[Pages S1011-S1014]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




 CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET FOR THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT FOR FISCAL YEAR 
                                  2025

  Mr. MERKLEY. Mr. President, this evening we had a vote on the motion 
to proceed to the Republican budget resolution, and that passed. It was 
a simple majority vote. And this budget resolution has a very simple, 
straightforward theme: Families lose, and billionaires win.
  The plan is simple: Slash programs for families, give massive tax 
giveaways to millionaires and billionaires, and run the country deeper 
into debt.
  That is not a plan that my constituents back home would vote for or 
support. They don't want to see the programs that enable families to 
stand on their feet be slashed or destroyed. They don't think that our 
megamillionaires and billionaires need more massive giveaways, and they 
certainly don't want to see the debt run up in the process. But that is 
where we are.
  Now, my Republican colleagues might say: Well, not so fast. This bill 
is really about securing our border and national defense.
  But don't let that fool you. Senate Democrats are happy to entertain 
an appropriations bill to address these issues. In fact, we had a 
strong, bipartisan defense spending bill in the Appropriations 
Committee last year. Senate Democrats also supported a bipartisan 
immigration bill, and that was just a year ago May; but the bill was 
killed. Bipartisan, negotiated bill was killed when then-Candidate 
Trump said: Senate Republicans, I don't want you to fix the problem. I 
want to have this as a campaign element, the chaos at the border, so 
don't fix it.
  So it was killed. So you have Democrats ready to work on national 
defense, as we have in the past, and willing to work on security at the 
border.
  So this bill is not about that. This bill is about this: Slashing 
programs

[[Page S1012]]

for families, giving massive tax giveaways to the richest Americans. 
That is the real soul of the Republican budget resolution.
  Now, this resolution proposes over $9 trillion in cuts to programs. 
Just look at the budget table that accompanies the resolution. You will 
see it in there. Basically, it has a line: unallocated cuts, $9 
trillion--and that includes cutting a trillion dollars out of the 
programs in the last 6 months of this year.
  One of our colleagues on the Republican side did an amendment that 
showed what those cuts of a trillion dollars would do--let alone 9 
trillion--and it would, basically, wipe out five major programs and cut 
another five major programs in half at the end of this year. So that 
vision of massive cuts to programs families depend on is right at the 
heart of this budget resolution.
  And this really is the great betrayal because Candidate Trump 
campaigned on the vision of helping families. But now that he is in 
office, he is reverting to the same plan he had in the last year of his 
first administration, which is slashing programs for families and 
giving massive tax cuts to megamillionaires and billionaires. We have 
seen this movie before, and the movie's director is a man named Russell 
Vought. He was head of OMB in the Trump administration the first time 
around. And who has Trump nominated to put in place of the Director of 
OMB and now been confirmed by the Senate? The same man, Russell Vought.
  And do we see the architecture of this plan anywhere else? Well, yes, 
we do. It is called Project 2025--that plan that President Trump said 
he didn't know anything about. But it was his Director of OMB who was 
the architect of the plan, and it is that plan that is being 
implemented right now. And what is that plan? That plan is the great 
betrayal: slash the programs for families, give tax giveaways to the 
richest Americans.
  Now, in the Budget Committee, we had a chance to examine this plan 
and propose amendments to it. We proposed 44 amendments, and all of 
them were voted down on a party line. So that was quite disappointing 
because, really, what we were about was to say, Hey, to our Republican 
colleagues, if you want to protect families and this program isn't 
really about slashing programs for families, then vote with us to 
protect those programs.
  Well, so we put up amendment after amendment to protect those 
programs. One was about the cost of groceries. Democrats said: Don't 
allow provisions into this bill that are going to drive up the cost of 
groceries. Democrats voted for protection; Republicans voted it down.
  Democrats said: Don't put provisions into this bill that are going to 
cut Medicare or Medicaid or Social Security or, in any other way, make 
healthcare more expensive. Democrats voted for that protection. 
Republicans rejected it.

  Democrats put forward an amendment for provisions that would--against 
provisions that would raise the cost of rent or raise the cost of 
buying a home. Republicans on the committee rejected it.
  Democrats put forward an amendment to protect or hopefully lower the 
cost of drugs, and Republicans rejected it.
  Democrats put forward an amendment that said: Don't make changes in 
the law when this bill comes back that will increase the cost of going 
to college. Republicans rejected it.
  Protecting the National School Lunch Program? Republicans rejected 
it.
  Protecting families against an increase in childcare? Republicans 
rejected it.
  Protecting the investment in research for cancer, Alzheimer's, and 
other lifesaving major medical measures? Protect the funding for that? 
Republicans rejected it.
  Now, if this bill wasn't about slashing all those programs, why would 
Republicans vote against all those things? If they actually wanted to 
protect families--the programs that provide the foundation for families 
to be on their feet, to thrive, to move in the middle class, to 
prosper--why would they vote to open the door to slashing all those 
programs?
  Then we see that they are racing their House counterparts. At 10 a.m. 
last week, when we considered in committee the Republican Senate budget 
resolution, the House proceeded to put forward--they are just down the 
hallway through this door over here--the House--at the end of the 
hallway--put forward their own budget resolution, which is very, very 
similar except in magnitude. The House bill provides even more tax cuts 
for the richest Americans than does the Senate bill. So the stakes 
couldn't be higher.
  Where are we headed? Are we headed towards a bill this year that is 
going to make the rich richer, increase income inequality, proceed to 
help the wealthy run this country by and for the powerful and undermine 
the vision of government by and for the people? That is exactly where 
the Republican budget resolution is headed.
  If you kind of want to make sure that you really understand how true 
this is, think about the fact that the last budget presented by 
President Trump in his first term, his first 4 years, which was written 
by his current OMB Director, Office of Management and Budget Director 
Russell Vought--that had exactly the same architecture. It proposed 
slashing $1 trillion over a decade from programs for families. It 
slashed healthcare and housing for seniors and veterans, slashed 
funding for hospitals and community health centers, slashed school meal 
programs and food pantries, slashed Head Start and police and 
firefighting grants, slashed tax relief for families and veterans and 
retirement--$1 trillion in the last budget.
  But that was $1 trillion over 10 years. What Republicans are now 
proposing is $1 trillion over 1 year--just 1 year. It is only actually 
half a year. There are only 6 months left in fiscal year 2025.
  When President Trump ran, when he was Candidate Trump, he talked 
about reducing the costs for families, but everything he is doing now 
is sending costs upwards. It is Trumpflation. Trumpflation has arrived 
in the United States of America. Instead of slashing the price of 
groceries, he is proposing programs that will drive up costs for hard-
working families. That is Trumpflation.
  This budget resolution opens the door to making healthcare more 
expensive for families--not cheaper, more expensive. That is 
Trumpflation.
  This budget opens the door to making college more expensive by 
changing how college loans are administered. That is Trumpflation.
  This budget opens the door to unleashing carbon dioxide and methane 
pollution that drive climate chaos, that will drive up the cost of 
flood and fire insurance across America. In the West, it is fire 
insurance. In the gulf in Florida, the Southern States, it is flood 
insurance. That is Trumpflation.
  This budget opens the door to increasing the cost of childcare--
something working families really struggle with. It is Trumpflation.
  It opens the door to increasing the cost of prescription drugs. 
Trumpflation has arrived.
  In each of these areas, we said: Don't do it. We said: Don't proceed 
to put into this budget resolution opening these doors to these 
assaults on American families. Democrats said it in every way we could, 
and Republicans said: No. We want to cut those programs. We are not 
closing those doors.
  I know American families don't agree with this vision. My office--the 
office of every Senator here, every Senator represented by their desk 
in this room--every office is receiving thousands of phone calls. I had 
a couple of days last week that I got over 2,000 phone calls from 
Oregon. That is an incredible number. And we had so many members of the 
team working, trying to answer every call live, but we couldn't keep 
up. Even though my team has a highly coordinated ability to expand the 
number of people answering the phone, we couldn't keep up because 
people are so disturbed about this vision for America, this vision of 
attacking families and gold-plating billionaires. That is not an 
American vision, but it is the vision of President Trump.
  Then we have the second piece--the tax giveaways. The Senate budget 
resolution proposes $3.7 trillion in tax giveaways. The 
megamillionaires and billionaires get most of that, just like in the 
first Trump tax cut proposal, tax giveaway proposal. It was something 
like 80 percent that went to the top 10 percent in America.
  Well, I know that Elon Musk doesn't need more of our Treasury money. 
I

[[Page S1013]]

know that the richest Americans, the megabillionaires, don't need more 
of our Treasury and to run up our debt. But that is what this proposal 
does.
  The House budget resolution goes further, proposing $4.5 trillion in 
tax giveaways.
  Over the weekend, there was article after article of Republicans 
saying: That is not enough. We have all these tax giveaways we want to 
do for the powerful, and we can't fit them all into $4.5 trillion. We 
need more space.
  If you think I am exaggerating, take a look at the budget put out by 
House Republicans last week. They included a mechanism to guarantee 
that they follow through on their tax cut programs to families--they 
linked the tax cuts directly to the program cuts for families. They 
said that for every additional dollar they cut from safety net 
programs, they will be able to give away an additional dollar to 
billionaires. They put that into their plan, that these two things are 
linked--cuts to programs for families--the more you cut it, the more 
you can do tax giveaways to the wealthy.
  It doesn't stop there.
  All of this is going to result in higher deficits here in the United 
States. My Republican colleagues are famous for campaigning on fiscal 
responsibility but not delivering.
  This chart shows the difference between the first year of each 
Republican administration and the last year in terms of deficits. If 
you are looking at H.W. Bush, he had more deficits in his last year 
than he did in his first. Clinton went the other direction; Clinton 
dropped the deficit year after year. In fact, in the end, he produced a 
surplus at the end of his 8 years. Along comes the second Bush 
Presidency. He drives up the deficits from his first year to his last 
year, over those 8 years. In comes Obama. Obama decreases them. In 
comes Trump in his first Presidency, and he blows the lid off the whole 
thing--like a bomb to the deficit and a bomb to the debt. Then comes in 
Biden, and the deficits drop down again. This is the pattern. You have 
seen this movie before.
  It is often said: Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on 
me. Well, Americans, you have been fooled time and time again, and you 
are being fooled again, and it is all embedded in this budget 
resolution that is on the floor of the Senate right now.
  I find it just so remarkable that Democrats deliver on decreasing 
deficits, but somehow, through the magic of marketing--selling the 
sizzle instead of the steak; giving the talk instead of doing the 
walk--Republicans somehow still present themselves as fiscally 
conservative.
  I encourage my colleagues to say that we are going to keep putting a 
spotlight on the fact that deficits are going to go up under President 
Trump, just as they have under every previous Republican President 
going back decades.
  I would like to think that we could come together as Democrats and 
Republicans and say: Yes, there are efficiencies to be found in 
programs, but it is also absurd to be giving away the Treasury to the 
richest Americans.
  But if you want a symbol of where this administration is coming from, 
just take a look at the picture of President Trump doing his inaugural 
address--also just down this hallway in the Rotunda. All you see is him 
backed up by one billionaire after another, four in a row right behind 
him. They love this idea because, after all, there is never enough 
money for a billionaire.
  Well, I can tell you, where I live, billionaires do not struggle. 
Where I live, families struggle. They struggle with healthcare. They 
struggle with housing--housing--that vision of home ownership for your 
children.
  My father was a union mechanic. My mother, when she had children, 
stayed at home. She worked in the home, did all kinds of activities 
with her kids. On a single mechanic's income, you could easily buy a 
home, but not today, not a single income. No. The price of homes is 
through the roof. The dream of home ownership is dying. Why? Because 
hedge funds are buying up single-family housing across America and 
because we haven't invested enough in creating starter homes, 
incentivizing the building of starter homes.
  In the Budget Committee, we had a proposal that said: Make it easier 
to put legislation forward that would discourage hedge funds from 
buying up single-family housing. They have been hard at it since 2009 
when all those hundreds of thousands--millions--of homes went into 
foreclosure because of banking regulations creating a massive national 
fiasco.
  Every Democrat said: Yes, make it easier to take on the issue of home 
ownership. Every Republican said no.
  I don't like that this is a partisan outcome. I would love to see us 
partner to help out American families, partner across the aisle for 
families. But we have an administration that is all about the rich and 
making them richer, and it is all about slashing the programs families 
depend on.
  We have yet another threat to families. That threat is the 
concentration of authoritarian power in the White House in a way we 
haven't seen in the entire history--almost 250 years--of our Republic. 
We have a President who has a thirst for authoritarian power, who 
admires Xi in China, admires Putin in Russia, sent his Vice President 
over to Munich just days ago to bad-mouth the democracies of Europe 
that share our values of freedom of speech, freedom of religion, and 
freedom of assembly. Wow.
  But we not only have a President who admires authoritarian figures, 
admires dictators, he is acting like a dictator right here. He is 
breaking the law, and he is violating the Constitution.
  He proceeded to say: I am going to cut all of these programs that I 
don't like.
  Well, do you know what? He doesn't have that power. We have what is 
called a separation of powers in America. It means Congress sets the 
law, and then we have an Executive, the President, who implements it.
  Now, President Nixon--you remember him. You remember Watergate. You 
remember the impeachment. You remember the conviction. You remember the 
resignation. Actually, it never got to a conviction because he resigned 
first.
  What did he do?
  He said: I am going to be a bit imperial, and I am going to not 
provide the funds that Congress told me had to be provided to various 
programs.
  And do you know what? The courts said: Hell no. You can't do that. We 
have what is called a Republic. It is called a separation of powers. It 
is called what it says in the Constitution: that Congress writes the 
law and the President executes it.
  Now, the President can request Congress to change a program that has 
already been authorized, that is already in the law. It is called a 
rescission. He sends a note over to Congress and says: You know, we 
don't need to spend as much money as you all appropriated for this 
program; or maybe that nuclear warhead we were going to refurbish has 
no longer got the right one for the right missile, so we can cancel 
that program.
  He can send those over to us, but he doesn't get a line-item veto. He 
doesn't get a line-item reduction. In fact, in 1996, the Republican 
Congress provided a line-item veto power to the President, and the 
Supreme Court said: No, you can't delegate that authority. If you 
violate that line between Congress making the law and the President 
executing it, you have destroyed the separation of powers, which is the 
heart of every democracy.
  It is that thin line of Congress making the laws that is the 
difference between a democracy and a dictatorship, and it is under 
assault. We are in the middle of a constitutional crisis.
  If you look at the speech that President Trump gave at the 
inauguration in the Rotunda, down the hall, he didn't talk about a 
vision in which he was going to work with Congress to get it 
implemented--to pass laws to make it happen. He talked about Executive 
order after Executive order as to what he was going to do.
  That is the mind of an autocrat. That is a king, not a President. 
That is a threat to our Constitution. It is a threat to our Republic.
  He has issued more than 60 Executive orders--bypassing Congress 
entirely. He went further. He handed the keys to the data systems 
across America to Elon Musk.
  Now, Elon Musk was not elected. He was not confirmed by the Senate. 
He has no independent oversight. Elon represents a concentration of 
power we

[[Page S1014]]

have rarely seen--first, his power by being the CEO of large companies, 
like SpaceX and Tesla and Starlink. Now, those companies have lots of 
lobbyists here on Capitol Hill. So that is a lot of power that Elon 
Musk has right there. And do you know? Here is something you might not 
know: He gets about $8 million a day in Federal subsidies for his 
companies. I would say that is a conflict of interest. Yes, $8 million 
a day is, roughly, $2.5 billion over the course of a year.
  So here is a man--the richest man in the world. So he has that 
massive personal wealth; he has that power--that power to run media 
campaigns or to hire lobbyists and hire lawyers. He has got his three 
companies, and they have that ability to do media campaigns and hire 
lobbyists and hire lawyers. So you have tremendous power there, but now 
he has been given the keys to Agency after Agency all across the U.S. 
Government.
  What kind of a threat is that?
  Well, it is huge--it is huge--because those databases contain the 
most private information on every American--the private healthcare 
records of people who are on Medicaid or Medicare, the financial 
records of every family who files a tax return. His minions are now the 
foxes in the henhouse--so his corporate wealth, his personal wealth and 
power, and now his team--controlling databases all across the 
government, including the payment systems as to what gets paid and what 
doesn't get paid.
  I don't want this man to have my Social Security information or 
yours, my tax information or yours, my address or my bank account 
numbers or my records or yours.
  Then he put the CFPB on the chopping block, the Consumer Financial 
Protection Bureau. He posted a message that said: ``CFPB,'' rest in 
peace, ``RIP.''
  Now, why does the richest man in the world want to get rid of an 
Agency that has delivered $21 billion in checks back to consumers who 
were ripped off by illegal practices?
  I would say that is something where one could say: Hey, the CFPB is a 
hero for working families, a hero for families in returning $21 billion 
to families who were ripped off by illegal practices. And because they 
shut down those illegal practices, they probably saved consumers across 
this country and saved families across this country some other enormous 
sum. Maybe it is five times that $21 billion.

  I know that, when I worked on payday loans in Oregon and we got rid 
of those 500-percent, 400-percent, 300-percent interest rates, 
millions--not millions--but tens of thousands of Oregonians who were 
victims of the 300-,
400-, 500-percent loan-sharking benefited enormously.
  Well, who is the similar watchdog here for the Nation? It is the 
CFPB, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The rich hate it 
because they are the ones who have engaged in illegal practices to rip 
off consumers, and so they hate it that there is a watchdog.
  So here is Trump and Musk getting rid of the watchdogs, getting rid 
of the inspectors general, and breaking the law while they do so. The 
law says you have to give 30 days' notice to dismiss an inspector 
general, and you have to do it for cause, because we need watchdogs to 
make sure that the executive branch is playing by the rules. He fired 
them. He fired the FBI agents who are specialists in executive branch 
behavior, watching to make sure they follow the law. He fired them and 
now the CFPB.
  What else?
  Well, I can tell you this: Musk and his minions could create a lot of 
damage with the access, and it is not just privacy to your records and 
my records. It could also be by accidentally screwing up the computer 
code because they don't fully understand the details on what they are 
playing with.
  Let's be clear: Seniors living on fixed incomes cannot afford a 
single missed payment. They won't be able to buy their groceries or pay 
their rent or pay their mortgage.
  This chaos unleashed by Trump and unleashed by Musk is illegal, 
unconstitutional, and just plain corrupt.
  Here is another piece of the puzzle that should disturb you all: In 
budget resolutions, deficits cannot be maintained for more than 10 
years. It is bad enough that Republicans want to increase the deficit 
over the 10-year period, but they have come up with a plan where they 
change the baseline so that they can actually project those deficits 
beyond 10 years--basically indefinitely into the future. That is not 
fiscal responsibility. Not only are they planning to run up the debt 
for 10 years, but they want to be able to run it up forever more, until 
you get a Congress that has the spine to change it.
  Why does the party that has claimed fiscal responsibility want to 
change the baseline so they can run up debts far into the future? They 
have gotten off this game. They have sold this game--this scam--time 
after time. They sold it under Bush 1. They sold it under Bush 2. They 
sold it under Trump. They are going to do it again. They think they can 
get away with it again.
  So that is our job, to shine the spotlight on it and say: No. The 
American people see what is happening and say, ``No.''
  Say you want programs of healthcare, housing, education, support for 
childcare, and for nutrition. You want to help families thrive so they 
can move into the middle class or move beyond the middle class. 
American families, speak up, because it is very true that, in our 
Republic, the one thing that can move this Chamber is citizens back 
home telling us what they think about what is happening.
  Families lose. Billionaires win. That is what is at stake in this 
budget resolution. The plan is simple: Slash programs for families. 
Give massive tax giveaways to megamillionaires and billionaires. Run up 
the deficit in the process, and let Elon Musk and the minions dismantle 
the Federal Agencies that protect families from getting ripped off and 
exploited.
  This Republican budget is not a government of, by, and for the 
people. This Republican budget is a government of, by, and for the 
powerful. And Democrats will fight day and night against this 
diabolical plan to attack America's families.

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