programs, we are not only denying sustenance to many families, we are 
also not providing the kind of economic stimulus that the country needs 
to move forward.
  So for all those reasons and more, I hope we can move, in the course 
of this evening or tomorrow, to adopt a measure that will allow us to 
continue the funding for unemployment compensation.

[[Page 4988]]

  With that, I thank the Senator from Illinois, and I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Udall of New Mexico). The Senator from 
Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I yield 5 minutes to the Senator from 
Michigan.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Michigan is recognized.
  Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, first, I wish to thank the Senator from 
Illinois for his leadership on this issue, as well as my friend from 
Rhode Island who has been such a staunch fighter, and other colleagues 
on the floor.
  I can't help but think: Here they go again. One more time we are in a 
situation where we need to extend unemployment benefits for people who 
are out of work, through no fault of their own--breadwinners not 
bringing home the bread, through no fault of their own--and we are 
right back where we were before with the Senator from Kentucky, who 
held up the ability for us to move forward to help families, to help 
people who have lost their jobs or are out of work and looking for 
work, who are caught up in an economic tsunami, an economic disaster, 
through no fault of their own. Here we are again.
  We just left a debate where we went most of last night with the same 
kind of effort to block, to stall, to say no, and to try to stop us 
from moving ahead and doing something very important for families, 
small businesses, tackling the national debt in this country, and with 
health insurance reform. We just went through hours and hours and hours 
with our colleagues on the other side becoming just a party of no and 
playing games, holding up things politically, finding tricks to make 
people vote on things they support, knowing if they do, that will stop 
us from moving forward on health insurance reform.
  We finished that. We made it through. We cast the votes and achieved 
the goal for the American people of saving money for middle-class 
families, saving money for small businesses, saving money for seniors 
on their medicines, and putting in place something that will make a 
difference in bringing down cost and making sure every family can 
finally have a family doctor. The same day we finally get through all 
that, here we are again.
  I come from the State with the highest unemployment in this country, 
and it is not because people in Michigan don't want to work. People in 
Michigan know how to work. They work very hard. They are out looking 
for work. People are trying to hold it together, some with part-time 
jobs right now, trying to just get through until they can get back a 
job that is going to allow them to be able to take care of their 
families and have some sense of security; to stop holding their breath 
while they are waiting for things to turn around. But we are in a 
situation right now where we have six people looking for every job. Six 
people are vying for every job.
  People are caught in an economic disaster that they didn't create, 
and our job has been to help them get through that so they can keep a 
roof over their head, food on the table, take care of their kids as we 
work to create an economic situation, partnering with business, to turn 
this around. Things are beginning to turn around but not fast enough 
for any of us. We are working very hard to turn that around, but the 
reality is we still have more than 700,000 people in Michigan who have 
lost a job and who want to work. They are out of work, through no fault 
of their own, and find themselves in a situation where they are looking 
to their government to understand the situation for their family and 
place some value on that.
  We seem to be able to pay for things when people think it is 
important. I have been here long enough to live through a situation 
where tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans somehow were passed even 
though they weren't paid for--and more than once. My guess is there 
will be proposals to do it again. But when you are talking about 
somebody who has worked all their lives and finds themselves in a 
situation where they do not have a job because of what is happening in 
the economy, then we say, but for you--for you--we are going to have a 
different set of rules. We are going to have a different set of rules. 
We are not going to treat this as a disaster--an economic disaster--as 
we have at every other time in our country where we move forward with 
emergency spending. For you, because you are not as important as those 
folks on Wall Street or the folks who got the big tax cuts, we are 
going to have a different set of rules.
  Well, that is why we are here, because we don't think that is fair. 
We don't think that is right. It is not right.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has used 5 minutes.
  Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, as I yield the floor, I wish to say we 
are going to be here, and we are going to keep fighting over and over 
again, as things move forward this year and beyond, on behalf of the 
people who want a job and who don't have one today, who are counting on 
us to help them make it through this and do what they need to do to 
care for their families.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Michigan, and I 
yield the remaining time of the 15 minutes to the Senator from Oregon.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon is recognized.
  Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, I join my colleagues in talking about the 
challenge that is faced by America's working families. Back home in 
Oregon, our economy has been hit pretty hard. We have a timber 
industry, and when you aren't building houses across the country, then 
you can't sell lumber. So we have mills going out of business across 
the State of Oregon and a lot of people unemployed--a lot of unemployed 
people who would be working in the woods cutting down the trees as well 
as working in the mills. Then we have the challenge of our 
manufacturing industry that has been hit pretty hard too. We build a 
lot of RVs and light planes, and those products aren't selling too well 
in this recession. We have a fruit industry and we have a Christmas 
tree industry. We ship a lot of that overseas, but the foreign demand 
is down, and domestic demand is down as well. We have those Mexican 
tariffs that have been applied to Christmas trees and fruit as well, 
which has had a pretty strong impact.
  You pile up all of this on a State that is on the Pacific Rim and add 
to that the fact that the entire Pacific Rim economy is depressed, and 
you have a State that not so long ago was second in the Nation only to 
Michigan in terms of unemployment.
  Well, things have improved a little in Oregon. We are no longer 
second worst, partly because many other States have continued to get 
worse. We are at about 11 percent. That is just about twice the 
unemployment we had not so long ago. That is a lot of struggling 
families. Unemployment is a program that helps keep the economy in gear 
during a difficult recession. It helps break the headlong rush into a 
depression. It helps families stabilize while they are looking for a 
job.
  Unemployment compensation is not a sweet deal. You don't get paid a 
great deal with unemployment but maybe just enough to get by so your 
house isn't one more foreclosed property; so you are not one more 
family on the street, wondering where you are going to live; so there 
isn't one more set of children whose schooling has been disrupted and 
their path in life has been disrupted and as a parent you wonder how it 
will impact them down the road. This is about us watching out for each 
other here in America.
  I can tell you it has been very frustrating to me to watch Members of 
this body during the last two administrations decide to do things in 
which they said: You know what, we are going to give away the Treasury 
to the wealthiest Americans, and we are not going to have any way of 
paying for it because we just to want give away money to the wealthy. 
So the wealthy are doing very well in America. But what about the 
workers in our Nation? The average compensation for a working family 
plateaued the year I graduated from high school--1974. During the 36 
years

[[Page 4989]]

since, working families have been earning the same amount. Yet the 
productivity of our Nation has gone up enormously. Where did all that 
wealth go? All that wealth went to the wealthiest Americans. Then my 
colleagues across the aisle are going to stand up tonight and self-
righteously proclaim we should not do this without paying.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the majority has expired.
  Mr. MERKLEY. We need to extend this unemployment for working 
families, not kick them when they are down.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma is recognized.
  Mr. COBURN. I think we had an agreement with the majority whip that 
some unanimous consent requests would come in; is that correct? I will 
be happy to yield out of our time to the majority whip.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I am now going to be asking unanimous 
consent that would extend the unemployment benefits for an additional 
30 days. I make it formally in this form.
  I ask unanimous consent that the Senate proceed to the immediate 
consideration of Calendar No. 323, H.R. 4851, to provide a temporary 
extension of certain programs; that the bill be read three times, 
passed, and the motion to reconsider be laid upon the table.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Mr. COBURN. Reserving the right to object, it is my understanding if 
we were to do that we would add $9.2 billion to the debt. I am 
wondering if that is correct. The same unanimous consent request was 
asked earlier today, and the head of the Finance Committee said it 
would add $9.2 billion to the debt. So given the fact that it will add 
to the debt rather than us making choices, I object.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Objection is heard. Who yields time?
  Mr. COBURN. I yield 10 minutes to the Senator from Alabama.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama is recognized.
  Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I appreciate so much Senator Coburn's 
leadership on this very important matter. I think we are at a defining 
moment. I take offense for those who say we have no interest in 
extending unemployment insurance. My State has high unemployment. We 
were doing very well, and it has doubled now from where we were in 
unemployment.
  My home area is one of the worst in the State. I am well aware of 
that. Members of the Senate on this side of the aisle strongly favor 
extending unemployment insurance and actually extending other benefits, 
too, such as the doctors fix that we need to do, the COBRA and FMAP and 
matters of that kind which are in the legislation and we believe should 
be passed into law. There is just one thing that I would raise, and 
that is that we want it to be in a way that does not increase, again, 
the debt because here we go again.
  Our colleagues passed an amendment, passed the pay-go law a few weeks 
ago, and within a few days they were violating it. This violates it 
again. What we need to ask ourselves, then, is how we are going to help 
people who are in need. Are we going to do it in a responsible way or 
will we take the easy way out, pass the debt on to our children and 
grandchildren without the least concern, it seems, about how we are 
going to pay for it?
  My colleague just recently said we should call it an emergency. 
Unemployment insurance is fundamentally one of our established 
government programs, he said, because that allows us to provide this 
benefit without an offset. That is precisely what the deal is, you 
understand. He was quite honest about it. We do not have to pay for it; 
we don't have to look for money; we don't have to cut waste, fraud, and 
abuse; we don't have to reach into the stimulus bill that we passed, 
which was announced to be for unemployment insurance as one of its 
primary motives and use that money that is unspent--and $100 billion or 
$200 billion still remains unspent. Why don't we use that money? It 
would not then increase the debt larger than we now have.
  We proposed a number of other offsets, offsets that our Democratic 
colleagues have utilized in legislation they have offered. We have 
suggested to our colleagues, what other containment of spending would 
you propose, and we would be willing to consider if you would use that 
to pay for this. But the day of just continuing to increase our debt is 
passed.
  This Senate needs to face the truth, and the truth is we will double 
the entire debt of the United States in 5 years, ending 2013. We will 
triple the entire debt of the United States in 2019. In 2019 the 
interest on the debt that we will be paying in that 1 year will be $800 
billion. Just last year the interest on the total debt of the United 
States was $170 billion. We cannot continue this. Every economist who 
has ever testified before our Budget Committee has said repeatedly this 
is unsustainable. When do we stop if it is unsustainable? Members of 
our Senate say it is unsustainable, on both sides of the aisle. When do 
we stop?
  Senator Coburn had the courage to say: Now, we can pay for this. We 
have moneys unspent that we can use to pay for the extension of 
unemployment insurance, and we will not agree that we will just add 
more to our debt.
  I have in my pocket, I just happened to notice, pictures of three of 
my grandchildren. I have had three--one born in November, one born 2 
weeks ago, one born Sunday. We are talking about hundreds of thousands 
of dollars that they are going to have to pay off.
  It is an addiction and a habit that we must break. This is $9 billion 
added to the debt. I hope and pray this courage by Senator Coburn that 
calls us to account and says let's face the music and let's be honest 
with ourselves is respected, as I respect it. I think the American 
people respect it. When I am out talking in my townhall meetings and in 
my communities and in the airplanes, they tell me: You guys are 
spending recklessly. We can't believe it. What has happened?
  The American people understand we cannot do this. There is no free 
lunch. Nothing comes from nothing. Somebody pays, and we cannot just 
spend and take the easy way every time without facing the consequences 
of a debt that we create. When we spend more than we take in, we borrow 
the money. We borrow it on the open market and we pay interest on the 
debt.
  I want to say my Democratic colleagues are at it again, spending more 
and not paying for it. Have the Republicans failed in their 
responsibility when they had the Presidency and a majority in the 
Senate? Yes, we should have done much better. But we have never seen 
the deficits we are seeing today--never, ever.
  President Bush had a record deficit of $450 billion his last year in 
office. This year, ending September 30, it was $1.4 trillion--$1,400 
billion--three times. This year, when September 30 arrives, our budget 
experts tell us our annual deficit for this 1 year will be $1.5 
trillion, and we will average $1 trillion a year for the years to come, 
more than twice the highest deficit we have ever had. We cannot do 
that. This is serious business.
  I hope and pray the stimulus package will give us some benefit. I 
know it will. When we spend $800 billion, every penny of it is 
borrowed, to be paid back someday, or the interest paid back by our 
children or grandchildren. This stimulus package, hopefully, will give 
us some lift, but we will carry the debt.
  Do you know what the Congressional Budget Office told us when they 
analyzed the $800 billion stimulus package? They said: Yes, it will 
provide a benefit for a few years. You will get a lift in the economy. 
But over 10 years, just over 10 years, it will have a net negative to 
the economy, a slight negative because you have to carry this debt, and 
it is crowding out private sector borrowing because the government 
borrowed it first. The government has to pay interest to all these 
people around the world who loan us this money.
  There is no easy way out of this. It is time for us to be mature and 
grown up and make good decisions. It is time to say no to this 
legislation unless it is paid for, and we can pay for it. There are 
plenty of places in our budget it can be paid for.
  I thank colleagues for allowing me to share these thoughts. I thank 
Senator

[[Page 4990]]

Coburn for raising this important issue, for his courage in saying it 
is time to do better. We can do better. We can do this in the right 
way. We came close tonight to getting it done, I thought, in a paid-for 
way--so close. If we stand in there, maybe in a week or 2 we will be 
able to take care of the unemployment insurance and pay for it in a 
sound way.
  I yield the floor.
  Mr. COBURN. I yield 7\1/2\ minutes to the Senator from Nebraska.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Nebraska is recognized.
  Mr. JOHANNS. Mr. President, I am proud to rise tonight and follow, 
first of all, Senator Sessions. He has come to the floor many times on 
this issue and talked about the crisis that is building in our Nation 
relative to the spending and the debt. He always speaks with such 
eloquence.
  I also want to say thank you to my colleague, Senator Coburn, for 
giving me an opportunity to come down tonight and offer a few thoughts 
in the time that we have. I appreciate it immensely.
  Senator Coburn puts himself in a very difficult situation by standing 
on principle because, of course, he makes himself a target of somebody 
who wants to say he is not caring about the people who are out there 
and looking for work. I know him and very much that is the opposite. 
But here is the point. Here is what we are facing in this Nation. We 
are literally getting to a stage in our history where the cascading 
amount of debt is like a huge snowball that now is gaining enormous 
momentum as it comes down the mountain. It is just growing bigger and 
bigger.
  I am going to head back home to Nebraska tomorrow. I am going to have 
an opportunity to get across the State. I have some--we call them 
community coffees but townhall meetings. I am going to talk to the 
people of Nebraska. I will guarantee that one of the first things on 
their agenda will be to raise concern about the spending and the debt 
they see going on here in Washington.
  Let me, if I might, take a moment and talk about the ethic of the 
State that I come from because I think it is enormously important in 
terms of what we are doing. I might add, I have had an opportunity as 
county commissioner, as city council member, a mayor, and a Governor to 
represent this great State.
  In my job as mayor of Lincoln, I was a strong mayor, so I was the guy 
responsible for the budget. Here is how we did it. There was only so 
much money that was available, and what we would do is we would put a 
list down, page after page, of very important priorities for the 
community. At some point on this list there would be a line drawn and 
my budget director would say to me: Mayor, if you want to go below that 
line and fund some of these other important priorities, you are going 
to have to look above that line and figure out what you can live 
without because it is at this line that we have to quit spending. 
Otherwise, our bond rating will be in jeopardy. Otherwise, the economic 
stability of this community will be in jeopardy.
  You know what. We made some very hard choices. We had some things we 
would have loved to have done, but we began to realize we just couldn't 
fit them into the budget.
  Then I had the good fortune of becoming the Governor of the State of 
Nebraska, and it didn't change anything. The Nebraska Constitution says 
we can only borrow $50,000. Maybe at some point in our State's history 
that was a handsome sum of money, but in effect what the constitution 
says is we cannot borrow money.
  While other Governors were balancing budgets by issuing bonds and 
debt, we did not have that alternative. I had really three choices: 
raise taxes, which I did not like and opposed, cut spending, or do 
both. And I cut spending.
  You could look at many places in that budget and say, well, Mike, why 
did you choose this versus that? And you could have a great debate 
about why this priority versus that priority. But in the end, what we 
were doing was trying to choose the priorities for our State without 
borrowing money, without putting our State in debt, while maintaining 
economic stability.
  I want to share that our State has fared as well as any State in the 
country during this very tough economic time. Our unemployment rate is 
about 4\1/2\ percent. We value our businesses, we create jobs, and we 
do not spend money we do not have.
  I came out here a year ago--a little more than a year ago--to join 
the Senate. I am as proud today as I was then to be here on the Senate 
floor. But here is what I will tell you: I am worried about where we 
are headed with this budget. You see, this $9 billion is very 
manageable. We want to provide unemployment insurance to the people who 
need it. We all do. We want to help these people. But we have a 
multitrillion-dollar budget here, and in effect what we are saying to 
the American people is that we cannot find $9 billion to offset the 
cost of that.
  We can do better than that because, if that is what we are 
acknowledging, that we cannot find $9 billion to offset the cost of 
that important priority, then, my goodness, how will we ever deal with 
a budget deficit that is over $1 trillion annually--annually--as far as 
the eye can see.
  I see I am running out of time, but I want to end with this thought. 
I had a wonderful group of schoolkids from Nebraska in today, from 
Superior, NE. I have been to Superior many times. It is a great 
community. And these kids are great kids. As I was talking about the 
various things that had happened here, I said something to them that I 
hope made the point of the need to take responsible action on this 
budget. I said this year I will celebrate my 60th birthday. God will 
not keep me on this Earth long enough to pay the debt that has been 
incurred.
  It is no consolation to Nebraskans that I go home and say to them: I 
have been here over a year, and I figured out who is at fault, because, 
you know what, they are not caring about who is at fault. They are 
saying: Mike, we elected you to go back there and lend your voice to 
try to fix these problems.
  It will be of no consolation for me to go home and say, well, it was 
the Democrats or it was the Republicans. It will be no consolation.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Cantwell.) The Senator has used the time 
that has been yielded to him.
  Mr. COBURN. I continue to yield.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator may continue.
  Mr. JOHANNS. I said to those kids: I will not be on Earth long enough 
to pay this debt. I said to them: That means that will fall to you.
  Do you know what I am saying to those kids? I am saying that the 
quality of their lives will be impacted by the fact that we could not 
take responsible action to deal with this debt.
  I would like to say to them: You will not have any more wars. But 
they will have their own wars to fight. They will have their own 
pandemics to deal with. They will have their own recessions they have 
to somehow fund and finance. And they will have their own challenges 
they will have to deal with. You know what. If we do not start coming 
to grips with this debt, they will not have the resources to manage 
their way through those challenges.
  You see, tonight is not about unemployment insurance. We want to help 
those people. Tonight is about making the statement that we have to 
take control of this because it is taking control of the future of 
those young people.
  I yield the floor and the remainder of my time to Senator Coburn.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
  Mr. COBURN. I will consume the remainder of our time.
  I thank Senator Johanns and Senator Sessions for being here.
  We have heard the word ``emergency.'' The emergency that is in front 
of us is, we are a boat upside down fiscally, and there has to be a set 
of competing priorities for how we right that boat. But the No. 1 way 
we do not right the boat is to continue to add to the debt when we have 
programs that are not working and are wasting money, that are consuming 
precious resources we need to spend in other areas.

[[Page 4991]]

  I am particularly interested in the very fast revisionist history 
that has been presented by the Senator from Michigan.
  Let me tell you what happened here today. What happened here today 
was that a bill was offered and a motion to proceed on a bill that 
would accomplish this was totally paid for. That motion was tabled, 
with all of the Republican Senators voting against that, and some 
Democrats. We worked, through the next couple of hours, negotiating 
with the majority leader, with great help from Senator Durbin, the 
senior Senator from Michigan, and a compromise was reached that we 
would, in fact, make sure no interruption would happen over the next 2 
weeks to those who are dependent on unemployment insurance. That was 
communicated to the House of Representatives and the majority there, 
and it was rejected.
  Then the final thing that happened is we had an adjournment 
resolution, for which everyone on our side of the aisle voted against 
to stay here. Now, that probably was not a truly sincere vote. I would 
put that out to my colleagues. But the fact is, the Senate does not 
have to go home. And the reflection for this not passing should not 
fall on the Senate; it should fall on the fact that the Senate came 
together and agreed on a solution that was not acceptable to the 
leadership in the House of Representatives.
  So if there is a problem with what we have done today, it is that 
when we compromised in the Senate, the House would not take it. And we 
did compromise. We compromised on spending. We compromised on time. We 
compromised on making sure the people who needed to have this extension 
were going to get it.
  I started out the debate earlier today on the basis of, where are we 
going in our country and what is our problem? Our problem is that we 
are drowning in debt, that our foreign policy is affected by it today, 
our ability to borrow is affected by it, and the manipulation of our 
ability to stabilize our own economy is affected by it. But, most 
importantly, what we do today has dramatic impact on those who know us.
  It is unfortunate that we did not work out a deal tonight. So we are 
going to have a week of exposure for people who actually need the help. 
It is actually going to be harder on the bureaucrats to handle this. 
But it did not happen.
  But I think the bigger question is, Should we just lay down and add 
more money to the debt because we could not get agreement across the 
Capitol? And so what we are going to do, when we come back, the day 
after we get back, we are going to have a cloture vote, which I think 
will be very difficult to achieve, but it may be achieved, because the 
same principle is going to lie here.
  With over $300 billion worth of waste, fraud, and duplication in the 
Federal budget every year, there are many of us who believe sincerely 
that it is time to stop spending money on lower priorities, time to 
stop calling things an emergency when we actually have the money in 
waste and fraud and duplication that we can use to pay for this.
  We needed to start somewhere. The unfortunate aspect that we did not 
accomplish that this evening means some people will suffer. But I want 
you to contrast that with what the suffering is going to be in 2019 
within our country when we have double-digit interest rates because we 
can no longer maintain our borrowing; when we are, in the next 9 years, 
going to pay $5.6 trillion in interest on $9.8 trillion we are going to 
borrow. Of that $9.8 trillion, $5.6 trillion is going to be interest 
payments.
  What is coming is a tsunami to our country. So I feel a failure 
tonight because I could not accomplish both goals, both protecting our 
children and their future opportunity and taking care of those who need 
us right now. But the principle is still there.
  We have to, in fact, start making tough choices. If we learn to do 
that together, the country benefits. And the future of our children is 
at hand. But we can no longer make the decision that we steal from our 
children to take care of things we are responsible for today. And I 
understand the resistance to that, but the fact is, our future depends 
on us starting today. It does not matter if you are liberal in 
philosophy or conservative in philosophy, the economics will be borne 
home to everyone. It has to stop. And we have to start with us.
  I appreciate the congeniality of my friend from Illinois. Tough week 
for us all--probably more tough for us than you. I congratulate you on 
your victory on the yearlong battle with a difference in philosophy on 
how we fix health care. But I know that 20 years from now, the Senator 
from Illinois and I will suffer the same pain if our kids are 
diminished by our lack of action here. So I will say, let's let it not 
be so. Let's let it not be so. Let's start making hard choices. Let's 
start doing what is in the best long-term interests of our country.
  With that, I yield back a minute of our time to the Senator from 
Illinois.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Let me thank the Senator from Oklahoma for his 
professionalism and his own decorum during the course of this debate. 
We want to maintain that on this side of the aisle.

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