[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 159 (2013), Part 1]
[Senate]
[Pages 9-10]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                     OPENING OF THE 113TH CONGRESS

  Mr. McCONNELL. Madam President, I would like to welcome everybody 
back after what we all realized was a somewhat abbreviated recess. In 
fact, I believe you would have to go back to 1970 to find the last time 
the Senate was in session and voting between Christmas and New Year's.
  In particular, I want to welcome back Senator Mark Kirk. He has made 
a brilliant recovery since suffering a debilitating stroke almost a 
year ago. The fact that Mark is here today says a lot about his 
tenacity, his dedication, and his commitment to the people of Illinois.
  I am told that about two-thirds of the patients in the facility where 
he has been recovering over the past year don't return to work, but 
true to form Mark opted for an experimental rehabilitation program so 
grueling, it has been compared to military boot camp. His staff counted 
45 steps from the parking lot to the front door of the Senate, and 
during his treatment he made walking those steps his goal. Today he did 
it. He did it. So we admire him for his spirit, and we applaud his 
achievement. It is wonderful to have him back and ready to work.
  I would also like to welcome the new Members who take their oaths of 
office today, particularly the four new Members of the Republican 
conference: Senator Flake of Arizona, Senator Fischer of Nebraska, 
Senator Cruz of Texas, and Senator Scott of South Carolina. 
Congratulations to you all. We welcome the energy and intelligence each 
of you brings to the challenges we face and especially to the 
transcendent challenge of our time: a Federal debt so huge, so huge it 
threatens to permanently alter an economy that has provided generations 
of Americans the opportunity to fulfill their dreams of a better life.
  Four straight years of trillion-dollar deficits and projected 
spending that no realistic amount of tax revenue could cover have put 
us at a crossroads. Either we tackle our Nation's spending problem or 
it is going to tackle us. It is that simple, and there is no better 
time to do the work we need to do than right now.
  The bipartisan agreement we reached earlier this week was imperfect. 
I am the first to admit it--especially the process. But aside from 
shielding 99 percent of my constituents and many of yours from the 
painful effects of a middle-class tax hike--the President seemed all 
too willing, by the way, to impose that--it gave us something else: It 
settled the revenue debate for good. The revenue debate is over. 
President Obama declared the other night that those he calls rich are 
now paying their ``fair share,'' so it is time to move on.
  The President got his revenue, and now it is time to turn squarely to 
the real problem, which we all know is spending. We all knew that the 
tax hikes the President campaigned on were never going to solve the 
problem. Now that he has gotten them, he has a responsibility to put 
his preoccupation with taxes behind him and to work with us to actually 
solve the problem at hand. It is time to face up to the fact that our 
Nation is in grave fiscal danger--grave fiscal danger--and that it has 
everything to do with spending.
  This is a debate the American people want us to have. The President 
liked to point out on the campaign trail that most Americans supported 
the idea of taxing the rich. What he conveniently left out is that even 
more Americans support the idea of cutting spending. One recent survey 
I saw said that about three-fourths of all Americans say they want to 
see major spending cuts in Washington. When you look at some of the 
things Washington has been wasting their dollars on, it is no wonder. I 
mean, if we can't stop spending taxpayer dollars on robo-squirrels, 
dancing robot DJs, or hot air balloon rides for Smokey the Bear, then 
there is no hope at all because if we can't fix the easy stuff, the 
robo-squirrels and the robot DJs, the things most of us agree on, how 
are we ever going to get at the hard stuff?
  That is why the first step in this debate is for Democrats to get 
over their fanatical commitment to guarding every single dime the 
government ever got its hands on. This has to stop. The best time to 
stop it is now.
  There is actually no better time for this debate. In a couple of 
months the President will ask us to raise the Nation's debt limit. We 
cannot agree to increase that borrowing limit without agreeing to 
reforms that lower the avalanche of spending that is creating this debt 
in the first place. It is not fair to the American people, and it is 
not fair to our children, whom we are asking to foot the bill. The 
health of our economy requires it, so now is the time to get serious 
about spending.
  If the past few weeks have taught us anything at all, it means the 
President needs to show up early this time. The American people will 
not tolerate the kinds of last-minute crises that we have seen again 
and again over the last 4 years as a result of this President's chronic 
inactivity and refusal to lead on the pressing issues of our time. We 
don't need speeches, we need action, and we need it now. We need 
courage because the only way we are going to address the spending that 
is at the root of our Nation's fiscal problems is if the President is 
willing to bring the members of his party to the table and get them to 
rise above the partisan voices 


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on the left, who treat every single 
penny of government spending as sacred.
  Hopefully, that kind of cooperation will be forthcoming but, if not, 
we will have several opportunities in the coming months to force the 
conversation Washington needs to have. The first such opportunity, as I 
have said, surrounds the President's upcoming request of us to raise 
the debt ceiling. After that, there is the continuing resolution. But 
let me be clear, there is no need for drama--no need for drama--and we 
don't want any. The President knows as well as I do what needs to be 
done. He can either engage now to significantly cut government spending 
or force a crisis later. It is his call.
  But for the sake of the country we must have this debate now. So 
today I call on my friend the majority leader and the rest of my 
Democratic colleagues to start working with us right now--not 1 hour, 1 
day, or 1 week before we hit the debt limit but ahead of time for once 
so we can pass a bipartisan solution on spending that everyone will 
have an opportunity to weigh in on in early February. We need a plan 
that can pass the House and actually begin to get Washington spending 
under control. If we are serious, we will get one done.
  With taxes now off the table, the only way to achieve a balanced plan 
is to focus on the spending side of the equation, particularly, as the 
President pointed out, health care entitlement programs because, as I 
said, taxes simply can't go high enough to keep pace with the amount of 
money we have projected to spend on them without crushing our economy. 
The best way to reform these programs is to make them work better. The 
debt isn't exploding because these programs exist, it is exploding 
because they are inefficient. They were created in a different era--the 
era of black-and-white TV. They should be updated for the age of the 
iPad, and we should want to fix them not just because we want to lower 
the debt but because we want to strengthen and improve these programs 
themselves.
  Over the next few months it will be up to the President and his party 
to work with us to deliver the same kind of bipartisan resolution on 
spending that we have now achieved on taxes, but it needs to happen 
before the eleventh hour. For that to happen, the President needs to 
show up this time.
  The President claims to want a balanced approach. Now that he has the 
tax rates he wants, his calls for ``balance'' means he needs to join us 
in the effort to achieve meaningful spending reform. The President may 
not want to have this debate, but it is the one he is going to have 
because the country needs it. Republicans are ready to tackle the 
spending problem, and we start today.

                          ____________________