[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 5]
[Senate]
[Pages 6194-6214]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




   CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET, FISCAL YEAR 2016--CONFERENCE 
                           REPORT--Continued

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
  The Senator from Wyoming.
  Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that time under any 
quorum call be equally divided between the two sides.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. ENZI. I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. WHITEHOUSE. Thank you, Mr. President.
  I rise today to speak in opposition to the Republican so-called 
budget. I call it a ``so-called budget'' because I do not believe even 
Republicans would actually pass appropriations consistent with it. It 
looks to me like it is just a show to keep extremists on the right 
happy. My guess is that practical Republicans cannot wait for President 
Obama to bail them out by negotiating appropriations higher.
  Recently, we have seen impressive examples of committee 
bipartisanship. In Foreign Relations, Senator Corker brought a 
unanimously bipartisan Iran resolution out of the poisonous turmoil 
surrounding that issue. In the HELP Committee, Senator Alexander 
brought a unanimously bipartisan education bill out of committee on an 
issue that has long been contested. Even the intensely divided 
Environment and Public Works Committee brought out a chemical 
regulation bill with a strong bipartisan majority. But Budget? No 
chance.
  Instead of working with Democrats on a real budget, Republicans 
produced a partisan ideological showcase. They cut programs for 
seniors, for low-income families, and for other vulnerable citizens and 
protected the wealthiest Americans from contributing even one dime in 
deficit reduction.
  As we have seen in the past, Republicans care about deficit reduction 
only when it involves cutting programs for people who need help. But 
can they find a single tax loophole to cut? Not one.
  This budget follows the Ryan budget off the cliff of shielding every 
single subsidy and giveaway in the Tax Code. No special interest tax 
loophole is too

[[Page 6195]]

grotesque for them. Big Oil tax subsidies, special low rates for hedge 
fund managers, private jet depreciation, for goodness' sake--tax 
giveaways that amount to nothing more than taxpayer subsidies for the 
wealthy and well connected--this budget loves and protects them all.
  Not only do the Republicans protect every tax loophole, they propose 
eliminating the estate tax--a tax that only affects families worth over 
$10 million--the top 0.2 percent. You may have heard a lot about the 1 
percent. Well, this budget does even better than that. It confers a 
great, wonderful, fat favor on the top 0.2 percent and, at the same 
time, the budget will allow the taxes to increase on 13 million lower- 
and middle-income households--households with 25 million children. That 
is a $300 billion tax giveaway to that 0.2 percent--to basically 5,000-
some of the wealthiest families in America. And that big gift to those 
5,000-and-some wealthiest families is paired with a tax hike for 
millions of families who are just getting by.
  And, of course, it is lower-income and middle-class families who 
would suffer the most from the Republican spending cuts. Medicaid, food 
stamps, Pell grants, and job training all get axed. They hand Medicare 
over to private sector vouchers and kick 16 million Americans off of 
health insurance plans they obtained through the Affordable Care Act.
  Today, across this Capitol, breast cancer advocates are asking for 
our support for investment to help cure that deadly disease. This 
budget cuts research for breast cancer and other deadly diseases. It 
slashes funding for nursing homes, including those that care for 
seniors with Alzheimer's. It even supports a 20-percent across-the-
board benefit cut for disabled Americans--a 20-percent benefit cut for 
disabled Americans--by doubling down on the senseless House rule that 
can be used to create an artificial crisis and prevent a routine Social 
Security fix.
  As for the investments that keep our Nation competitive in an 
increasingly global economy, all are attacked. From scientific research 
to education to infrastructure, the Republicans offer a radical plan of 
cuts.
  In a nutshell, their behavior proves that the deficit is just a 
pretext for them to cut programs that Republicans have always opposed--
programs that create jobs, support the middle class, and offer 
lifelines to the most vulnerable Americans.
  Even transportation infrastructure--our roads and bridges--gets 
whacked. Much of our highway system dates back to the 1950s, and roads 
and bridges across the country are in dire need of repair and 
replacement. This budget fails to provide any new funding for 
infrastructure. It does not even ensure that current funding levels 
will be maintained.
  This matters because the current funding authorization for highway 
and transit projects expires at the end of the month. That will imperil 
construction projects and jobs just as we enter the busy summer highway 
construction season. There is no plan to deal with that that 
Republicans have announced--no bill in any committee.
  In the budget, Republicans had an opportunity for a big win-win. They 
could have upgraded America's roads and bridges and supported millions 
of jobs. Ranking Member Sanders even offered an amendment that would 
have paid for infrastructure investments by closing some of these 
corporate tax loopholes. All Republicans had to do was vote yes. But 
corporate tax loopholes were too important, and roads and bridges did 
not matter. They chose to protect their cherished tax giveaways for 
special interests. Today the clock still ticks toward a looming highway 
jobs shutdown.
  This will hurt a lot of States. It will particularly hurt my home 
State of Rhode Island. We are a historic and densely populated State. 
We have aging and heavily used infrastructure. Lots of our roads and 
bridges are in poor condition. One study found that the average 
motorist in Rhode Island pays an extra $637 per year for car repairs 
and operating costs because of potholes and bumps and other bad road 
conditions. It is not just Rhode Island. This is true also across the 
country. Nationwide, poor road conditions are estimated to cost our 
country more than $100 billion a year--over $500 per motorist. The 
American Society of Civil Engineers gives America's bridges a grade of 
only C-plus. It gives our roads a D.
  Where is the plan to address this? Where is the plan to help the 
working Americans who have to spend $500 or $637 a year because we do 
not take care of our roads and highways? There is none.
  Well, I understand that the Republicans in the Senate have been in 
the minority for a long time and old habits die hard. But the 
responsibility of a majority is to be responsible. Republicans passed 
up the opportunity to be responsible in their budget with highway 
funding. This should not be that difficult. They could start by looking 
at the bipartisan 6-year highway bill approved last year in the 
Environment and Public Works Committee. My recollection is that it was 
approved unanimously. That bill would have provided the certainty that 
our State departments of transportation need to plan for the big 
multiyear, job-creating projects that our years of deferred maintenance 
have brought due.
  The extremist Republican budget under the Senate rules does not need 
Democratic support, and it appears that the Republicans do not even 
want Democratic support. Under the Senate rules, this budget will pass 
this Chamber. The good news about that is that the budget is merely 
political theater. The penalty for violating this budget is a 60-vote 
point of order. Nowadays it takes 60 votes to pass an appropriations 
bill. So in effect the penalty is a nullity. So there is really nothing 
to violating the budget.
  The real budget will be sent to us through the Appropriations 
Committee, and the real numbers will be negotiated upwards, and the 
Republicans will be relieved of the human responsibility for what would 
happen if this budget were actually to guide our appropriations. That 
is the good news.
  The bad news is that it is a missed opportunity to try to work in any 
kind of a bipartisan fashion. It is a missed opportunity to address 
issues that Americans agree on, such as maintaining our bridges and 
highways.
  I hope very much that my friends on the other side of the aisle will 
begin to work with Democrats on addressing, with some semblance of 
bipartisanship, our constituents' needs in that regard. With funding 
set to expire in just a few weeks, and with no Republican plan on the 
horizon to address it, we should at least begin with a bipartisan 
conversation about a long-term highway bill.
  I thank the Presiding Officer and yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The senior assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Enzi). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. PORTMAN. Mr. President, I rise as we are talking about the 
budget, and I want to talk a little bit about that today, being a 
member of the Budget Committee and someone very concerned about the 
fiscal direction of our country. I also want to talk about a trip I 
took to Israel. Over the last weekend, I was in Israel having meetings 
with Prime Minister Netanyahu, members of the Knesset, the Minister of 
Intelligence, the Deputy Foreign Minister, and others, and part of what 
I want to talk about in the budget relates to that.
  This budget, by the way, is the first time in 6 years that we have 
had the ability for the House and Senate to come together and have a 
congressional budget. During that 6 years, by the way, I think there 
has been $8 trillion added to the national debt. During that 6 years, 
there has not been adequate oversight of the departments and agencies 
of government, partly because there hasn't been a budget. Without a 
budget, it is very difficult to go through the appropriations process, 
which means that not only has spending been high--more money being 
spent

[[Page 6196]]

than coming in, in terms of revenue year after year to the tune of 
hundreds of billions of dollars--but also we haven't had the ability to 
have the appropriate checks and balances, oversight of the various 
agencies we have in the appropriations process.
  So, after 6 years, it is about time. My constituents, when I say it 
is the first time in 6 years we have been able to pass a budget, they 
say, well, what took you so long. Why is it that I have to have a 
budget in my family, have to have a budget in my business and in our 
community, the county, and the State, and Congress can't get its act 
together? So we are, this afternoon, I believe, going to pass this 
budget, and it does provide this framework for going forward.
  What is that framework? Well, it is a balanced budget over 10 years. 
Although it is the first time Congress would come together in 6 years 
to have a budget, it is actually the first time since 2001 that there 
has been a budget that gets to balance that is presented and passed by 
this Congress. That is important.
  Earlier, one of my colleagues was talking about everything that was 
cut by this budget. Actually, those decisions are going to be made by 
the Appropriations Committee. That is appropriate. They are the 
committee responsible for defending every dime. Congress has that 
responsibility. They are the ones who should look at the priorities. 
They are the ones who should decide which program is working and which 
one is not working, which ones should get less money, which ones should 
get more money, which ones should be reformed and changed. That is the 
process we are going to be undertaking, and it is exactly what we are 
hired to do.
  Is it an easy vote? No. Yet we see this afternoon we will get the 
necessary 51 votes to pass this budget and begin to move the country 
forward. It not only balances the budget in 10 years, it does it 
without raising taxes. It does it in a way that actually strengthens 
Medicare, protects Social Security, supports a healthier and stronger 
economy that we need in this country.
  We just had the economic growth numbers come out for the first 
quarter and, boy, are they disappointing--0.2 percent. We just had some 
weak numbers in terms of jobs numbers last month. We have to do better. 
We can and should do better. Part of it starts with better policies 
here in Washington, DC. We need policies that encourage people to get 
out there and work hard, take a risk, and let people know that if they 
do play by the rules and work hard, they can get ahead. There is so 
much more we can do with tax reform and regulatory relief and coming up 
with smart ways to deal with health care. That is what this budget 
does, by the way.
  It also improves the efficiency, effectiveness, and accountability of 
government. This is very important. It has a particular provision that 
I feel strongly about, as the Presiding Officer knows. He has done a 
great job of shepherding us through the Budget Committee to make sure 
we could have the information on the floor of the Senate to decide the 
best tax reform to pursue. We will now have not just what is called the 
static analysis but also an analysis, that takes into account that tax 
policy does change people's behavior. We all know that--everybody knows 
that--but we haven't had that information until now. This macroeconomic 
scoring of a tax provision is going to make it more likely to come up 
with good tax reform that will help give this economy the shot in the 
arm it needs to get moving.
  I am pleased with the fact that we are finally going to move forward 
on a budget. It is discouraging that it took this long--6 years--but 
with the Republican majority we committed to do this, and I am very 
pleased that this afternoon we are going to finally see, for the hard-
working taxpayers whom I represent, the opportunity to actually have a 
budget around here and to get individual appropriations bills done.
  One other part of the budget that relates to the trip I just took is 
our defense spending. The budget helps to provide more avenues for 
increasing defense where needed, and in this dangerous world in which 
we live, we do have to ensure that we have a strong defense that is up 
to the challenges we face.


                                 Israel

  Mr. President, I just returned from a trip to Israel, where I had 
very productive meetings with Prime Minister Netanyahu, with the 
Secretaries, the Ministers of Intelligence, the Deputy Foreign 
Minister, other Israeli officials, as well as our Ambassador over there 
and his team.
  The reason for going to Israel was the same as with the previous 
visits; that is, to learn firsthand from those on the ground about the 
best way forward in a very volatile and dangerous region of the world, 
to show support for our ally Israel and, finally, to report back to my 
Ohio constituents and to the Senate as we face these challenging issues 
we have in the region. I saw when I was there, again, how since its 
independence in 1948, the people of Israel have not only learned how to 
survive, how to make do in sometimes a very unforgiving strategic and 
natural environment, but have also learned how to thrive.
  They boast the region's most dynamic economy now. It is also the 
region's most vibrant democracy, with an open society that promotes the 
values of freedom, tolerance, and equality. It is a small population. 
They have very little land and very few natural resources, and they are 
faced with aggression from all sides. Throughout its history, Israel 
has faced these challenges through both the power of the head and the 
heart--knowledge, innovation, grit, and determination--to build and 
defend the world's one and only Jewish State and the one democracy in 
the region.
  It is against this general backdrop that I wanted to talk to the 
Prime Minister and other leaders about some really important topics 
that we face in the Senate; one is the ongoing nuclear talks and how to 
prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, as well as how to 
address Iran's current aggression all throughout the region.
  Second, I wanted to talk about the insidious campaign going on around 
the world. It is a campaign to delegitimize Israel through boycotts, 
divestments, and sanctions. I have been involved in this for years. Ten 
years ago, I worked on this as the U.S. Trade Representative. Most 
recently, I joined Senator Ben Cardin in a bipartisan effort that was 
successful in adding an amendment to the trade bill that is working its 
way through the system, to tell our trading partners you cannot 
boycott, divest, and sanction Israel if you want to do business with 
us.
  Third, I want to talk about the myriad of challenges that face this 
region and the destabilizing of it right now: ISIS, the civil war in 
Syria, the immediate challenges Israel faces with the terrorist 
activities of Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon and in Syria.
  Finally, I wanted to talk about the Israel-Palestinian dialogue, the 
opportunity for peace and a two-state solution.
  Of all these threats, I suppose Israel's greatest threat lies in 
Iran. Iran has been described, by the way, as a regime that is the No. 
1 state sponsor of terrorism in the world. Let's remember that, 
remember whom we are dealing with. This has been true since 1984, when 
they put Iran on the terrorist list. I think there are only four 
countries on it, and one is Cuba, that I am sure the administration 
would like to remove from that list. So this is a small list of 
countries.
  According to the administration, the Iranian regime is able to 
produce enough material for a nuclear weapon in sometime between 3 
months and 1 year, depending on which testimony you hear from the 
administration. They also acknowledge that it supports terrorist groups 
such as Hezbollah. It funds other Shiite militias as it seeks regional 
dominance in Iraq. We have seen this in Yemen most recently, but also 
in Syria and elsewhere. They also have supported a Sunni group, Hamas, 
as they lobbed rockets into Israel. Many of those rockets have been 
provided, apparently, through Iran. Of course, we should not forget 
that this behavior comes from a regime that has

[[Page 6197]]

pledged to ``annihilate,'' ``destroy,'' and ``wipe Israel off the 
map.''
  Like many of my colleagues in the Senate, I have serious concerns 
about the framework of the nuclear agreement and what may follow in a 
comprehensive deal. Given the importance of this issue, I feel strongly 
that Congress should play a role in analyzing any agreement and 
approving or disapproving it. Our negotiating objective, in my view, 
should be an enforceable agreement; one that contains concrete and 
verifiable steps to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons 
capability.
  For years, the international community demanded that Iran dismantle 
its nuclear program--most notably by halting all enrichment activity. 
If you look at the U.N. resolution and the activity around that, it is 
pretty strong language. From what we know, it appears that the so-
called framework agreement is still a great distance from that. I hope 
that can be improved. We are looking at a model of an agreement that 
aims to freeze the nuclear program but somehow doesn't dismantle it. I 
certainly would have preferred the dismantlement model, and with the 
tough sanctions we put in place, I had hoped that was doable. But given 
where we are and given Israel's expertise and focus, I wanted to learn 
more about why the Israelis think the framework agreement is inadequate 
and whether it can be turned into a better agreement.
  There are many important questions that remain, and sadly only a few 
of them have satisfactory answers in the current framework agreement. 
In fact, the Iranian version and the U.S. version of the text seem to 
differ on some of the key details. If you hear from them, they say one 
thing and we say another. In particular, I returned from this trip 
continuing my focus on what I think is perhaps the most important issue 
of all, which is the sanctions relief. The U.S. Congress put these 
sanctions in place, encouraging the administration. If we give the 
Iranian regime sanctions relief on day one before they have kept their 
word on any deal, we will be contributing a cash windfall to Iran's 
ongoing efforts to further destabilize an ever-growing list of 
countries--think about it--Syria, Lebanon, Libya, Yemen, and so on. 
Whether it is sanctions relief or whether it is releasing frozen oil 
revenues in banks that are all around the world, getting the proceeds 
from sales of oil that are now frozen in banks, if that becomes 
something the Iranians can use, that kind of financial relief would be 
a step to fuel war, not peace.
  So these are the right areas to focus on when it comes to Iran, not 
just for Israel's sake, of course, but for the sake of peace and 
stability in the region and for our sake, our national security, and 
the world's sake.
  I am hopeful we can pass the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act and 
safeguard Congress's role. I hope we can move to a bipartisan consensus 
on the floor of the Senate. But what constitutes a good deal? I believe 
consensus could provide a measuring stick to determine what kind of an 
agreement would produce a lasting peace and also provide the 
administration some leverage, give them some leverage to be able to 
negotiate a more effective agreement by having that debate on the floor 
of the Senate.
  Attacks on Israel, of course, don't always come from rockets, 
missiles, or other violent means. Increasingly, opponents of Israel are 
using economic weapons to target Israel. The boycott, divestment, and 
sanctions movement--also called BDS--is an effort to undermine Israel's 
sovereignty and further isolate it from the international community, 
really delegitimize the state.
  Senator Cardin and I recently authored the United States-Israel Trade 
Enhancement Act of 2015. It has a very simple purpose. It says that the 
United States will leverage trade to stop efforts to delegitimize 
Israel, especially when, as I look at it, having just been there, some 
of these BDS efforts actually harm the Palestinians in the West Bank, 
whom I think some of these efforts are meant to help.
  Our legislation leverages ongoing trade negotiations to discourage 
our trading partners from engaging in this economic discrimination. I 
have seen how it works. I know trade can be effective. We did this with 
Oman when I was in the U.S. Trade Representative's office, as they 
wanted to negotiate a trade agreement, and the same with Bahrain. Both 
of those agreements ended up removing their boycotts of Israel. I 
talked with Saudi Arabia when I negotiated for their accession to the 
WTO, where again we were able to make progress in providing, in that 
case, equal treatment to Israel.
  I am very proud that the Cardin-Portman amendment was the first and 
one of only three amendments to pass out of the Finance Committee when 
we took up the trade promotion authority bill.
  In my meetings with U.S. Ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro, the 
Foreign Ministry, Israeli national security officials, and in my 
discussions with the Prime Minister, I gained some additional insight 
into how BDS actually works in practice, and I came home more resolved 
than ever to work in a bipartisan way to ensure that we don't have this 
discrimination and painfully obvious double standard with Israel. For 
instance, its advocates only insist on isolation and penalties for 
Israel--not other countries--over territorial disputes and turn a blind 
eye to other territorial disputes around the world.
  Finally, I talked to officials at length about general turmoil in the 
Middle East and Israel's relationship with its neighbors. This 
deteriorating regional security environment includes Egypt's battle 
against Hamas and radicalism in the Sinai, the brutal civil war in 
Syria, the destabilizing role of Iran-backed Hezbollah fighters in 
Lebanon and Syria, threats and challenges to our ally Jordan, the 
brutality of ISIS, and the Israeli-Palestinian dialogue.
  So I returned from my trip with my concerns reinforced over the 
threats to the region, but I also returned with hope because whether I 
was touching the ancient stones of the Western Wall, walking the 
Stations of the Cross in the Old City, amidst the Old City Market, 
standing amidst the worshipers in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, or 
marveling at the modern hustle and bustle of Tel Aviv, I saw a 
remarkable phenomenon up close.
  A small but determined country that carries within its narrow borders 
the ancient wisdom of our great faith, the cutting-edge innovations, 
and the can-do spirit of the modern State of Israel--all of this 
combines to bring me back to this floor with a greater resolve to meet 
the challenges we talked about today for our own national security but 
also for that of our steadfast ally, Israel.
  I yield back the remainder of my time.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, what is the business pending before the 
Senate?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The conference report to accompany S. Con. 
Res. 11, with 10 hours of debate equally divided.
  Mr. DURBIN. On the budget.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. On the budget.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I hope some of the comments I make in 
reference to this product are not taken personally.
  I thank the Presiding Officer for all the work he has put into the 
budget and for his friendship and cooperation on so many different 
issues.
  What is this budget all about? A budget is really like a blueprint. 
It really says what we want to do and spend in the next fiscal year 
that starts October 1. As a result of passing a budget, we send a 
message to the spending committees and tell them how much to spend in 
different areas. The budget tries to spell out not only the amounts but 
also the policy we are to follow when we pass these spending bills. It 
is really a pretty small document by Federal standards, but it really 
packs a lot of wallop when it comes to what we are going to be doing 
for the next several months.
  Budgets make choices, just as our family budgets make a choice. Can 
we afford a new car? Is it time to move?

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Can we remodel the kitchen? Can we pay for the kids to go to college? 
These are family budget decisions that are made that really impact the 
lives of members of the family. Just as those decisions impact lives, 
so does this, in a large way, for over 300 million Americans.
  Sadly, from my perspective--and I have great respect for the Senator 
from Wyoming, who serves as the Senate Budget Committee chairman--from 
my perspective, this budget has the wrong priorities. Let me tell you 
why.
  Many times, you are going to hear speeches given on the floor of the 
Senate about how the government should not pick winners and losers. I 
have heard that so many times. It basically says: Let's leave it to the 
free market forces and other forces. Government shouldn't pick winners 
and losers.
  This budget being offered to the Senate picks winners and losers, and 
we can almost identify those winners by name because what this budget 
does is it eliminates the Federal estate tax. The Federal estate tax in 
this circumstance--changes that are called for, reforms in it, will 
result in tax breaks for the wealthiest people in America. Roughly 
4,000 people a year will be spared, if their estates are worth more 
than $10 million, from paying the estate tax. For these individuals who 
are that wealthy, it means a $3 million tax break. When you add it up 
over a 10-year period of time, 4,000 people per year, it comes out to 
$268 billion. So the wealthiest people in America are declared the 
winners in the Senate Republican budget.
  Who are the losers? The losers are 16 million Americans who will find 
that they don't have the benefits of the EITC tax credit, as well as 
the child tax credit that has been proposed. For 16 million Americans, 
we cut back tax credits which they can use to build and sustain their 
families in order to give tax breaks to 4,000 people a year who have an 
estate worth more than $10 million.
  We haven't ignored the estate tax. In fact, we substantially reformed 
it. We indexed it. We made a lot of changes to it. But the Republican 
budget said we haven't gone far enough. We still have 4,000 people who 
are so rich that they are going to pay the tax, and this budget says it 
is time for that to end. I think they are wrong.
  In order to deal with reducing the budget deficit, let me tell you 
where this Republican budget turns. All of us are aware of the fact 
that student loan debt now is the largest debt in America other than 
mortgage debt. There is more student loan debt in America than credit 
card debt. Think about that for a second.
  Millions of students are deep in debt and carrying that debt for year 
after year because higher education--colleges and universities--cost so 
much. Middle-income families can't afford to pay it. They haven't saved 
enough. So the kids and sometimes the family have to borrow the money 
to get it done.
  What does this budget do for those student borrowers? First, it 
reduces the amount of money available in Pell grants. Pell grants are 
grants--not loans--given to low-income students at colleges and 
universities. That is money the students don't have to borrow because 
they come from low-income families. Well, in this bill, we have a 31-
percent cut in Pell grant funding; it is about $90 billion over 10 
years. Eight million Americans are dependent on Pell grant funding in 
this current school year. They will find that there is less money 
available in grants--even though they are from low-income families--to 
go to college. So what is the alternative? Don't go to college or 
borrow more money. So the Republican approach to the student loan debt 
crisis is to decrease the grants and increase the debt of future 
students.
  That isn't all. There is a provision that says: If you borrow money 
to go to colleges and universities from the Federal Government, then 
your repayment of those government loans is going to be at least 
sensitive to your situation in life. In other words, you won't have to 
pay more than 10 percent of your income each year to pay off the 
student loan.
  They eliminate it. That basically means these students are going to 
have to pay higher amounts of their earnings on their student loans. Is 
that a problem? It is a big problem. It is a problem for those fresh 
out of colleges and universities who want to start their lives. How are 
they going to start their lives and take the jobs they want and still 
pay off the student loans? Students are making decisions now about 
where they go to work and what they do with their lives because of the 
debt they carry with them out of colleges and universities. The 
Republican budget before us today makes it more difficult for those 
students by reducing the Pell grants and increasing the payback cost on 
student loans.
  They do something else for students, too. The Affordable Care Act, 
which some call ObamaCare, said: If you graduate from college, you can 
stay on your parents' health insurance plan until age 26. Is that 
important? Boy, it was in our family.
  I can remember when my daughter graduated from college, and I said: 
Jennifer, do you have health insurance?
  She said: Dad, I don't need it. I feel fine.
  Really?
  Well, now, under the Affordable Care Act, my daughter and other kids 
can stay on their parents' health insurance plan. So what does the 
Republican budget do about that? It abolishes the Affordable Care Act. 
It abolishes that protection for families to keep their kids on their 
health insurance plans. How can that help families and kids fresh out 
of college? A lot of kids out of college are not finding jobs right 
away. They are doing internships. They are working part time. They 
can't afford health insurance. But they are on the family plan now 
because of ObamaCare--not according to the Republican budget; they want 
to get rid of it.
  That isn't all. When you take a look at eliminating the Affordable 
Care Act--at this point, we have 16 million Americans who have the 
benefit of health insurance because of ObamaCare, and they eliminate it 
over a period of time. And we believe that number will grow to 27 
million Americans who, because of the Republican budget, will not have 
the opportunity to get health insurance.
  They cut back on Medicaid eligibility. Medicaid, of course, is health 
insurance for those in low-income situations. What will happen to those 
people? I wonder if the Budget Committee sat down, took a look, and 
said: Well, what is going to happen if people lose their health 
insurance, 27 million Americans? It would be naive to say that they 
just won't get sick. We know they will, and it will go back to the old 
days. In the old days, sick people who had no health insurance still 
showed up at the hospital. The hospital took care of them. The doctors 
took care of them. They were charity patients. Who paid for their care? 
All of us who have health insurance. I don't want to go back to the old 
days. I don't think America wants to. But this Republican budget does. 
It eliminates the Affordable Care Act.
  I travel around Illinois and Chicago--I am honored to represent it--
and I go to community health centers. They are popping up all over, in 
rural areas and cities as well, in neighborhoods. I want to say how 
proud I am that the Affordable Care Act created many of these centers. 
I have said, and I stand by it, that if I were sick or a member of my 
family were sick, I would be confident that if they walked into that 
center, that clinic, they would be treated to professional care. They 
are popping up all over the place. Elderly people now have someplace 
close to home to go to a clinic. Those who are on Medicaid--the health 
insurance from the government--can go in and be treated the same as 
anybody else.
  What do we have in this bill when it comes to these health care 
clinics? This bill not only kicks 11 million people off Medicaid by 
taking away States' rights to expand health care to lower income 
residents, it cuts funding for community health centers by 70 percent--
community health centers that are now serving 23 million Americans, 
which includes 7 million children and

[[Page 6199]]

250,000 veterans. How can we be better off by cutting back on the 
medical care in these health clinics? Do we think people won't get 
sick? Of course they will, and the cost will be shifted to others, just 
like the bad old days that we remember when health insurance premiums 
were going through the roof. But that is the proposal, and I think it 
is a serious mistake.
  When I look at this Republican budget, I wonder if the Members who 
voted for it have really taken these ideas back home; if they have sat 
down with people and talked about what the impact will be when working 
families lose the tax credit of the ITC and child care. I wonder if 
they have considered what the impact will be by saying they want to 
perpetuate breaks in the Tax Code which reward companies for taking 
jobs overseas.
  Isn't that the last thing we should be doing? Shouldn't the Tax Code 
be rewarding American companies that keep quality jobs in the United 
States, instead of shifting their mailing address to the Cayman Islands 
or someplace in Europe?
  I think it is pretty clear: If you want to build a strong American 
economy, you stand by the best, most patriotic American corporations 
that keep people working in the United States. Yet that is not what 
this budget proposal does. We can do better.
  I hope we defeat this budget resolution, and I hope we can then sit 
down and actually have a bipartisan conversation about the future of 
this country.
  I think the future of this country includes a Tax Code that is fair 
to working families. I think it rewards American companies that create 
jobs in the United States. I don't think it gives 4,000 people a year, 
who happen to be the wealthiest people in America, a winning Power Ball 
ticket, as this budget proposal we have before us does.
  I think we ought to expand the reach of health insurance, not reduce 
it. We want to give families a chance to be able to send their kids to 
college and kids not be so burdened with debt they can't chart their 
own futures. That is an optimistic, positive view of a growing America. 
This budget resolution is not.
  I urge my colleagues to vote against this budget resolution and say 
to the Committee on the Budget that we can do better. If we are going 
to pick winners and losers, let's pick working families right here in 
America as the winners.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Portman). The Senator from Oregon.
  Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I rise reluctantly against this budget 
resolution. I want to pick up exactly where our colleague from Illinois 
left off with respect to the values that are really important for this 
debate. As I look at this budget, I see opportunities missed that would 
bring the Senate together, help us find common ground, and particularly 
help the middle class.
  The reality is there are tens of millions of people in Oregon and 
across America who day in and day out walk an economic tightrope, 
stretching every paycheck to the last penny. They want to climb the 
ladder of opportunity, they want to give their kids a brighter future, 
and the climb is not easy. My view is we ought to be trying to write a 
Federal budget that makes it easier for middle-class people to climb 
that ladder of opportunity and for those who aren't middle class to 
start moving up the rungs.
  This legislation before us misses out on several bipartisan 
opportunities that reluctantly drive me to say the bill is flawed, 
because in too many instances, it leaves our working families, our 
middle class, behind.
  Let me be specific. I offered, when the budget came up here, an 
amendment which stipulated that tax reform be built around the needs of 
our middle class so employers that would hire workers would have an 
opportunity to hire more, our workers would be able to get child care, 
and our students would be able to get educated. It was pretty 
straightforward. It said tax relief should be built around our middle 
class.
  A number of my colleagues on the other side of the aisle asked if 
this would allow for some approaches that they would be interested in. 
I said of course.
  Chairman Enzi and I both have the honor to serve on the Senate 
Committee on Finance, so I offered an amendment that was built around 
some core ideas, recognizing my colleagues might have other approaches. 
A number of Republicans voted for that. It got more than 70 votes in 
the Senate.
  Today, as we debate this legislation, we don't hear anything about 
tax relief for middle-class families. As I look at the budget, it sure 
looks to me, given some of the other priorities, as though there is a 
real prospect that taxes could go up for our middle-class families, as 
if they are not getting hammered hard enough. We could be working on a 
budget proposal today that creates new opportunity for middle-class 
people, a proposal that includes something such as what was voted on in 
the Senate that got more than 70 votes. Yet it is not there.
  A second example deals with rural America. Again, in a lot of our 
rural communities there is enormous hurt. Many feel the policies of the 
Federal Government would pretty much turn them into some kind of 
economic sacrifice zone. So in the Committee on the Budget, I said: I 
think we have an opportunity to bring together programs such as the 
Secure Rural Schools Program, the Payment in Lieu of Taxes Program, and 
the Land and Water Conservation Fund, and we could adopt a smarter 
approach to fighting wildfires. The fact is that, too, was bipartisan. 
In the Committee on the Budget, the vote was 18 to 4--an overwhelming 
18-to-4 bipartisan vote for the kind of approach I offered which would 
bring these programs together and put in the budget secure rural 
schools alongside these other programs that are a rural lifeline.
  Once again, a bipartisan proposal--a bipartisan proposal that got 
resounding support in the Senate Committee on the Budget--somehow 
didn't make its way into the legislation we are considering today. So 
for communities in my home State, the message is: We are not really 
going to make your communities a priority.
  I was just in, for example, Roseburg, OR, which is Southern Oregon, 
where there are hard-working people who would like to both get the 
timber harvest up and have the funds for their police and their schools 
and their roads and basic services. But this budget says that even 
though in the Committee on the Budget we had something bipartisan to 
help those communities, gee, we are really not going to follow through. 
We are just going to have a partisan plan, No. 1; and No. 2, we are 
going to basically shuffle to the side these bipartisan proposals with 
respect to middle-class tax relief and rural communities that, in my 
view, could make a huge difference in the quality of life for millions 
of American families. Of course, these were bipartisan ideas.
  Now, a third area that has concerned me about this budget is the need 
for supporting programs such as Medicare and Social Security that keep 
millions of Americans from falling through the cracks. With this budget 
plan, the Congress ought to be protecting Medicaid so Americans of very 
limited means can count on having access to health care. Yet the budget 
that is being considered today would make, in my view, needlessly 
painful, needlessly arbitrary cuts.
  It just seems as if the budget doesn't recognize that weakening 
Medicaid will hurt the most vulnerable families in Oregon and across 
the country--those who are struggling so hard to climb that ladder of 
opportunity. Without Medicaid coverage, those who are vulnerable end up 
forgoing checkups. They end up passing on the preventive visits. In my 
view, they will end up with lesser care at a higher overall cost. A 
massive burden would end up getting shifted to hospitals and doctors 
and many Americans who simply pay insurance premiums through their 
employer.
  So if we make those kinds of cuts today--the cuts I have described as 
being arbitrary--we are going to have

[[Page 6200]]

higher costs and more economic pain down the road.
  Finally, millions of seniors and those with disabilities rely on 
Medicaid to help cover what otherwise can be crushing costs--crushing 
costs--in the long-term care area. I was codirector of the Oregon Gray 
Panthers for a number of years before I was elected to Congress, and 
what I have seen over the years are nursing home costs going up and up 
and up. Even those families who worked hard and saved and never took 
that extra vacation, never bought that special car ended up being 
impoverished, and they and those who are disabled simply would not be 
in a position to get long-term care without Medicaid.
  Now, we know what used to happen years and years ago. There were poor 
farms, there were almshouses when savings ran out. It is pretty hard to 
do that with the demographic revolution of today, with 10,000 people 
turning 65 every day--10,000 people turning 65 every day for years and 
years to come.
  So my view is Medicaid, this lifeline for the most vulnerable 
people--a lifeline that keeps so many individuals, particularly 
seniors, from falling into utter destitution--should be protected 
rather than filleted, as this budget would do, and it is one of the 
major reasons I am in opposition.
  I will close by way of saying that I have gotten, over the years, to 
know Chairman Enzi very well. He is a compassionate legislator. He is a 
talented legislator. My hope is, though I oppose this budget today for 
the reasons I have described--the bipartisan opportunities missed with 
respect to tax relief for the middle class and the rejection of a 
bipartisan plan to help rural America--that in the days ahead, as we go 
to the Committee on Finance, in particular, and we look at these 
issues, we can return to what has always been the Senate at its best, 
which is working in a bipartisan fashion. We can do it on tax relief. 
We can do it for rural America.
  By the way, we can do it in terms of Medicare. We can protect the 
Medicare guarantee and hold down costs. Our colleague Senator Isakson 
from Georgia has joined me in an important piece of legislation that 
really starts to transform Medicare into a program that better meets 
the needs of those who will most need it, which is those with chronic 
disease--cancer, diabetes, stroke, and heart disease. But we would be 
protecting the Medicare guarantee, not, in effect, damaging Medicaid 
the way this budget would do.
  Mr. President, I am going to yield the floor now and just state, once 
again, that I hope we can go back to what makes the Senate function at 
its best, bipartisanship. We missed that opportunity thus far, and I 
hope we will return to it.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
  Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, I thank the Senator from Oregon for his kind 
comments, and I know, as the ranking member of the Committee on 
Finance, he will be doing a lot of things to see that things in this 
budget happen, and I suspect they will happen a lot the way they are 
here.
  I would like to mention just a couple of things, though, for him to 
note because he mentioned the wildfire suppression. I know how 
passionate he and Senator Crapo have been on wildfire suppression. I 
want him to note that section 3208 preserves the wildfire suppression 
funding.
  One of the things that has always concerned me since I got here was 
that we have these emergencies for all sorts of things. When I first 
got here, they were $5 billion a year; now they are up to $7 billion a 
year. But any time you are budgeting and you know something is going to 
happen every year, it ought to be in the budget. So I put in $7 billion 
for emergencies, and that will help to provide some of the funding for 
his suggestion of the wildfire suppression.
  A couple of the other paragraphs the Senator from Oregon would be 
interested in are 4319 and 4320. We did not throw out everything. We 
did do some combining of ones that were very similar to make sure that 
in the 183 proposals we had for reserve funds, we could come up with a 
few fewer that would incorporate the ideas of everyone.
  Some of the previous speeches mentioned what we were doing to 
Medicare. There aren't a lot of specifics on Medicare because, again, 
the Finance Committee--which Senator Hatch chairs and Senator Wyden is 
the ranking member on--will have to make a lot of those actual 
decisions. In fact, almost everything that is in the budget requires 
some additional action, and that additional action even has to be 
signed by the President. So if we are way off, it is not going to 
happen. But I am thinking there will be a lot of bipartisan action on 
this.
  On Medicare itself, all we in the Senate did was go with the same 
Medicare cuts that the President suggested in his budget. We made one 
small change in that. We said those Medicare cuts, the money that will 
be saved in Medicare, has to stay with Medicare. That is a difference 
that we have with the President. When we did ObamaCare, there was $714 
billion worth of Medicare that was taken out and spent on other parts 
of the program. We could have done the doc fix back then really easily, 
but that was spent in other places.
  One of the promises we made was that if there were some changes in 
Medicare--and there ought to be some changes in Medicare. Actually, the 
government ought to take a look at everything it does on a regular 
basis and do it better or, if it is not working, do without it. But 
Medicare does serve a need in this country, and the money that comes 
from Medicare ought to stay in Medicare but used in better places in 
Medicare, where it is more needed.
  So I hope people will actually take a look at the document that is 
here.
  Incidentally, on the Medicare proposal, the House came to the Senate 
proposal and eliminated a couple of things they had.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Lankford). The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. TESTER. Mr. President, if we look into this Senate's agenda this 
month, we will see right away why so many folks are frustrated with 
Washington. We have now been considering an Iran bill for the last 2 
weeks. It has huge bipartisan support, but it is tied up with 
amendments designed to kill the bill.
  Today, the House and Senate Republicans bring forth a budget which 
reflects some of the worst ideas from each Chamber. Back in March, I 
raised concerns that the Senate budget put the interests of a few ahead 
of the future of this country, and that is still true today. The 
majority insists on spending billions of dollars overseas, and 
continues the fiction that this spending somehow doesn't count towards 
the deficit.
  Under this budget, every penny proposed in the overseas contingency 
operations account--that is $187 billion--is going to be borrowed from 
China, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and others. The majority once again favors 
tax breaks for the wealthiest among us over plans to strengthen the 
middle class--a middle class that has been the envy of the world. But 
under this blueprint, the $2,500 tax credit that helps students with 
the cost of tuition disappears. The benefit under the child tax credit 
gets smaller, and American middle-class folks get squeezed. The 
majority continues to reward companies that ship jobs overseas instead 
of creating jobs right here in the United States. This budget 
drastically cuts and ends Medicare as we know it, and it opens up the 
door to the sale of our public lands.
  Finally, this budget fails to invest in basic infrastructure. In 
fact, it actually calls for a cut of over $200 billion in highway and 
transit funding over the next decade. The majority is pushing this 
proposal even though the highway bill funding expires on May 31, 2015. 
Now we are nearly out of time. In less than 4 weeks, just as millions 
of

[[Page 6201]]

Americans will be getting on the road to enjoy summer vacations, road 
construction projects around this country will come to a screeching 
halt.
  In my home State of Montana, the State department of transportation 
will delay nine projects this month due to Congress's failure to pass a 
long-term highway bill. Four projects that were scheduled to be awarded 
in April have been postponed to July and may be postponed indefinitely. 
Five more that were scheduled to be awarded next week will also be 
delayed. If Congress does another short-term extension, that list will 
get even longer. If we delay these projects even by a few weeks, we 
could miss the entire construction season in Montana, a northern-tier 
State. The snow will start falling, and the potholes will get bigger.
  We already know that America's transportation infrastructure has been 
ignored for far too long. According to the American Association of 
State Highway and Transportation Officials, more than half of America's 
major roads and bridges are rated as poor to mediocre. In Montana, 40 
percent of our roads are in need of repair or will need fixing soon. 
When our roads have potholes or can't handle the volume of cars and 
trucks, safety becomes an issue. Montana routinely leads the Nation in 
highway fatalities, and thousands of road fatalities each year are the 
result of bad road conditions.
  As far as the economic impact, Federal highway dollars directly 
impact 11,000 jobs in Montana alone, not to mention the thousands of 
others who rely on roads for their businesses. These are jobs that 
cannot be outsourced. Each year, around $60 billion in goods is shipped 
over Montana's 75,000 miles of roads and highways. That is true 
economic impact.
  So instead of a long-term highway bill that allows States to plan and 
to get America moving, the next item the majority leader says he is 
going to take up is trade promotion authority. This will open the door 
for trade deals that the American public hasn't been allowed to see. 
While many in Washington see trade promotion as the key to ensuring 
America's long-term economic viability, we need to make sure that the 
investments are made right here at home--smart investments.
  After all, how are farmers in Montana going to get their crops to 
Asia if they cannot even get them down the road to the nearest grain 
elevator?
  Our transportation infrastructure affects every industry. Take, for 
instance, Montana's outdoor economy. Millions of people come to Montana 
each year to hunt, fish, hike, and enjoy Montana's great outdoors--from 
Glacier and Yellowstone National Parks to our millions of acres of 
forest and public lands. Montana's outdoors brings in $6 billion each 
year and supports some 60,000 jobs.
  Passing a highway bill will increase folks' ability to access these 
outdoor places. But States which oversee these construction projects 
cannot wait until the end of the month to find out if Congress is going 
to do its job. Many of them are already pumping the brakes on projects 
until we step up and pass a highway infrastructure bill.
  In the University District in Missoula, an important resurfacing 
project was scheduled to start next week after classes get out. But 
thanks to congressional inaction on the highway bill, that project will 
start no earlier than the third week in July--maybe not at all.
  What does that mean? That means the project likely will not be done 
before students return and traffic in the University District increases 
exponentially. The Montana Department of Transportation has already 
announced it will push back the start-up date 3 months for a bridge 
replacement in Sanders County.
  With one in five bridges being in desperate need of repair, delays on 
projects such as this are irresponsible and only add to the backlog. 
The need to act could not be more clear. While everyone knows we need a 
long-term solution, the American people have come to expect the worst 
from Congress--shortsighted, stopgap measures that will not give 
businesses or working families the certainty they need and deserve.
  The House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee 
have put forth no solutions to this date. They are anxious to move the 
trade legislation that seems all too reminiscent of past trade deals--
long on promises but short on jobs. Yet they will not produce a long-
term highway bill that we know creates jobs here in America.
  We must pass a long-term highway bill, and one that is paid for. But 
instead of working together on a long-term plan, Congress seems 
resigned to passing another short-term patch. This is shortsighted and 
we will have negative consequences for folks across this country.
  The question I have for my colleagues is this. When did passing a 
highway bill become political? When did basic investments in our 
Nation's infrastructure become this difficult? This is a no-brainer. 
Now we have folks in Congress who think roads build themselves. We have 
folks in Congress who eagerly swipe the Nation's credit card when it 
comes to investments in the Middle East. But these same Members of 
Congress will not even open up the wallet to fill a pothole next to a 
school in this country.
  China will spend more than $400 billion on transportation 
infrastructure this year. That is eight times more than the United 
States will spend on the highway trust fund. How do we expect to 
compete in a global economy if we are not willing to make the 
investment?
  Infrastructure investments are investments in our economy, and they 
are investments in the future. If we can pass a long-term bill, it will 
pay for itself by giving businesses the certainty they need to grow, 
create jobs, and build the kind of economy that our kids and our 
grandkids deserve.
  The clock is ticking, but the Senate is focused on the wrong 
priorities. It is time to refocus on making smart investments in our 
economy and being honest with the American people in our budgets. Right 
now we are doing neither.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Ms. KLOBUCHAR. Mr. President, I come to the floor today to voice my 
opposition to this budget. Since being elected to the Senate, I have 
always stressed the importance of responsibly addressing our country's 
fiscal challenges. We have had bipartisan agreements before when we 
faced fiscal challenges. At the end of 2013, we passed the bipartisan 
Murray-Ryan budget agreement which then led to the passage of the 
omnibus spending bill. I was part of the group of 14 during the 
shutdown who came together with an idea for a fix that allowed us to 
get to the budget--seven Democrats and seven Republicans. We also saw 
some major bipartisan work on the farm bill, the Water Resources 
Development Act, the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act, and we 
reauthorized the Child Care and Development Block Grant Program and, as 
well as we know, recently, the Medicare sustainable growth rate. But 
today that is not what this budget is about. That is one of my major 
focuses today.
  I would say, by the way, as a result of some of the bipartisan work 
that has been done in the past, since 2009 we have seen the deficit as 
a percent of GDP drop from nearly 10 percent--9.8 percent, exactly--to 
under 3 percent.
  In this economic recovery, we have seen 61 straight months of private 
sector job growth and added over 12 million private sector jobs. 
Unemployment is at 5.5 percent nationally and 3.7 percent in my home 
State of Minnesota. The unemployment rate went down faster in 2014 than 
it has in any year since 1984.
  With this economy not just stabilized but finally starting to show 
some signs of improvement--not everything that we need, not with 
everyone sharing in

[[Page 6202]]

its growth; we know that--we are no longer governing from crisis. We 
are finally governing from opportunity--opportunity for the people of 
this country, opportunity to compete in this global economy. My problem 
with this budget is that it does not give us that opportunity. This 
budget would make drastic cuts to the programs we need to seize this 
opportunity in the global economy, programs such as student loans, 
transportation, and heating assistance, just to name a few.
  According to the Congressional Budget Office, the deficit is 
projected to drop to 2.8 percent of GDP in 2015, a cut of nearly two-
thirds. Yet this budget would cut many of the programs that help our 
middle-class people, our families, our seniors, and those working hard 
to make ends meet. We have heard about a lot of the cuts in programs, 
but I want to focus on three key areas that I believe we need to invest 
in today so we can seize this opportunity when we finally have a stable 
economy and our country can grow and compete. The first is 
infrastructure, the second is investing in kids, and the third is 
research.
  One of the best ways to boost our economy and create good-paying jobs 
is through investing in infrastructure. For far too long we have 
neglected the roads, the bridges, and the mass transit that millions of 
Americans rely on every day. According to the Federal Highway 
Administration, more than 24 percent of the Nation's 600,000 bridges 
are either structurally deficient or functionally obsolete. According 
to the American Society of Civil Engineers' 2013 report card, the 
United States scores a D-plus on the overall condition of our Nation's 
infrastructure.
  Compared with other countries, we are falling behind. China and India 
are spending, respectively, 9 percent and 8 percent of their GDPs on 
infrastructure. How much are we committing? Just 2 percent. The effects 
of this shortsighted strategy are increasingly clear. No one knows that 
better than in my home State of Minnesota, where on August 1, 2007, a 
major bridge--an eight-lane highway--went crashing into the Mississippi 
River, and 13 people died. Dozens and dozens were injured. Dozens of 
cars were submerged in the water. As I said that day, a bridge should 
not fall down in the middle of America--especially not an eight-lane 
interstate highway, especially not a bridge that is one of the most 
traveled bridges in our State, especially not a bridge that is blocks 
from my house, a bridge that my family goes over every day when we want 
to go anywhere in our State--rush hour in the heart of a major 
metropolitan area.
  When we have something like that happen in the State, we understand 
the importance of investing in infrastructure. The last thing we want 
to see is more cuts. Whether it is roads, bridges, rail, airports or 
waterways, the need to rebuild our infrastructure is critical to 
reclaiming our country's competitive edge. We want to get goods to 
market in this export economy. How do we do it? We do it with roads, 
with bridges, with rail. We do it with locks and dams. We do it with 
airports. Yet this budget would cut transportation and infrastructure 
by more than $200 billion over the next decade--a cut of 40 percent. 
That is simply unacceptable.
  Education funding is something that is so important to me in my life. 
My grandpa worked 1,500 feet underground in the mines and never 
graduated from high school. He literally spent his life working, 
putting money in a coffee can in the basement to send my dad to 
community college. My dad went to community college and got a 2-year 
degree and then went on to the University of Minnesota--two public 
institutions. That is what education is about. Yet, we see cuts to 
education, cuts to Pell grants in this bill.
  The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act provides critical 
funding to help offset education costs for States and local areas that 
are providing services to kids with disabilities. We are talking about 
our most vulnerable kids here. Yet this budget would cut Federal 
education funding by 2 percent in 2017 and 9 percent in 2025. IDEA 
funding--that funding so critical for kids with disabilities--would be 
cut by more than $15 million per year on average in Minnesota and more 
than $950 million nationally. Our kids deserve better than that.
  Medical research--no one knows that better than Minnesota, home of 
the Mayo Clinic, home of the University of Minnesota. Yet what do we 
see with this budget? The cuts would mean a devastating $8 billion 
decrease at the National Institutes of Health over the next decade. 
This is simply unacceptable--cutting investment in medical innovation 
for cures that could cure Alzheimer's, for cures that could cure 
childhood diabetes, for cures and for research that could help people 
with autism; cutting investment in medical innovation is not a path 
that we can afford to take.
  As Newt Gingrich said in an op-ed this last month, investing in 
health research is both a moral and a financial issue. The NIH is a 
beacon of hope for people across the Nation and in my home State of 
Minnesota. Just look at Alzheimer's. Right now, close to 5.2 million 
Americans are living with Alzheimer's, including nearly 100,000 
Minnesotans. These numbers will grow dramatically in the many coming 
years with the aging of the baby boomer generation. We know there is 
good research being done through the Human Genome Project and the work 
that is being done at Mayo, where, if we can catch it earlier, our 
doctors might be able to figure out exactly what works and does not 
work. If you do not catch it early, how are they ever going to do the 
research we need to do to figure out what works and what does not work 
if you wait too long?
  That is some of the groundbreaking work that is being done right now. 
That is why I have worked with Senator Durbin on legislation to boost 
NIH funding. In contrast to this budget, the American Cures Act, of 
which I am a cosponsor, would reverse the trend of declining Federal 
investment in medical research and fuel the next generation of 
biomedical discoveries by providing a 5-percent annual increase at NIH 
and at other key Federal research agencies.
  We need to see this as an investment. We know how expensive 
Alzheimer's is--and we know the heartbreaking stories of families where 
a family member gets Alzheimer's. Yet we cannot back away from the 
research that is going on right now--the research for things such as 
precision medicine. We are going to have targeted treatments helping 
patients to live healthier lives.
  In conclusion, this budget would make cuts to infrastructure at a 
time when we need to invest and rebuild. This budget would make cuts to 
programs that serve kids with disabilities and slow the process of 
biomedical research and innovation. We have an opportunity now in this 
country. Through the work of so many businesses and workers across the 
country, we have been able to stabilize this economy. People in our 
country did not give up. But now is the moment to seize opportunities, 
and seizing opportunities means really taking back our place in America 
as a preeminent researcher, as the country that people go to when they 
want to cure diseases. We cannot do that by moving backwards. We cannot 
do that if we are going to cut the funding for our roads and bridges. 
We cannot afford to have another I-35W bridge collapse.
  I urge my colleagues to oppose this budget and work together on a 
smarter budget, one that actually allows this country--America--to 
seize the opportunity before us so we can compete in this global 
economy.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oregon.
  Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, I rise today to discuss the budget that 
is before the Senate, this combined House-Senate Republican budget. In 
evaluating this budget proposal, my core question has been this: Is 
this a budget that works for working America? Or is this a budget 
designed for powerful special interests and for those best off in our 
society? A budget is not just about the numbers; it is about the vision 
that it has for America.
  Over 70 years ago, President Franklin Roosevelt issued an economic 
bill of

[[Page 6203]]

rights, proclaiming: In our day these economic truths have become 
accepted as self-evident: the right to a useful and remunerative job; 
the right to earn enough to provide adequate food; the right of every 
family to a decent home; the right to adequate medical care; the right 
to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, 
accident, and unemployment; and the right to a good education. He 
closed with these words: ``All of these rights spell security.''
  Enacting a budget that advances these economic rights for all 
Americans is my top priority. That means the budget must create good-
paying jobs, improve access to quality, affordable education, ensure 
retirement security for our seniors, and lower the tax burden on 
working families. The American people share these priorities. They want 
a plan, a budget, a vision for our Nation that builds a foundation for 
middle-class families to thrive.
  Two months ago, I stood on the Senate floor to review the budget 
proposed as the Senate Republican budget. In category after category, 
that budget earned a failing grade. Unfortunately, I am here today to 
say that the plan that has come out of the conference committee from 
the House and Senate Republicans is even worse. It constitutes an 
egregious assault on working Americans. It slashes investments in 
infrastructure and education, failing to close tax loopholes and 
attacking financial reform. It is fundamentally misaligned with the 
values of working Americans. It is poised to move our Nation in exactly 
the wrong direction--more tax breaks and corporate welfare for 
millionaires, billionaires, and large corporations that are already 
doing phenomenally well and more pain and suffering for the middle 
class, working families, and the most vulnerable.
  With this budget, the GOP is continuing to play games with Americans' 
health care coverage, claiming we can grow our economy by cutting 
health care for seniors and children and the poorest in our society. 
The Senate GOP budget wiped out coverage under the Affordable Care Act, 
and this budget continues to wreak havoc. It will immediately eliminate 
health insurance coverage for 16.4 million Americans and swell the 
ranks of the uninsured by 23 million individuals within a single year. 
It will deny millions of young adults the right to stay on their 
parents' health insurance plan until the age of 26. It will deprive 130 
million Americans with preexisting conditions the right to purchase 
affordable health insurance if they lose their jobs or otherwise lose 
their health insurance. These numbers are appalling.
  It puts our seniors back at risk of bankruptcy from unaffordable 
prescriptions because it wipes out the ACA's effort to fill in the 
Medicare Part D doughnut hole. In 2014 alone, seniors saved $4.8 
billion on prescription drugs, and 39 million seniors will be forced to 
pay more for preventative services under this budget. The GOP budget 
takes seniors back to the bad old days where the doughnut hole would 
force more than 9.4 million seniors and persons with disabilities to 
pay billions more out of pocket for prescription drugs.
  At a time when senior poverty is on the rise, shouldn't we be focused 
on helping our seniors retire with security and dignity? Instead, the 
new plan cuts Medicare deeply--$430 billion over 10 years. It cuts 
Medicaid by at least $400 billion, jeopardizing nursing home care for 
the most vulnerable senior Americans. It calls for ending Medicare as 
we know it by turning it into a voucher plan. Finally, it paves the way 
for a fast-track consideration of a way to repeal the Affordable Care 
Act through reconciliation.
  When you total up these factors, look at the assault on seniors. 
There is more for prescription drugs and less for nursing home care and 
Medicaid. Medicare will be cut by $430 billion, and it will be 
voucherized. Annual wellness checks and preventive services, such as 
mammograms and prostate cancer screening, will be wiped out. What this 
budget does is turn security into insecurity. What this budget does is 
turn dignity into indignity. This is an unacceptable assault on our 
seniors.
  It is also an assault on our children and on education. Both 
Democrats and Republicans agree that we want a chance for our children 
to get ahead and to pursue their dreams. Shouldn't the budget tell our 
children that education is a priority? The Republican plan makes new 
cuts to Head Start that would kick 400,000 children off the program 
over a 10-year period--400,000 empty Head Start chairs across America.
  This picture is from an event that I held at Oregon's Whitaker 
School. The cuts in the Senate Republican plan to Head Start would mean 
15 empty chairs just at this one location. But now we are talking about 
a budget that wipes out an opportunity for 400,000 children from 
struggling families to get a head start through Head Start.
  The conference report doesn't just hit early childhood education; it 
also fails our children with regard to opening the doors of opportunity 
for higher education. College costs are soaring, so it makes sense to 
strengthen Pell grant funding. But this Republican budget slashes Pell 
grant funding by about one-third. Picture one out of every three of our 
children who use a Pell grant to get through the doors of college, the 
doors of opportunity, unfortunately having that opportunity taken away. 
This budget cuts the program by $90 billion over 10 years and will make 
college out of reach for so many when we should be going in the other 
direction.
  That is not all. It also increases student loan debt by an average of 
$4,000 for an estimated 30 million students, making the children from 
struggling families pay more for basic need-based student loans.
  I believe in opportunity. I believe in the American dream. I believe 
that higher education is one of the best pathways to the middle class. 
We cannot and must not adopt a budget designed to slam the doors of 
opportunity shut on millions of our children.
  There is more to be concerned about. One of the keys to prosperity is 
infrastructure. My colleague from Minnesota was just illuminating many 
of the problems in that area. Why shouldn't a budget prioritize 
improving our Nation's crumbling roads, bridges, dams, water systems, 
airports, and rail systems?
  We have a huge infrastructure deficit. Our highway trust fund is 
running out of money. Right now Europe is investing 5 percent of its 
GDP in infrastructure and the United States is investing less than 2 
percent. We are vastly underinvesting, and this budget continues and 
aggravates that underinvestment, hurting the creation of good-paying 
jobs now and doing enormous damage to the economy of the future.
  Our parents did far better for us by putting a massive infusion of 
funds for infrastructure that strengthened the system and strengthened 
our economy today. Shouldn't we do the same for the next generation? 
And then we can turn to food security.
  Our country has 40 million hungry Americans. In the wealthiest Nation 
on Earth, shouldn't our budget make sure families can put food on the 
table? This Republican budget says no. It supports making massive cuts 
to programs that provide critical assistance to low-income families. 
This plan eliminates
nutrition assistance for 1.2 million women, infants, and children who 
rely on the WIC Program through $10 billion in cuts to programs over 
the next decade. This budget would cut $660 billion over 10 years for 
programs that support low-income individuals and families, including 
massive unspecified cuts to food stamps. With this budget, my 
Republican colleagues are telling the parents of children and 
financially challenged families: Let them go hungry. And that is just 
wrong.
  Since this budget cuts food, Pell grants, infrastructure, and health 
care, and since it does so much damage to working families, shouldn't 
it ask for some small sacrifice from those who are best off? Apparently 
not. This Republican budget takes from the most vulnerable and gives it 
to the wealthiest families in America. This Republican budget provides 
a quarter of a trillion--and, yes, that is trillion with a T--dollar 
tax break for the wealthiest 0.2 percent of Americans while increasing 
taxes on 13 million working

[[Page 6204]]

families with 25 million children by diminishing the earned income tax 
credit and the child tax credit, affecting families who earn just a 
modest amount with an average household income of just $22,000.
  I cannot conceive of any economic or moral argument that justifies 
taking money out of the pockets of struggling families--from Pell 
grants to Head Start to food on the table--and giving it away to the 
already wealthiest Americans. Perhaps one of my colleagues who is 
voting for this budget would like to explain why taking from the poor 
to give more to the wealthiest families in America is justified, 
because it is not justified.
  Despite the fact that our richest families already pay less in their 
marginal tax than working families pay, this Republican budget wants to 
give more away to them from the American Treasury and do it by taking 
food and education opportunities out of the reach of our struggling 
families.
  This budget removes two amendments that were originally adopted in 
the Senate budget. Senator Murray's amendment would have allowed 
Americans to earn paid sick leave. It was supported by 61 Senators, 
including 15 Republicans, but it was eviscerated in this budget. The 
second amendment was introduced by Senator Schatz. It would have 
ensured that all legally married same-sex spouses have equal access to 
Social Security and veterans' benefits they have earned. It was broadly 
supported but wiped out in this joint House-Senate Republican budget.
  This budget takes away from hard-working, middle-class Americans, 
from struggling Americans who are often working two to three minimum-
wage jobs, and it gives away to the wealthy and well-connected, not 
asking them for one slim dime--not one egregious tax loophole closed--
and gives them preferred tax cuts, returning millions of dollars to the 
wealthiest families.
  Is this a budget that works for working Americans or is it a budget 
for the best off? I think it is clear from the topics I have covered 
that this is a budget for the best off at the expense of everyone else 
in America in every possible way that provides a foundation.
  If we return to the vision laid out by Franklin Roosevelt in 1944 of 
the self-evident economic truths, of a right to a good job, to earn 
enough for adequate food, to a decent home, to adequate medical care, 
and to protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, 
accident, and unemployment, this budget fails every test and should be 
defeated.
  I thank the Presiding Officer.
  Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I wish to speak on the budget 
resolution conference report that we are considering today.
  In my view, this is the worst budget resolution that I have seen in 
my 22 years in the Senate. It represents a major step backwards for the 
country, and I believe we need to go back to the drawing board.
  Budget resolutions are as much about priorities as they are about 
numbers, and I believe this budget resolution sets all the wrong 
priorities.
  At a time when millions of families are still struggling to recover 
from the recession, this budget would raise their taxes while cutting 
taxes for the wealthiest Americans, who have only gotten wealthier in 
recent years.
  The budget calls for the elimination of the child tax credit and the 
earned income tax credit, which would raise taxes by an average of $900 
on 13 million working families. Yet, at the same time, the budget would 
eliminate the estate tax, which is only paid by 5,400 families each 
year who inherit estates worth more than $10 million.
  Let me repeat that: this budget calls for raising taxes on 13 million 
low-income families in order to pay for tax cuts for the 5,400 
wealthiest families, representing the richest 0.2 percent of our 
country.
  Prioritizing the rich over struggling families is at the heart of 
what is wrong with this budget.
  In addition, this budget calls for dramatic funding cuts for the very 
Federal programs that these working families rely on most. Nationwide, 
the cuts required by this budget would: prevent 35,000 low-income 
children from enrolling in Head Start, an early childhood education 
program; cut Federal funding for public schools that serve more than 
1.9 million low-income students; increase the cost of college for more 
than 8 million low-income students through cuts to Pell grants; prevent 
2.2 million Americans from accessing job training services; and 
eliminate health coverage through Medicaid for 14 million low-income 
Americans.
  In my view, these cuts are draconian and wholly unnecessary. I also 
believe that these cuts would only further exacerbate income inequality 
and economic hopelessness, the very forces that have been fueling 
unrest throughout the country.
  The events in Baltimore that have been broadcast across the Nation in 
recent weeks are not only a response to years of police brutality, but 
also the result of whole neighborhoods being left behind economically.
  As a former big-city mayor, I remember a time when there was robust 
Federal and State support for cities to redevelop depressed 
neighborhoods and provide educational and employment opportunities for 
their citizens.
  That priority no longer exists, certainly not in the austere funding 
levels of this budget. Instead, we have seen a total abandonment of our 
cities over the past three decades.
  When I was mayor of San Francisco, the Community Development Block 
Grant program, CDBG, was the primary source of Federal funding to help 
State and local governments undertake housing, economic development, 
and neighborhood revitalization projects. During my time at city hall, 
CDBG funds peaked at $3.7 billion, which would be the equivalent of 
$10.6 billion in inflation-adjusted 2014 dollars. In 2014, Congress 
provided only $3.023 billion for CDBG, just 28 percent of that peak 
inflation-adjusted amount.
  For my city, when CDBG was at its prime, it meant we had around $28 
million per year to use for police, fire departments, and economic 
development projects. Under the funding levels in this GOP budget, San 
Francisco would be slated to receive only around $16 million a year, 
just 20 percent of what I had when adjusting for inflation.
  If you care about our cities and the problems facing them, these are 
the dollars that can really make a difference. They work; I have seen 
it. Yet, they would simply not be there under this budget.
  At the same time, many States, including California, have cut funding 
for local redevelopment projects, further straining local government 
funding for economic development and neighborhood revitalization.
  Now, I recognize Congress can't solve all of the country's problems, 
and pouring money into cities will not cure all of their ills.
  But I believe the central role of the Federal Government should be to 
expand opportunities for the people who need it most, not those who 
have already succeeded in life.
  This budget doesn't do that. Not only does this budget not help 
working families, it would actually make their situation even worse.
  This budget would take away the healthcare of the most vulnerable, 
make it even harder for Americans to find a job, deny our Nation's 
youth the opportunity to learn, and raise taxes on those who can least 
afford it.
  The Republican priorities reflected in this budget are morally wrong 
and terrible for our country's future. It is time to develop a budget 
that helps all Americans, not just the wealthy few.
  Mr. REED. Mr. President, the budget conference report before us today 
charts the wrong course for our country and threatens our economic and 
national security.
  During the consideration of the Republican Senate budget a few weeks 
ago, I laid out concerns about its most alarming aspects and my reasons 
for opposing it. My concerns and opposition have not changed because 
this Republican budget conference report doesn't deviate from the 
Senate budget's construct.
  Indeed, the Republican budget stacks the deck in favor of special 
interests and makes it harder for middle-class families to get ahead. 
For example,

[[Page 6205]]

their budget would eliminate the estate tax, giving the wealthiest 0.2 
percent of Americans a $269 billion tax cut over 10 years. It would 
pave the way to cut millionaire's top marginal tax rate from 39.6 
percent to 25 percent. At the same time, it would raise taxes on 16 
million middle-class families by ending the expansion of the earned 
income tax credit and child tax credit. These choices by my colleagues 
on the other side of the aisle are clear and stand in stark contrast to 
policies my Democratic colleagues and I fight for that help middle-
class families and grow the economy from the middle out.
  The Republican budget would also keep the sequester in place, which 
puts unworkable caps on nondefense and defense spending. Both sides of 
the ledger need relief from the sequester for our Nation's economic and 
national security. But it seems that my colleagues on the other side 
are only willing to use the overseas contingency operations, OCO, 
account to provide relief to defense spending despite what we have 
heard from our military leaders on the need to address both sides of 
the ledger and that using OCO in this manner has its own serious 
shortcomings.
  The Pentagon simply cannot meet the complex set of national security 
challenges without the help of other government departments and 
agencies--including State, Justice, Homeland Security, and the 
intelligence community. In the Armed Services Committee, we have heard 
compelling testimony on the essential role of other government agencies 
in ensuring our Nation remains safe and strong. The Department of 
Defense's share of the burden would surely grow if these agencies were 
not adequately funded as well.
  Adding funds to OCO does not solve the Defense Department's problems. 
As Army Chief of Staff General Odierno said, ``OCO has limits and it 
has restrictions and it has very strict rules that have to be followed. 
And so if we're inhibited by that, it might not help us. What might 
happen at the end of the year, we have a bunch of money we hand back 
because we are not able to spend it.''
  Making a 1-year plus up to OCO also does not help the Defense 
Department with the certainty and stability it needs when building its 
5-year budget. As General Dempsey, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, 
testified, ``we need to fix the base budget . . . we won't have the 
certainty we need'' if there is a year by year OCO fix. Defense 
Secretary Carter added that raising OCO does not allow the Defense 
Department to plan ``efficiently or strategically.''
  While adding funds to OCO would provide some relief to the Defense 
Department, it is to defense alone, leaving domestic agencies at 
sequestration levels. And the truth is that the Defense Department 
cannot do its job without other departments. As General Mattis said, 
``If you don't fund the State Department fully, then I need to buy more 
ammunition.'' And in recent testimony, the commanders of Northern 
Command and Southern Command stated they could not accomplish their 
mission of protecting this country without the Coast Guard, the Border 
Patrol, DEA, and the intelligence community.
  Moving beyond the needs we have to keep the Nation safe, there is a 
whole list of needs that ensure Americans and our economy stays healthy 
and thrives. I would like to bring attention to one such need--
addressing lead poisoning, a preventable tragedy that dramatically 
impacts a child's health and ability to learn. This budget would mean 
cuts to programs that help keep kids healthy like the lead poisoning 
prevention program. The kinds of physical health issues and 
developmental delays that stem from lead poisoning have long term 
effects on our children, our communities, and our economy. Indeed, 
educational system costs are estimated at $38,000 over 3 years per 
child with special education needs due to lead poisoning.
  The impact is especially pronounced in low-income and minority 
neighborhoods and populations in cities like Providence or as the 
Nation has recently seen in the dramatic events unfolding in Baltimore. 
These lead poisoning prevention programs are the kinds of initiatives 
that help put disadvantaged communities on an even playing field and, 
ultimately, work to ensure that our children can grow up to contribute 
to their families and their communities.
  I have mentioned several shortsighted provisions, but this budget is 
replete with them. We cannot short-change our Nation's investments in 
the middle class, in our children, and our national security and expect 
long-term prosperity. That is why I will vote no and urge my colleagues 
to do the same.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.


                 Recognizing Montana's Small businesses

  Mr. DAINES. Mr. President, I rise today to honor Montana's thousands 
of small businesses and for their contributions to our State's economy.
  During National Small Business Week, we recognize all of the hard-
working Montana men and women who took the risk to start a small 
business. These men and women have spent countless, sleepless nights 
working to create jobs and grow their business in a State they love and 
call home.
  Before being elected to Congress, I spent nearly 3 decades in the 
private sector, and I know firsthand there is no better place to live 
and work than in Montana. I also know that our small businesses are 
critical to Montana's economy and our State's future.
  According to the Small Business Administration, small businesses 
represent more than 97 percent of all Montana employers, in turn 
employing more than 68 percent of Montana's private sector labor force.
  I am excited to say there are a lot of small business success stories 
in Montana. We have countless business leaders and entrepreneurs 
working to drive our State's economic growth and helping us lead the 
way in a variety of industries, from tourism and agriculture to 
technology and resource development.
  Look no further than Bozeman, my hometown, where Advanced Electronic 
Designs is doing incredible things in innovations, helping to build up 
the Montana high-tech sector. Their team is comprised of 15 Montana 
State University engineers, and together they have designed more than 
70 percent of the LED signs in Times Square--from the NBC ``Today'' 
show to the Disney store.
  I have also had the opportunity to tour ALCOM in Bonner, MT, to see 
their trailer manufacturing facility. They just won the Small Business 
Administration's 2015 Small Business Award for Montana Exporter of the 
Year. This award recognizes ALCOM's achievement in significantly 
increasing their export sales, profits, and jobs, while encouraging 
other Montana businesses to find new markets for their goods.
  This is an exciting time to do business back home in Montana. From 
our growing technology sector to our State's diverse natural resources, 
there is a lot of opportunity to create jobs and grow businesses in 
Montana. Unfortunately, the Federal Government's out-of-touch policies 
and bureaucratic overreach continue to prevent Montana's small 
businesses from reaching their full potential. Too many Montana 
businesses face regulatory burdens that hinder innovation and block 
opportunities for growth.
  Our Tax Code is too complex and serves as yet another barrier to 
prosperity. And ObamaCare's burdensome and costly mandates are forcing 
millions of dollars in new fees and compliance costs upon Montana's 
small businesses, in turn forcing our job creators to downsize, reduce 
employee hours, or close their doors altogether.
  When I drive around in Montana, I have yet to hear a small business 
owner ask for more regulations and higher taxes. We need commonsense 
policies that encourage Montana's job creators to innovate and to grow. 
We need solutions to lift these regulatory barriers, reduce tax 
burdens, and create long-term certainty for hard-working Montanans.
  I have long said that the best solutions don't come from bureaucrats 
in Washington, DC; they come from Main Street Montana and our State's 
hard-working businesses and community

[[Page 6206]]

leaders because in Montana, we understand that jobs come from small 
business, not big government. That is why we need to reduce the redtape 
that is holding our small businesses back and work toward commonsense 
regulations that don't place unnecessary burdens on Montana families 
and Montana small businesses.
  We do need comprehensive tax reform that is fair, that is simpler, 
that promotes economic opportunity, and that works for all Montanans. 
And we need to repeal and replace ObamaCare with Montana-driven 
solutions that put patients and their doctors at the center of a health 
care equation and don't place these job-killing burdens on our small 
businesses.
  Instead of hindering our small businesses, we should reward them with 
flexibility and with the freedom they need to thrive and empower them 
with the tools they need to create jobs. That starts with educating 
Montana's future leaders and ensuring that students have the tools they 
need to succeed in their future careers.
  It is no secret that for many recent college graduates, finding a job 
in today's economy is harder than ever. This is especially true in 
Montana, where students are often forced to leave our State to find 
good-paying and long-lasting careers. It has been said that our top 
three exports are our grain, our cattle, and our children.
  As we work to grow Montana's technology and resources, we need to 
ensure that our students have the skills they need to get ahead and 
find jobs at home. From Montana's tribal colleges and vocational 
schools to the new Jake Jabs College of Business and Entrepreneurship 
Building at Montana State University, Montana's educational 
institutions are leading the way in giving our students the head start 
they need to succeed outside of classrooms and help grow our State's 
economy because when small businesses succeed, our economy thrives.
  We need to continue to find ways to encourage investment, 
entrepreneurship, and innovation in our State and all across our 
Nation. Our country was founded on the principles of hard work and 
entrepreneurialism. I am proud that Montana's small businesses continue 
to exemplify these pillars of our Nation's heritage and are leading the 
way in economic innovation.
  During this National Small Business Week, I encourage all of my 
fellow Montanans to shop small and join me in supporting Montana's 
small businesses and thanking them for the important role they hold in 
our State--not just this week but every week.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
  Mr. BARRASSO. Mr. President, today, for the first time in 6 years, 
Congress will pass a budget, and we are passing a budget that actually 
balances. This fulfills another basic responsibility of governing and 
an important promise Republicans made to the American people.
  In advance of this vote, I wish to take a moment to applaud Chairman 
Mike Enzi for his leadership on this issue. Because of his strong work, 
our balanced budget will help grow our economy, reduce the debt, repeal 
ObamaCare, and rein in Washington overreach. Our balanced budget proves 
that the Senate is fully working again on behalf of the American 
people.


                               ObamaCare

  Mr. President, I wish to speak about another issue that is also 
important to Americans across the country, an issue which I hear about 
as I travel the State of Wyoming and which I heard about this weekend.
  Last week, the Democratic leader came to the floor of the Senate and 
he made some very interesting statements about the President's health 
care law. He said ObamaCare is a smashing success. That was last week.
  On Monday, we had this headline in the Wall Street Journal:

       U.S. Emergency Room Visits Keep Climbing: People on 
     Medicaid turn to hospital care when doctor access is limited, 
     new survey suggests.

  It is interesting to take a look at this large story and learn about 
how the number of visits to emergency rooms keeps climbing in spite of 
what the President promised during the debate of the President's health 
care law.
  The article goes on to say:

       Emergency room visits continue to climb in the second year 
     of the Affordable Care Act, contradicting the law's 
     supporters who had predicted a decline in traffic as more 
     people gained access to doctors and other health care 
     providers.

  This is according to a survey by the American College of Emergency 
Physicians. They should know; they are the ones in the emergency room 
treating patients. The group says that people whom the health care law 
pushed on to Medicaid--pushed on to Medicaid--are having trouble 
getting appointments or even finding a doctor to take care of them 
because it is someone who doesn't take their new coverage. Does the 
Democratic minority leader think that is a smashing success? This is a 
survey of over 2,000 emergency room doctors. Seventy-five percent of 
them said they have seen increases in emergency room care since 2014. 
Only one out of 20 ER doctors said they have seen a decrease.
  The article quotes one doctor, Dr. Howard Mell, as saying: ``There 
was a grand theory the law would reduce ER visits.''
  A grand theory? Yes, it was.
  He said: ``Well, guess what, it hasn't happened. Visits are going up 
despite the [law], and in a lot of cases because of it.''
  That is according to one emergency room doctor who sees the results 
of the Obama health care law every day in the emergency room where he 
takes care of patients.
  This really shouldn't surprise anyone. We have seen the warning signs 
coming now for a while. Back in December, the Department of Health and 
Human Services found that more than half of the health care providers 
listed for Medicaid plans--half listed as taking Medicaid patients--
couldn't schedule appointments for patients, and they are even listed 
with Health and Human Services as taking care of Medicaid patients. 
This is only of the doctors who actually care for Medicaid patients in 
the first place. We know that about half of doctors won't see Medicaid 
patients at all because the reimbursement is so low for taking care of 
them.
  For more than one-quarter of the doctors, the wait time for a patient 
to actually get an appointment is more than a month. Does the 
Democratic leader think that is a smashing success, waiting more than a 
month to see a doctor?
  Last year, almost half of doctors said they had seen an increase in 
emergency room visits, and now we see it is much higher. Some 
supporters of the law last year said that wasn't important. They said: 
Don't worry, the numbers will drop off after the first year as more 
people get primary care physicians. Well, it hasn't happened, and it 
has actually gotten worse. About half of the ER doctors saw an increase 
in the first year of ObamaCare coverage and 75 percent saw an increase 
this year, the second year.
  It is not getting better. It continues to get worse, to the point 
that USA TODAY had an article dated May 4, yesterday, page 1: ``ER 
Visits Surge Despite ObamaCare.''
  It says:

       Three-quarters of emergency room doctors say they are 
     seeing ER patient visits surge since ObamaCare took effect--
     just the opposite of what many Americans expected would 
     happen.

  It is not what many Americans expected would happen.
  Look at what the President said would happen. Back in 2009, the 
President was trying to pass the law, and President Obama said this: 
``If everybody's got coverage, then they're not going to go to the 
emergency room for treatment.''
  That was one of the biggest reasons the law required everyone in 
America to have insurance coverage. Remember, that is the mandate. It 
is called the individual mandate, and it remains extremely unpopular 
today. The President kept saying it over the years. He said it early 
on, he said it during the debate, and he said it after the law passed. 
He continues to hold this position in spite of the fact that 75 percent

[[Page 6207]]

of emergency room doctors--2,000 doctors who actually work in emergency 
rooms--are saying: It is not true, Mr. President. The ERs are getting 
more and more crowded.
  We see what happens when an ER gets more crowded: The wait time goes 
up, the mortality rates for patients trying to get treatment there goes 
up--because of the health care law.
  In 2013, the President told one group of people: ``It means that all 
the providers around here, instead of having to take in folks in the 
emergency room, they suddenly have customers who have insurance.''
  The President's statements continue to fly in the face of reality. 
According to the people who really know what is going on, the medical 
coverage is not keeping people out of emergency rooms. It has become 
crystal clear that coverage does not equal care. Not only is ObamaCare 
coverage not delivering care, in many cases the system to provide the 
coverage isn't even working.
  There was an article last Friday in the Washington Post. The headline 
was ``Nearly half of ObamaCare exchanges are struggling over their 
future.''
  It says: ``Nearly half of the 17 insurance marketplaces set up by the 
states and the District [of Columbia] under President Obama's health 
laws are struggling financially.''
  Does the minority leader think that is a smashing success?
  According to this article, ``many of the online exchanges are 
wrestling with surging costs, especially for balky technology and 
expensive consumer call centers--and tepid enrollment numbers.''
  It talks about problems in Minnesota, Vermont, Rhode Island, and 
Colorado. In Oregon, the exchange has failed so spectacularly that the 
State had to shut it down entirely.
  The Washington Post says: ``States have already received nearly $5 
billion in Federal grants to establish the online marketplaces.''
  That is $5 billion that hard-working American taxpayers had to pay to 
set up these exchanges, and half of these exchanges, in spite of all of 
that taxpayer money, are now struggling financially.
  This article quotes one expert, Sabrina Corlette, who is a project 
director at Georgetown University's Center for Health Insurance 
Reforms. She said: ``A lot of people are going to want to know: What 
happened to all those taxpayer dollars?''
  Well, that is what a lot of Senators want to know. That is exactly 
what Senators on this side of the aisle have been asking for quite a 
while now. What happened to all of that hard-earned taxpayer money? How 
much of that $5 billion was wasted?
  The States with these failing exchanges are now looking at raising 
taxes and raising fees on everybody else's insurance claims. So in half 
of the States, the exchanges where people are supposed to sign up for 
coverage are failing. Billions of taxpayer dollars wasted, and States 
are looking at charging people even more. That is the President's 
solution for health care in America.
  People who do get coverage and want to see a doctor may have to wait 
for more than a month. They may end up going to the emergency room 
along with millions of other people since ObamaCare's mandates began.
  Does the minority leader, who came to the floor last week calling 
this health care law a smashing success, really think that is so? This 
is not what the American people wanted from health care reform. People 
knew what they wanted, and they wanted something very simple: They 
wanted the care they need from a doctor they choose at a lower cost. 
ObamaCare has failed on every one of those things. It is not a smashing 
success.
  It is time for us to finally give Americans the health care they were 
asking for all along.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Massachusetts.
  Ms. WARREN. Mr. President, a budget is about building for the future. 
A budget is about what it takes for our families, our businesses, and 
our economy to grow and prosper.
  The basics are pretty simple: Our kids need access to a good, 
affordable education. Our workers need good wages and good benefits. 
Our businesses and our workers need transit--roads and bridges that are 
safe enough, strong enough, and fast enough to get us to work and keep 
goods and services moving. Our workers need good jobs here in America, 
jobs built on 21st-century innovation and technology. And everyone 
needs to know that we are in this together, that we won't kick people 
to the ground, that we will help those who need it most, including 
seniors, children, and families struggling to make ends meet. That is 
how we build a strong future.
  The Republicans have a different vision of how to build a future. The 
Republican budget plan will make the rich richer and the powerful more 
powerful while leaving our kids, our college students, our seniors, our 
workers, and our families to fall further and further behind.
  The people of Massachusetts didn't send me here to do what I can to 
help the richest of the rich; they sent me here to work for them. So I 
want to talk about what this Republican budget will mean to the people 
of our State.
  Assuming it is applied proportionately, the Republican budget can cut 
mandatory transportation funding by 40 percent over the next decade. 
That will be significantly fewer dollars to repair and improve our 
highways and to help keep our buses and trains moving in Massachusetts. 
So if you already think we have a crumbling infrastructure, if you are 
already worried about old buses and whether the T can struggle through 
another winter, remember that the Republicans want to slash the support 
for transportation by 40 percent. With these cuts, our crumbling 
infrastructure will crumble even faster.
  These cuts will also cost jobs. Economists estimate that this 
Republican budget could mean 56,000 fewer jobs in Massachusetts alone.
  This budget also takes aim at our kids. Over the next decade, it 
could eliminate Head Start services for 400,000 children across this 
country, cutting the program by more than $4 billion. Little kids are 
under attack, and so are big kids. The Republican budget could also 
make college more expensive for the 131,000 Massachusetts students who 
receive Pell grants. And cutting the student loan interest rate? Forget 
it. The Republican budget keeps sucking billions of dollars in profits 
off student loans.
  The Republican budget puts Massachusetts residents' health at risk, 
especially the health of our seniors. Today, the Affordable Care Act 
saves seniors billions of dollars in prescription drugs. The days when 
seniors had to choose between filling a prescription and paying the 
rent were over, but under the Republican budget, almost 80,000 seniors 
in Massachusetts could each pay an average of $920 more per year for 
prescription drugs.
  It gets worse. About 900,000 seniors in Massachusetts could lose free 
preventive Medicare health services and about 26,000 Massachusetts 
nursing home residents who rely on Medicaid could face cuts to their 
care and an uncertain future.
  What about medical research and the technologies of the future, the 
kind of work we are proud to do in Massachusetts? For over 10 years, 
Congress has decimated medical research funding, reducing the buying 
power of the National Institutes of Health by nearly 25 percent and 
choking off support for projects that could lead to the next major 
breakthrough against cancer, heart disease, ALS, diabetes, or autism.
  With people living longer and longer and more and more families 
desperate for a breakthrough on Alzheimer's, what is the Republican 
budget solution? Cut the NIH budget. Cut medical research. In fact, 
compared with the President's budget, the Republican budget could mean 
1,400 fewer NIH grants a year.
  The Republican budget also cuts $600 billion from income security 
programs, such as nutrition assistance, potentially jeopardizing food 
stamps for thousands of Massachusetts families who depend on this 
program to put food on the table. And just to turn the

[[Page 6208]]

knife a little deeper for families in Massachusetts, the Republican 
budget could cut funding for heating assistance--funding that helps 
183,000 Massachusetts families stay warm in the winter.
  We know whom this budget would hurt--millions of middle-class 
families in Massachusetts and all over this country who are busting 
their tails to try to make ends meet. It will hurt people who work hard 
and play by the rules but who are seeing opportunity slip away. Why? 
Why inflict so much damage on hard-working American people, on students 
and seniors, on kids and construction workers? Why cut back the support 
for researchers trying to cure Alzheimer's or college kids trying to 
get an education? Why? One answer. Once again, the Republicans want to 
give billions of dollars in tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans--and 
they expect everyone else to pay for it. The Republicans have planned 
$269 billion in tax cuts that could go to just a few thousand of the 
richest families. That is not just irresponsible, it is just plain 
wrong.
  A budget is about values. The Republicans' values are on display 
here. This budget is about making sure that a tilted playing field 
tilts even further, and everyone else gets left further and further 
behind. Those aren't American values. We believe and we have always 
believed in opportunity. We believe that everyone should have a 
fighting chance to build a better life for themselves and their 
children.
  Mr. President, we weren't sent here just to help the rich get richer. 
It is time for the Senate to stand up for the values that build a 
strong middle class, and we can start by voting down this terrible 
Republican budget.
  Thank you.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Pennsylvania.


                   Citizen Unrest and Law Enforcement

  Mr. TOOMEY. Mr. President, I rise today to speak about the unrest we 
have seen, especially in Baltimore in the last week and to a lesser 
extent in several other cities around the country, including the city 
of Philadelphia in my State of Pennsylvania.
  There has been, of course, no shortage of discussions on this matter, 
going back to last year, to the protests in Ferguson, MO, and those 
surrounding other flashpoints that have involved law enforcement 
officials.
  We have in one way or another landed on a bit of a national 
conversation about police practices, and that is a good conversation. I 
think we should have that. I, for instance, think we should seriously 
consider body cameras for use by police officers.
  I think this conversation is closely related to some other things 
that we need to be talking about as well, including the problems of 
urban America that have a number of causes and that certainly deserve 
our attention and our action. For instance, I think we can and should 
be talking about how we can create better jobs, better economic growth, 
and a better economic climate in our cities, especially our big cities. 
We need to talk about how we can bring down the terrible rate of 
poverty that has been persistent for decades in our cities. We have to 
talk about how schools have been letting down too many poor families in 
our big cities.
  We ought to talk about family structure as well because we know that 
a breakdown of families contributes enormously to all sorts of social 
pathologies--involvement in gangs and drug use and drug dealing, 
criminality in general, and poverty itself.
  We can talk about guns, too. I remain proud of the work I have done 
across the aisle to try to make it more difficult for guns to fall into 
the hands of people who have no right to be using them--criminals and 
those with mental illness.
  These are all things we ought to be talking about in this great 
debate, and we should be acting on these things in the Senate and in 
State and local governmental bodies across the country.
  There is something in this discussion that we should also be willing 
to talk about. It is something that hasn't gotten as much attention 
during this national conversation about police practices, and it is 
something that has been bothering me for some time. I think it came to 
a head this week in Baltimore. I am going to talk about this now and I 
am going to continue to talk about this in the coming weeks and months 
because I think it is an important part of this national discussion.
  My concern specifically is over the growing scapegoating of police 
officers in America today. Before I go any further, let me be perfectly 
clear about one central point. If a police officer acts 
unprofessionally, acts outside the bounds of ethical standards or 
breaks the law, then by all means that police officer has to be held 
accountable and punished for his or her transgression. There is no 
excuse whatsoever for unlawful police conduct. That absolutely cannot 
be tolerated not even one little bit.
  I will be clear about another point. It is true that there are real 
and horrible cases of police misconduct. No one I know is trying to 
deny that or sweep it under the rug or pretend it doesn't happen. It 
does happen, and it should never be tolerated.
  Let's also keep this in perspective. There are doctors who break the 
law. There are accountants who break the law. There are lawyers who 
break the law. There are elected public officials who break the law. 
The fact is that there are bad actors in every profession, in every 
line of work, in every walk of life, and that is true of the police as 
well. But if you listen to many of the police critics we hear from 
today, you would think there is some sort of epidemic of crimes 
perpetrated by the police. That, I assure you, is not true.
  In my years in public life, I have spent a lot of time with police 
officers. I have gotten to know many of them. I have gone on rides with 
them. I have listened to their concerns. I have met with them. I have 
supported their community organizations. I have attended the charitable 
fundraisers they have held. By and large, I can tell you that I don't 
know of any group of people anywhere in our society who are more 
dedicated professionals than the policemen and policewomen across our 
country.
  Far from the epidemic of police misdeeds that some claim to be 
happening out there, I think just the opposite is true. The 
overwhelming majority of police are honest men and women. They have 
very high ethical standards. They don't have a racist bone in their 
body. Our police have incredibly difficult and often dangerous jobs to 
do, and it is an incredibly important job as well.
  Our communities--let's face it--we all depend on the police. That is 
probably more true in urban areas than anywhere else in the country.
  So we need to have a conversation about bad police practices, but we 
also need to have a conversation about what a great job the vast 
majority of police are doing across our country and how much they 
deserve our thanks and our support.
  Unfortunately, the scenes we witnessed in Baltimore last week 
certainly work against the kind of gratitude we ought to show to our 
law enforcement community. I am not talking about what happened to 
Freddie Gray. Mr. Gray absolutely deserves justice. If the police in 
the Gray case committed crimes, then they must be punished. I don't 
question that in the least. But what happened last week in Baltimore 
was not only about Freddie Gray. In scenes reminiscent of last year in 
Ferguson, last week in Baltimore we saw a great American city dissolve 
into utter lawlessness. We saw riots that destroyed a senior citizen 
center, a CVS drugstore, numerous cars, all kinds of property. We saw 
dozens of injuries, including injuries to over 90 police officers.
  We had a curfew imposed and the National Guard called in to restore 
order as though this were some kind of war zone. We even had Major 
League Baseball cancel two games and conduct one game where no fans 
were permitted to attend. They played before an empty stadium. How is 
that allowed to happen in a great American city?
  Some people excuse this lawlessness and point to the difficult 
underlying conditions in the local community, but let's ask ourselves 
who gets hurt the most by these riots.

[[Page 6209]]

  Well, we know it is the very poor people from these communities who 
now have no senior center to go to. They cannot go to CVS to get their 
prescriptions filled or to pick up necessities for their kids. And, of 
course, there is this big, red, flashing neon sign telling businesses, 
large and small--they could provide jobs and economic activity there--
to stay away.
  So where do the police come in on this? Well, President Obama called 
the looters and rioters in Baltimore thugs, and President Obama has 
received some criticism for that. I just would use an objective, 
indisputable term. These people are ``criminals.''
  It is a serious crime to set a fire to a car or to a building. It is 
a serious crime to throw a rock or a bottle at a police officer. 
Assault and battery is a serious crime. It is a serious crime to engage 
in looting, and people who commit those acts are criminals. They should 
be arrested, they should be charged, and they should be prosecuted and 
punished to the full extent of the law, but in order for that to 
happen, we need the police. We need them to be actively engaged.
  The Baltimore police officers have reported that they were ordered to 
stand down last week as the city was being destroyed. That is pretty 
tough to take--especially, I assume, for the law-abiding Baltimore 
citizens who need that police protection.
  Instead of standing down in the face of wanton criminal acts, the 
police need to be allowed to do their job. They should make arrests. 
They should restore order. There should never be another American city 
that looks the way Baltimore did last week.
  Now, when six police officers were charged on Friday in the death of 
Freddie Gray, there were celebrations in the streets in Baltimore. At a 
certain level, that is completely understandable. Whatever Mr. Gray did 
on that day, the day he was arrested, he certainly did not deserve to 
die, and his death cries out for answers. We need to have answers to 
these questions.
  In the passions of last week, I understand why some people cheered 
the appearance that the criminal justice system was standing up for Mr. 
Gray. I totally understand that, but let me ask a question. What 
happens if these accused police officers are found to have not broken 
the law? What if one of them, several of them or even all of them are 
found not to have violated the law? What happens then? Will we see 
Baltimore, and maybe other cities, erupt in flames once more? That is 
already what appears to be forecast in some quarters.
  What about those six individual police officers? Well, we know what 
happens if they are found guilty. If they are found guilty, they are 
going to go to jail for a long time, and that will be appropriate.
  But what happens if they are found innocent? In the Ferguson, MO, 
case, a grand jury found there was no reason to believe a crime had 
been committed by the accused police officer, Darren Wilson.
  The U.S. Justice Department also did an investigation, and they 
decided not to bring civil rights charges against Officer Wilson. So 
Officer Wilson was found to have committed no wrongdoing, neither by 
the local grand jury nor by the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. 
Justice Department.
  But what happened to Officer Wilson? Did anybody ask that question, 
What happened to Officer Wilson? Well, he faced multiple death threats. 
He ended up having to leave his job on the police force, the one job he 
had always wanted and he loved to do. He ended up having to move out of 
his home and go live somewhere else. He is only 28 years old.
  Now, the accused police officers in Baltimore have life stories too. 
One of them is police Sergeant Alicia White. She is a 30-year-old 
African-American woman who joined the Baltimore Police Department 5 
years ago. She is engaged to be married. A local Baltimore minister, 
who knows Sergeant White, described her this way:

       She wanted to be a police officer because she is a 
     Christian and wants to be a good role model for young black 
     women. And she wanted to be that good cop in the community 
     and bridge the gap between the police and the neighborhoods.

  Of the six arrested officers, three are African Americans, three are 
White. None of this means any of these officers necessarily acted 
appropriately or right in this case. It is quite possible they did not 
and, if so, the court system, our legal judicial system, will determine 
that.
  What I am simply trying to point out is that these police officers 
have human faces. They are human beings, and these officers are going 
to go through hell whether they deserve to or not. Their lives will 
never be the same whether they are guilty or innocent. There will be 
many people in the community who shun them, even if they are found to 
have done nothing wrong.
  What message does that send to all the tens of thousands of police 
officers all across America who risk their lives every day to protect 
their communities from criminals? Unfortunately, it says there are a 
lot of people out there who are looking to misplace a lot of social 
problems we face in our country on the backs of the police. It says 
they might not be allowed to do their jobs when their communities most 
need them to do their jobs, and it says that one day, should they find 
themselves accused of wrongdoing, there might be a public mob that 
clamors for their conviction and threatens to burn down the city if the 
legal system finds them independent. That is a sad state of affairs.
  I am not defending the officers in the Gray case. I don't know 
whether they are guilty or innocent. I expect the legal system to 
determine that, but that is not my point. My point is that while there 
are some police officers who act terribly and who must be stopped, 
there is no epidemic of police criminality in this country.
  We should absolutely discuss and act upon the issues that surround 
police and community relations, by all means, and we also need to 
acknowledge the critical role the police play in keeping our community 
safe, the overwhelming majority of police who conduct themselves 
honorably day in and day out.
  The next time there is a demonstration about police conduct, I hope 
it is a demonstration to thank the police for their dedication, their 
hard work, and their courage. That is a demonstration I will be honored 
to join.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Ms. Ayotte). The Senator from Connecticut.
  Mr. BLUMENTHAL. Madam President, we are here debating choices. They 
happen to be choices about our budget, about the future of our Nation 
that will be determined by choices we make about how to invest.
  That is the key concept at stake in this very momentous moment as we 
consider choices for how to invest in middle-class financial security, 
and all that goes along with it, job creation, infrastructure, 
education funding, clean energy research. All of those choices are 
critical to the future of our Nation, and we will make disastrous 
choices if we adopt the budget that has come to us in the conference 
report for fiscal year 2016 because it fails to understand the need for 
investment in our future.
  We are in danger of leaving a lesser America--an America that for the 
first time in our history will reflect a lesser Nation left to our 
children and their grandchildren. All generations before us determined 
that they would sacrifice, that they would give back and pay forward. 
Yet now, sadly, in fact tragically, we endanger their future by failing 
in those investment decisions.
  The conference agreement would cut trillions of dollars to domestic 
programs without seeking revenue. In fact, it relies on gimmicks that 
undermine its integrity--a significant gimmick, for example, 
accounting, $2 trillion in tax revenue from the Affordable Care Act 
while at the same time repealing that law. It relies on trillions of 
dollars in supposed savings without detailing how those savings will be 
accomplished.
  At the very least, we owe a measure of integrity to the American 
people. We can disagree about choices, but at least we should be honest 
about how revenue is supposed to match the

[[Page 6210]]

spending we allocate. The proposal before us would, in fact, repeal the 
Affordable Care Act, which has already allowed more than 16 million 
Americans to obtain health insurance, access preventive services, and 
save money on their premiums. It would cut more than $1 trillion from 
Medicaid, reversing the expansion that has provided health insurance to 
millions of Americans.
  Too many Americans are still struggling, and yet this budget would 
cut funding for job training and employment services. It would 
eliminate the Manufacturing Extension Partnership, which provides vital 
support for small manufacturers in Connecticut and across the country. 
Time and again, we have learned that education is the key to a brighter 
future for our children. Yet, tragically, this budget would cut the 
funding across the spectrum of American education, from universal 
prekindergarten, which would be slashed, to college affordability, 
where loan programs would be decimated. In fact, instead of making 
college more affordable, this budget decimates two critical programs 
that would help future students pay back loans. Remember, the average 
student debt in this country is in the tens of thousands of dollars. In 
Connecticut, it is about $30,000, conservatively estimated.
  This budget would increase student loan payments for millions of 
borrowers, and it would slash Pell grants--increase the cost of loans, 
cut the amount of grants available that enable students to avoid 
borrowing. In fact, it would cut the Pell Grant Program by nearly 30 
percent and eliminate other important Federal subsidies.
  These moneys are not spending, they are investments in our future, 
the futures of those students whose hopes and dreams will be 
constrained, undercut, and killed but also the future of our capacity 
to manufacture and compete around the globe because what we have--more 
than any other nation--is very smart, skilled people. That is why 
companies are coming back to this Nation after outsourcing.
  One of these programs, the Pay as You Earn Program, caps monthly 
student loan payments at a level that is proportionate to their 
earnings and forgives debt after 20 years of repayment.
  But the Republican budget would require cuts to this program in a way 
that could increase required monthly payment increases of more than 50 
percent to some borrowers, and it paves the way for eliminating the 
Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program, which assists students with 
debt payments for those who go into public service professions, such as 
teaching, firefighting, and policing. This program ought to be 
especially close to our hearts because we purport to be engaged in 
public service and to provide a role model for young people who engage 
in public service.
  I am particularly concerned about this program's impact on our 
railroads, roads, bridges, and airports. We know those facilities as 
infrastructure--the magic word in the Senate, ``infrastructure.'' In 
fact, we had a hearing just this morning in the Commerce, Science, and 
Transportation Committee on the importance of fully funded, long-term 
investments in our Nation's highway transit and rail system.
  We heard testimony from the public and private sectors about how 
important a revitalized and reinvigorated transportation network is for 
American competitiveness, American businesses, and American 
professionals to compete in the world. Yet, through this budget, we 
will not only sanction, but we will encourage and enable an inadequate 
investment in infrastructure. The budget conference report before us 
would cut funding for highways and mass transit by 40 percent over the 
next decade. There may be no more important fact to know about this 
budget.
  So I regret that I will vote against this budget because I wish, as 
do many of my colleagues, that we could reach a bipartisan measure that 
will embody the best in America, not encourage a retreat from our 
public obligation.
  In fact, I think America is ready to invest, ready to give back and 
to pay forward. In fact, I believe our wealthiest Americans are ready 
to do more and approve closing loopholes and ending subsidies, not 
making blanket cuts to vital programs, not cutting taxes for 
millionaires, as this budget would create a pathway to do, not forcing 
another 12 million middle-class families and students to pay for 
college by ending the American opportunity tax credit or adding $1,100 
more in burdens on them, and not forcing 16 million middle-class 
families to pay a $900 tax hike by ending the expansions of the earned-
income tax credit and child tax credit. I think our most fortunate 
Americans are ready to pay forward and do more and invest and, in fact, 
make more sacrifices, which is the way this budget ought to be 
arranged. And it isn't even a matter of sacrifices on the part of 
anyone; it is ending the subsidies for outsourcing to ensure that 
everyone pays their fair share without those hidden tax breaks and 
subsidies that can be closed.
  I hope we can do better than this. I urge my colleagues to join me in 
opposing the budget conference report.
  Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
  Mr. SANDERS. Madam President, a budget is a vision of the future, and 
it clearly appears the two sides have very different visions as to what 
our country should be and the direction in which we move.
  At a time of unprecedented and grotesque income and wealth 
inequality, where 99 percent of all new income is going to the top 1 
percent, my Republican colleagues say we need to give a massive tax 
break to the 5,000 wealthiest families in America--the top two-tenths 
of 1 percent--a $269 billion tax break over a 10-year period. That is 
not what the American people believe. What they believe is that at a 
time when the rich and large corporations are doing phenomenally well, 
when we have a large deficit, when we have massive unmet needs in this 
country, that maybe, just maybe it is time to ask the wealthy and large 
corporations to start paying their fair share of taxes, not give them 
more tax breaks. That is exactly what this Republican budget does.
  At a time when the United States is the only major country on Earth 
that doesn't guarantee health care to all people and when 35 million 
Americans today have no health insurance and even more are 
underinsured, with large copayments and high premiums, the Republican 
budget unbelievably--unbelievably--simply throws 27 million Americans 
off of health insurance. What happens to them? What happens when the 
Affordable Care Act is ended--which is what their budget does--and 16 
million people lose their health insurance? What happens when another 
11 million people lose their health insurance because of the $440 
billion cuts in Medicaid? What happens to 27 million Americans? How 
many of them will die? Clearly, many thousands will die. People who are 
sick will not be able to go to the doctor. People who are sick will get 
sicker and suffer. Twenty-seven million people thrown off of health 
insurance is beyond being unconscionable. Yet, that is what is in the 
Republican budget.
  The Presiding Officer is a neighbor of mine in New Hampshire. I know 
that in New Hampshire--I have been there recently--and in Vermont, 
young people are wondering about how they are going to be able to 
afford to go to college and what kind of student debts they will incur 
when they leave college. Our charge is to work together to make sure 
that every young person in this country who has the ability and the 
desire and the willingness to go to college is able to go to college 
regardless of his or her income. That is what we need to do in a 
competitive global economy.
  We used to have the highest percentage of college graduates in the 
world. Today, we are in 12th place. That is not where we should be if 
we want to compete globally in this difficult world economy.
  What is the Republican solution? The Republican solution is to make a 
bad situation much worse, with a $90 billion cut over a 10-year period 
in mandatory Pell Grant funding--Pell grants being the major source of 
funding for low- and moderate-income young people in order to get help 
to go to college.

[[Page 6211]]

This budget does exactly the opposite of what we should be doing.
  We are the wealthiest country in the history of the world. The 
problem we are having is that almost all of that wealth is going to a 
handful of people at the top. Yet, today we have more people living in 
poverty than at almost any time in the modern history of America. We 
have seen some descriptions of that in the tragedy we recently observed 
in Baltimore in communities where 50 percent of the people are 
unemployed, where kids don't have enough to eat. Honestly, without 
being too rhetorical, I just don't understand how, when families are 
struggling to feed their kids, when everybody understands that hunger 
is a real problem in this country, anybody could vote for a budget that 
makes huge cuts in food stamps, in the WIC Program, and in other 
nutrition programs for families who are struggling to feed their 
families. That is not what this country is supposed to be about.
  On top of all of that--on top of cutting health care, with 27 million 
people thrown off of health insurance; cutting education, making it 
harder for kids to go to college, harder for families to put their kids 
into Head Start; harder for poor families to feed their kids--my 
Republican colleagues say a major priority in this country is to give 
$269 billion in tax breaks to the top two-tenths of 1 percent. Does 
anybody--anybody outside of this Chamber think that makes any sense at 
all? Does anybody outside of here think those are American priorities? 
Billionaires do not need another tax break. They are doing just great. 
They are doing fine.
  Then, to add insult to injury, the Republican budget allows to expire 
the additional benefits we put into the earned-income tax credit and 
the child tax credit. That, in effect, would mean a tax increase for 
over 10 million working families. We would be raising taxes on low-
income workers while lowering taxes on billionaires. Those are not the 
priorities of the American people.
  Madam President, I hope very much we will reject this budget.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Arizona.
  Mr. FLAKE. Madam President, the Senate will soon vote to adopt the 
conference report to S. Con. Res. 11, the budget resolution. I 
supported the budget resolution when we considered it in March, and I 
plan to support the conference report, but I was disappointed to see 
one difference between the budget resolution that was passed by the 
Senate this year and the conference report we will be voting on later 
today. The Senate's budget resolution contained language that would 
have created a point of order against any legislation that designated 
more in the so-called OCO or overseas contingency operations funding 
than what the President requested in fiscal year 2016. The conference 
report we will soon consider does not contain that provision.
  This point of order would have allowed those of us who have objected 
to off-budget funds being used in order to avoid spending caps--
particularly in the international affairs budget--to at least raise the 
issue on various appropriations bills and other measures we consider in 
this body. This is an issue which needs to be raised, especially in 
light of the State Department's use of such funding.
  It is bad enough that the administration has been requesting OCO 
funding to avoid making tough choices for its underlying budget since 
2012, but Members of Congress have become enablers, consistently 
appropriating more OCO funds than the administration has asked for. In 
fiscal year 2014, the administration requested $3.8 billion in OCO 
funding for international affairs; Congress appropriated $6.5 billion. 
For fiscal year 2015, the administration requested $7.8 billion in OCO 
funding for international affairs; Congress appropriated $9.26 billion. 
That figure does not include the $2.5 billion appropriated to address 
the Ebola crisis; we appropriated that separately as emergency funding.
  While emergency funding and OCO are different designations, the 
practical effect is the same. This is funding which is not subject to 
budget spending caps created by the Budget Control Act.
  This year, the administration has requested $7 billion in OCO funding 
for international affairs.
  Secretary Kerry said in early 2013 that ``OCO funding supports the 
efforts of the department in meeting the extraordinary demands of 
operating in the frontline states of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, 
and to a limited extent in other fragile regions.'' This year's OCO 
request includes funding for those countries, plus Syria, Jordan, and 
the Ukraine.
  Some of my colleagues have concerns that the Defense Department will 
be shortchanged under the spending caps, and we have worked to increase 
OCO funding spending in 2016 beyond the $57 billion requested by the 
President to $96 billion in total. But that $96 billion can be used for 
anything the administration and Congress both designate as being in 
support of ``overseas contingency operations.'' It also enables 
departments that receive OCO-designated appropriations to avoid having 
to make the tough funding decisions in their underlying budgets.
  I am disappointed the conference report we will consider today does 
not contain a point of order that would have at least enabled those of 
us who share these concerns I have raised today to raise this issue and 
to take some votes on it.
  With that being said, I also understand that passing a budget is an 
important step in getting back to regular order and allowing Congress 
to carry out one of its primary responsibilities--establishing a budget 
for the Federal Government. By passing this budget, Congress will be 
able to start considering appropriations bills and other budget-related 
legislation. After all, it is Congress's job to exercise oversight and 
prioritize where and how Federal dollars are to be spent. In addition, 
passing a budget also initiates the reconciliation process for the 
committees in the House and the Senate that oversee the Affordable Care 
Act.
  As I said earlier, I will support this conference report, but I would 
be remiss not to voice my concerns over the removal of the OCO-related 
point of order and the systemic use of off-budget funds to avoid 
busting the spending caps.
  Madam President, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wyoming.
  Mr. ENZI. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that all time 
remaining on the conference report be yielded back at 5:30 p.m. today 
and that the Senate vote on the adoption of the conference report.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The Senator from Wisconsin.
  Ms. BALDWIN. Madam President, the American people have consistently 
and overwhelmingly voiced their concern that our country is moving in 
the wrong direction, whether that be with regard to wage stagnation, 
unemployment or simply realizing the American dream.
  Unfortunately, the budget resolution before us sends a strong message 
to the American people that Washington isn't listening. Instead of 
taking the opportunity to work together across party lines and move our 
country in the right direction, the Republican budget resolution 
continues to take our Nation down a road where Washington again stacks 
the deck against the middle class and rewards the wealthiest families 
and largest corporations in America.
  There isn't a single tax expenditure or loophole that is closed in 
the Republican budget. This budget refuses to ask the wealthy to 
contribute a single dollar more to deficit reduction. It does nothing 
to eliminate the carried interest loophole at a time when Wall Street 
billionaires pay a lower effective tax rate than some truckdrivers, 
teachers, and nurses. In fact, this budget would eliminate the estate 
tax for wealthy families who inherit over $10 million.
  This budget doesn't just give a tax cut for the wealthiest 1 percent, 
it also calls for lowering the top individual tax rate at a time when 
the top 1 percent already earns more income than the bottom 50 percent.

[[Page 6212]]

  What is more, the Republican budget resolution actually delivers a 
tax break for the wealthiest 0.2 percent of Americans over the next 
decade, providing an average tax break of $3 million to 
multimillionaires and billionaires. In fact, there are more Senators 
who will be voting later this afternoon on this budget proposal than 
the number of Wisconsin families who would benefit from the tax 
provision of this tax break I just cited.
  Who picks up the tab for these giveaways? In my home State of 
Wisconsin, an estimated 158,000 hard-working families would pay $1,000 
or more in taxes under the Republican budget resolution. I wonder, do 
my colleagues on the other side of the aisle really believe this budget 
gives Americans ``the right to rise''? Is this their idea of an 
``American revival'' for our middle class?
  Not only does the Republican budget resolution fall short when it 
comes to making strong investments in education to create a strong path 
to the middle class, it actually falls flat by actually cutting these 
investments, failing to make college education affordable, and ignoring 
the huge student debt crisis across America. For Wisconsin families, 
the cost of college education will increase for up to 117,000 students 
because of the Republican budget's substantial cuts to the Pell Grant 
Program. At a time when our national economy moves forward with a slow 
and steady recovery, my State's economy has continued to lag behind.
  So I can't support this Republican budget resolution when it doesn't 
make the strong investments America desperately needs in our roads, in 
our bridges, and in our ports that will create jobs, boost our local 
economies, and provide businesses with the quality transportation 
system they need to move their goods to market. I can't support this 
Republican budget resolution when about 46,000 Wisconsin jobs would be 
eliminated because of cuts to investment in transportation, education, 
and other programs.
  At a time when both parties should be working together to pass a 
budget that grows our economy for the middle class and gives everyone a 
fair shot at getting ahead, this Republican budget resolution cuts 
investments in workforce readiness, leaving 40,000 Wisconsinites 
without the training that prepares them to put their hard work ethic to 
work moving our economy forward.
  Many of the Wisconsin workers I hear from every day are really 
struggling to make ends meet. They are working more, taking home less, 
and worried--worried that for the first time in American history, their 
kids will have fewer opportunities than they did.
  The Republican budget doesn't address those worries, it doesn't 
address those anxieties or those fears. It doesn't respond to this 
insecurity. Rather, the Republican budget continues the same failed, 
top-down economics, where Washington rigs the rules in favor of special 
interests, in favor of millionaires and billionaires.
  Unfortunately, the Republican proposal seeks to balance the budget on 
the backs of the middle class and those struggling to one day become a 
part of America's middle class. This budget proposal marks another 
missed opportunity for the majority. The American people are right to 
believe this budget takes our country another step in the wrong 
direction because it turns its backs on building a stronger future. We 
can do better.
  Madam President, I yield the floor.
  Mr. ENZI. Madam President, section 3112 of the conference agreement 
directs the Joint Committee on Taxation and CBO to produce, alongside 
CBO's conventional estimates, cost estimates that incorporate the 
macroeconomic effects of major policy changes. With respect to the 
designation of the major legislation that would fall within this 
definition, the chair of the Committee on the Budget in the Senate 
shall exercise the authority granted under subsection (c)(1)(B)(ii), in 
consultation with the appropriate chair or vice chair of the Joint 
Committee on Taxation, to designate a revenue measure as major 
legislation.
  Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. ENZI. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. ENZI. Madam President, I have been here most of the day listening 
to comments about the budget. I am fascinated by the budget speculation 
that has gone on here. Of course, I do know I only had 6 weeks to make 
up a budget for us to debate, and add to, subtract from, and then to 
conference. But a lot of what has been said is not actually in the 
budget. Of course, one of the comments was that it should be a 
bipartisan budget. In the whole time I have been here, there has not 
been a bipartisan budget. The majority party has always gotten to take 
the lead and outline what they see as a vision. But in the past, I 
remember we used to do our opening statements on the budget in the 
Budget Committee and then get a copy of the budget we had just 
commented on. I thought that was wrong. I provided them with it the day 
before the statements were made so they could make better comments on 
the budget and have better amendments.
  What I really would have liked to have done is to have released it 
even a little earlier. I proposed this to them in exchange for them 
doing their amendments in advance so we could see their amendments and 
they could see our amendments. That would lead to a much more 
bipartisan budget event. That was not agreed to.
  Now we are down to the point where we are talking about this final 
conference report, where we have gotten the House and the Senate to 
agree on a position. I noticed a lot of people today said we were 
cutting highways. We are not cutting highways. There is a provision in 
there to take care of highways. I think everybody--both sides of the 
aisle--wants to make sure we have adequate highways in America. How we 
get there might be a little different. The President suggested we put a 
mandatory tax on money that is held overseas by companies to force them 
to bring it back. If that is done in too short of a period, that would 
bankrupt a lot of companies because they do have those invested in 
things overseas. But it is something everybody looking at international 
tax reform has been talking about. One of the difficulties is, if you 
do give a reduction in the amount of tax in order to encourage them to 
bring it back without making it mandatory, it shows up as a huge cost 
to the Federal Government. Right now they are taxed at 35 percent. If 
we were to say they could bring it back at the 14 percent the President 
suggested, that would be a 21-percent cost to our budget. But if we 
leave it at 35 percent, nobody is bringing that money back here. If we 
put it at 14 percent and make it mandatory, I guess they would bring 
the money back here, if we didn't bankrupt them. That will be 
considered in the Finance Committee in the tax reform package.
  I am certain something will be done on that to make us more 
competitive overseas, to bring the money back. I know they are talking 
about taking, as the President suggested, a portion of those funds to 
take care of the highways in the beginning, but we still have to have a 
long-term way to take care of highways, and that is going to require 
some bipartisan action.
  Virtually everything that was talked about today in the way of 
criticism is something that still has to be done. It has to be done 
with a majority vote, and it has to make it through the whole Senate 
process, which probably requires 60 votes, which means it is going to 
be bipartisan, and then every one of those things we were accused of 
doing has to be signed by the President.
  They have to be reasonable. They cannot be unreasonable, as we are 
seeing in there. Some do not even exist. For instance, we were accused 
of cutting Head Start money. That is not in the budget. There were some 
cuts to Head Start. That was part of the sequester a couple of years 
ago. I was astounded when some of the Head Start people came to my 
office and said: We got cut 7\1/2\ percent.

[[Page 6213]]

  I said: No, no. It is 2.3 percent.
  They said: No. We got cut 7\1/2\ percent.
  What I found out was that the bureaucracy in DC kept their money and 
took it out on the kids out there. Kids were taken out of Head Start. 
They realized their error and they made some different changes and they 
restored the money out there.
  I asked my people: Ok. You got your money back?
  They said: Yes, but we still couldn't put our kids back because our 
costs went up so high under ObamaCare on health care for our employees 
that we had to put all of that into health care. That was not how it 
was supposed to work either, but that is how ObamaCare works.
  They also talk about us cutting Pell grants. We moved Pell from 
mandatory to discretionary. It was not cut. It was moved so it could be 
reviewed on a regular basis, just like everything else. The estate tax 
was mentioned. Again, that is a Committee on Finance issue that would 
have to be dealt with. It has not been given approval for all the years 
that have been asked for, but that does not mean somebody cannot 
request it. We will see if the Finance Committee can find some way to 
do it.
  I think we can tell from the discussion that probably was not going 
to happen. The numbers speak, and the speculation does not. But here 
are some of the things this budget does: It balances the budget within 
10 years without raising taxes. It achieves more than $5 trillion in 
savings, so it puts us on a slope to get to a balanced budget in 9 
years. It produces a $32 billion surplus in 2024 and a $24 billion 
surplus in 2025 and it stays in balance. It boosts the Nation's economy 
by more than $400 billion in additional economic growth over the next 
10 years, according to the Congressional Budget Office. It is expected 
to grow 1.2 million additional jobs over the next 10 years--again, 
according to the Congressional Budget Office statement.
  The balanced budget ensures a strong national defense. Yes, that is 
in there. The balanced budget provides for repeal and replacement of 
ObamaCare. The balanced budget preserves Medicare. We heard about these 
cuts to Medicare. There are some savings in Medicare. Under our plan, 
instead of those being spent on other programs outside of Medicare, 
those are to be used for Medicare.
  We already saw that we did the doc fix. That is so the doctors would 
be adequately paid so they would continue to take Medicare patients--
very important. That is taken care of in this budget. The balanced 
budget supports stronger economic growth. Note that the boost in 
economic growth will all come from the private sector. Government 
spending does not contribute to this growth.
  As my fellow Budget Committee member and businessman Senator Perdue 
notes, expanding government does not help grow the economy.
  The budget agreement improves transparency, efficiency, 
effectiveness, and accountability of the Federal Government by cutting 
waste and eliminating redundancies and enacting regulatory reform. It 
calls for modernizing Medicaid by increasing State flexibility and 
protecting those most in need of assistance. It improves honest and 
responsible accounting practices as part of the Federal budget process 
by ensuring that fair value accounting is used, which provides a more 
honest accounting method.
  I am the first accountant to chair the Budget Committee. It is very 
important for me to have it so we can tell exactly where things are 
going, not just in the first 10 years, which is what we have been 
typically doing, but looking at the outlying numbers too.
  We are going through a baby boom retirement right now, and the number 
of people under Social Security is going just like that.
  We did not change Social Security. Under the Budget Act, we are not 
allowed to change Social Security, but we are going to have to take a 
look at it. Looking at those numbers in the long term is going to force 
both sides of the aisle to take a look at what we need to do to save 
what we are used to.
  This new honest accounting will tell us more accurately what the 
legislation will cost the hard-working taxpayers. It improves the 
administration and coordination of benefits, and it increases 
employment opportunities for disabled workers. It calls on Congress to 
pass a balanced budget amendment for the Constitution. There are a 
bunch of States that are working on it and 27 States passed the 
requirement for us to do that. Nine other States are close behind. If 
seven of the nine agree to that, we will have to actually balance the 
budget.
  How difficult is that? Last year, we overspent $468 billion. The 
dollars that we get to actually make decisions on are about $1,100 
billion. Some people call that $1.1 trillion. I do not think that 
really tells the story; 1,100 billion sounds like a lot more than $1.1 
trillion. So $468 billion overspent on an $1,100 billion decision 
process, that is 50 percent. If we were to balance the budget, we would 
have to cut that by 50 percent, and people really would be concerned.
  Why do we have to do that? Interest rates alone will cause us to do 
that. If the interest rates go up to what they normally would be--right 
now we are spending $230 billion, and that is at an interest rate of 
1.7 percent. With interest rates rising, we would have to spend $1,745 
billion over the next 10 years just on interest.
  Another reason we need to get this budget done is so appropriators 
can get started. They are the ones that do the spending bills. There 
are 12 spending bills out there that get into the specifics of the 
things we are spending. All we did was give a blueprint for the overall 
picture for each of those 12 spending committees. But they need to take 
a look at what they have jurisdiction over and see where there is 
duplication, fraud, waste, and programs that are not even working.
  We have a bunch of programs out there that we have not reauthorized. 
That means they have expired, but we are still spending money on them--
$293 billion a year on them. We have to do better.
  There are two ways we can make a difference. We can look at those 260 
programs and see if--if they have not been looked at for a long time, 
see if there couldn't be some savings there. Secondly, we can try to 
grow the private sector economy. Private sector growth by 1 percent 
would provide more than $300 billion in additional tax revenue every 
year. That almost balances the budget by itself.
  There are some things we can do if we start looking at how we can 
keep from impeding business, get business going and make it more 
competitive in the United States, and we can do better.
  I hope the people will all support the budget we have. It isn't 
perfect. We had a short time to work on it compared to the time the 
other side had to work on it in previous years, but we did it, and now 
we need to finish it.
  I ask for my colleagues' support on the budget.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
  Under the previous order, all time is yielded back.
  The question is on agreeing to the conference report to accompany S. 
Con. Res. 11.
  Mr. ENZI. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
  Is there a sufficient second?
  There appears to be a sufficient second.
  The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk called the roll.
  Mr. CORNYN. The following Senator is necessarily absent: the Senator 
from Louisiana (Mr. Vitter).
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Gardner). Are there any other Senators in 
the Chamber desiring to vote?
  The result was announced--yeas 51, nays 48, as follows:

                      [Rollcall Vote No. 171 Leg.]

                                YEAS--51

     Alexander
     Ayotte
     Barrasso
     Blunt
     Boozman
     Burr
     Capito
     Cassidy
     Coats
     Cochran
     Collins
     Corker
     Cornyn
     Cotton
     Crapo
     Daines
     Enzi
     Ernst
     Fischer
     Flake
     Gardner
     Graham
     Grassley
     Hatch
     Heller
     Hoeven
     Inhofe
     Isakson
     Johnson
     Kirk

[[Page 6214]]


     Lankford
     Lee
     McCain
     McConnell
     Moran
     Murkowski
     Perdue
     Portman
     Risch
     Roberts
     Rounds
     Rubio
     Sasse
     Scott
     Sessions
     Shelby
     Sullivan
     Thune
     Tillis
     Toomey
     Wicker

                                NAYS--48

     Baldwin
     Bennet
     Blumenthal
     Booker
     Boxer
     Brown
     Cantwell
     Cardin
     Carper
     Casey
     Coons
     Cruz
     Donnelly
     Durbin
     Feinstein
     Franken
     Gillibrand
     Heinrich
     Heitkamp
     Hirono
     Kaine
     King
     Klobuchar
     Leahy
     Manchin
     Markey
     McCaskill
     Menendez
     Merkley
     Mikulski
     Murphy
     Murray
     Nelson
     Paul
     Peters
     Reed
     Reid
     Sanders
     Schatz
     Schumer
     Shaheen
     Stabenow
     Tester
     Udall
     Warner
     Warren
     Whitehouse
     Wyden

                             NOT VOTING--1

       
     Vitter
       
  The conference report was agreed to.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The majority leader.

                          ____________________