

[Congressional Record: March 17, 1997 (House)]
[Page H1023-H1030]
AGENDA OF THE 105TH CONGRESS
Mr. GINGRICH. Mr. Speaker, I rise to describe what the Congress has
been doing and what I believe it will be doing in the near future,
because as we enter the Easter recess at the end of this week, Members
will be going home, and I think it is fair for our constituents to ask
us where are we going, what is this Congress going to be like, and what
have we achieved on behalf of the American people.
There are five basic messages that I think House Republicans in
particular can take home, but a number of Democrats can agree with
these messages. I think in a broad way, this is a principled
bipartisanship that outlines a direction that most Americans will want
to go in.
First, we have developed and unveiled a 2-year agenda, creating a
better America for ourselves and our children, and I will talk about
that agenda in just a moment.
Second, we are focusing on keeping our children and communities safe
by winning the war on drugs as a top priority for this country.
Third, we are committed to lowering interest rates and creating
better jobs by producing a balanced budget this year.
Fourth, we have as an objective ending the Internal Revenue Service
as we know it. We want to help the taxpayers save time and money by
providing real tax relief, simplifying our needlessly complex Tax Code,
and reforming the Internal Revenue Service.
And fifth, as proof that what we are working on can be achieved,
welfare reform is a success story. The 104th Congress, by passing
dramatic, bold welfare reform, has made a difference and the facts
prove it. That gives us reason to hope that we are going to be able to
work in 1997 and 1998 on other reforms that will be of similar
importance. There, I might mention education as an example of an area
that we truly want to work on.
Let me start by describing the agenda that will create a better
America for ourselves and our children. The House Republican majority,
led by the majority leader, the gentleman from Texas, Dick Armey, and
by the policy chairman, the gentleman from California Chris Cox,
developed a number of items which we believe will outline for the
country 13 major areas of improvement. I would like to outline the
steps we are taking, because I think they illustrate a firm, balanced
agenda for developing a better future.
The first area is balancing the budget. We believe it is vital to
pass a balanced budget amendment. We were saddened to see the other
body fail by one vote, but we believe at an appropriate time this House
should bring up the balanced budget amendment again, and I think if it
passes in this House, as it probably will, when we send it to the other
body maybe we will be developing the momentum and popular support to
then get that one final vote that is missing to send it on to the
States.
But a balanced budget is vital, first, because it is morally wrong
for us in peacetime to spend our children's and grandchildren's money.
It is just plain not right. We have the same obligation to set
priorities, to set limits, to have discipline in our Federal budget
that every family and every business has in their own budgets.
In addition, passing a balanced budget will lower interest rates that
will improve the economy, increase the number of jobs, improve take-
home pay. Think about a college student who graduates with a balanced
budget. They will save over $2,100 in repaying an $11,000 loan over 10
years. That is over $2,100 that that college graduate can save because
interest rates will be higher lower.
Or imagine a couple buying a new house. They could save up to $37,000
on a 30-year mortgage for an average-priced house. That is, literally
they could pay for one child's college education just with the savings
from a lower interest rate from a balanced budget.
Or imagine a family buying an average-priced new car. They could save
$975 over 4 years in lower interest payments on the average new-priced
car.
Our point is that there is a moral case, there is a practical case,
there is a self-interest case for balancing the budget. In addition,
when you have deficits and you borrow more money, interest payments go
up. The interest payments, when John F. Kennedy was President in the
early 1960's, were about $6 billion a year. This year the interest
payment will be $245 billion. That is, the average American will pay
more in taxes to pay interest on the debt than they will pay for the
Army, the Navy, the Air Force, and the Marine Corps combined.
So balancing the budget ultimately leads to lower taxes through lower
interest rates and less payment on the debt, and our hope would be
eventually through a balanced budget to actually begin to pay down the
national debt.
But this is not just a constitutional amendment. We are committed to
bringing spending in line with our commitment to balance the budget by
the year 2002 without raising taxes. In fact, we want to be able to
focus on saving money in Government so we can lower taxes so the
American people have more take-home pay and a greater ability to create
new jobs and new opportunities.
We have asked the President to submit a balanced budget. The first
budget that was sent up was apparently a mistake. It is about $62
billion in deficit in the year 2002, which is our target year for
balancing the budget. So we have asked the President, since he came
right to this room and promised 12 times in the State of the Union, on
12 occasions he said he was for a balanced budget, he had a balanced
budget plan, so we have asked him to submit a balanced budget that
would allow us to begin the process of passing a balanced budget.
In addition, we believe we need to overhaul the budget process. It
frankly does not work very well. We think there are steps that can be
taken that allow us to control Government spending and to reduce taxes
better with more cooperation between the executive branch and the
Congress, and we believe that requires reforming the budget process.
Finally, we think that when the President asks for additional
spending for emergencies or for overseas activities by our military,
that that should be paid for at the same time we are passing it. We
think that the age of credit card financing, where we just charge more
and charge more and charge more, is over. If we are going to spend more
money in one area, we should have the discipline to set priorities and
spend less money in another area, so we are going to insist that
supplemental spending bills be paid for on a pay-as-you-go basis.
Our second goal after balancing the budget is to improve learning for
all Americans. I want to commend the chairman, the gentleman from
Pennsylvania Bill Goodling, and the Committee on Education and the
Workforce, which is doing a tremendous job in a project called
Operation Crossroads.
They are looking at all the Federal programs for education, they are
looking at, with the oversight subcommittee chairman, with the
leadership of the gentleman from Michigan, Pete Hoekstra, they are
going out and have already held nine hearings asking what works; where
are the best schools in America? Where is the best inner city school
for poor children? Where are the best charter schools? Where is the
best math education? Where is the best science education?
They are trying to determine how can we improve Federal education
assistance so we get more resources to teachers and students for
classroom learning while keeping fewer resources in Washington.
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Our goal is to help the teacher in the classroom and the student in
the classroom rather than to build more and more bureaucracies. We
believe that by this examination in Operation Crossroads of what works
and what does not, we can begin to sort out the Federal programs.
There are approximately 720 Federal education programs. They spend
about, they have spent over the years over $539 billion in education.
Our goal is to shrink the number of bureaucrats in Washington, take the
savings, get them back home to the local school district, have them
spent with the local student and the local teacher so that the parent,
the student, and the teacher are affecting education.
In addition, one of our goals is to enhance local and parental
control of education. It is very important to recognize that real
learning occurs where the student is. It does not occur at the State
department of education. It does not occur at some regional office. It
does not occur at the Federal department in Washington. It occurs in
the school where the teachers are and it occurs at home. That is why we
think it is important to strengthen parents and we think it is
important to strengthen local control so that people who actually have
hands-on experience with the students are in a position to work in
education.
Finally, we intend to cut education redtape and excessive bureaucracy
and work with local teachers to help children master the basics. We
think it is very important, and we agree with the President when he
said that every child should be able to read by 8 years of age. We
would have added they should be able to read English, which would save
a great deal of money on bilingual education. We think it is important
for every American child to have an opportunity to participate in the
fullness of our culture, to be able to get the best possible jobs. We
think that requires mastering English, and we think that requires a
focus on reading and on writing and on basic math. We think every child
at a fairly early age should be able to go to the store and buy
something without being cheated because they are able to do the math to
check exactly what they were charged and what they paid.
We also believe that by focusing on the basics we can strengthen
young people so that they are then in a position to continue to learn
all of their lives because we recognize that lifetime learning is an
essential in the information age, and we recognize that every young
person is going to have to grow up in a world where they may have seven
or eight or nine jobs in the course of their lifetime. Each of those
jobs is going to require new learning and new experiences. They may
move to many cities. Those are going to require new learning and new
experiences.
So we are committed to lifetime learning. We believe you begin by
examining, out of the 720 Federal programs, which ones work, which ones
fail, which ones have too many bureaucrats in Washington, how can we
shrink the amount of redtape, get the money back home and help teachers
and students and parents where the real learning occurs.
Our third goal is to strengthen America's families. First we want to
pass the Working Families Flexibility Act, which will permit working
mothers and fathers to take time off using overtime for family and
medical emergencies and other personal needs. This essentially
recognizes that in the modern age very often people want time as much
as they want money. It allows you to earn 1\1/2\ times off or 1\1/2\
times income, whichever you want. So if somebody has a need to go and
see their child in the ballet or go visit with the teacher or be in a
situation where they need to go take care of a parent who might have a
health problem, this program, the Working Families Flexibility Act,
would allow people to take their overtime and turn it into time off,
more free time to be with their family if that is what they prefer.
If they prefer to continue to get paid time and a half in cash, they
could get paid. This creates greater flexibility and greater choice for
workers and allows families to decide which do they need more, more
money or more time. We believe that the Working Families Flexibility
Act is a key step in the right direction.
In addition, we will take steps to end partial birth abortions. It is
very clear from the testimony we have had in the last few weeks that
many Members of Congress were misinformed a year ago when one of the
leading advocates of abortion suggested that partial birth abortions,
these are abortions performed very late in pregnancy and they are
performed in a way that the child is basically born except for their
head and then their brains are taken out. It is a very gruesome
procedure, and it is one which virtually no one defends. Yet we had
been told it was very rare; it happened only in very unusual cases. Now
we have had testimony that that information was false, that in fact it
is fairly common and it often happens involving healthy babies and
healthy mothers. We believe it is important when a child is that close
to being born that they be protected and that this particular
procedure, which is particularly gruesome and inhuman, be ended. That
vote will be, I believe, this week.
We are working to end this kind of partial birth. We also are working
to expand the availability of adoptions. We think that adoption is a
dramatically better answer than abortion. In the last Congress we
passed adoption tax credits to give people some money to encourage them
to be able to adopt a child. We are going to continue to work to have
the adoption process streamlined because we believe that nothing will
be better than to have someone decide that, rather than have an
abortion, find a loving couple that wants to raise a child and help
them in the adoption process. We also believe that helps fight child
abuse and child neglect and helps take children out of foster homes and
get them into homes where there are loving couples that want to adopt
them.
We also believe it will strengthen American families if we protect
the rights of people of faith. For too long God has been driven from
the public arena. We believe it is important that people be in a
position where they can talk openly about their faith and where they
are not subject to religious persecution. I should note on this subject
that not only is it a challenge sometimes here at home but that we have
seen a tremendous upsurge in the last 5 years of religious persecution
of all faiths around the world and that we have an obligation to be
vigilant in our commitment to the right of people to worship God in
their own way and to protect their right to worship.
We also want to strengthen America's families by protecting
retirement security. We want to expand the number of individual
retirement accounts that are available. We want to remove the kind of
impediments that block expanded pension coverage, and we want to make
sure that workers have a chance to earn greater retirement savings. Let
me suggest that every citizen should look at the new program in
Michigan, where Gov. John Engler has passed with the State legislature
a new pension program that I think begins April 1 which allows the
State employee an individual personal pension account that they
control, that they invest, that they are vested in, that allows them to
follow what is happening in the market and allows them to be involved
in earning more money.
I think it is going to be a very big step in the right direction
toward giving the pensioner control rather than having a union-controlled
pension fund or a State Government-controlled pension fund or a corporate-
controlled pension fund. We are looking for ways that you can control the
money you are saving for your retirement. We believe that most Americans
want to have that right to be able to make sure that they are investing
their money wisely so they know how much money they really have for their
own retirement.
In addition, we will continue to work to make the Social Security
trust fund safe and secure. It is currently sound, well into the next
century. We believe it is possible to work to continue to make Social
Security safe for everyone who is currently on it.
Our fourth goal is to increase family income by lifting the burden of
excessive taxes from working Americans. We believe that we should
eliminate if possible or at a minimum significantly reduce taxes on
savings and investment. We want more jobs and better jobs. We want
Americans to have the best technology and the best science in the
world. That requires that we have the kind of savings and investment
that allows our laboratories to produce the best, that allows our
factories to buy the best, that allows new companies with new ideas to
start up. That is the only way to have the highest income in the world.
That is why we believe it is vital to reduce the penalty on savings and
investment. We favor strongly either eliminating or significantly
reducing any kind of capital gains penalty because we want people to
have an incentive to save and to invest because that way they are going
to create the jobs for the future so their children have even better
jobs with even better take-home pay so they can save even more. That
has been the cycle of prosperity that has made America work.
In addition, we want to pass tax relief that strengthens and
encourages American families. We believe that it is vital for American
families to have a $500 per child tax credit. We are going to do
everything we can this year to both balance the budget and move toward
a tax credit for children. We think that is the best way for parents to
then decide how to spend the money on their own child rather than
having higher taxes to hire a bureaucrat in Washington to then decide
how much of the money after their salary and expenses should go back to
take care of their child. We are trying to shift resources back into
the family by increasing family take-home pay.
We also believe that we should either repeal or substantially reduce
death taxes. Why should someone work all of their life, build a small
business or a family farm and then find the government taxes are so
high that, when they die their family is going to have to sell that
farm or sell that business just to pay the taxes. We think, if you work
hard and you already paid taxes on the money, you should not have
double taxation. We think it is wrong to say that, if you die, that
your entire family business is going to have to be sold just to pay
government taxes or your entire family farm is going to have to be
sold. So we believe we should dramatically reduce or if possible
eliminate the death taxes.
For all Americans, we think that we should dramatically simplify tax
laws in order to end the Internal Revenue Service as we know it. You
may have read recently that the Internal Revenue Service had a $4
billion computer project which failed. It turned out that, even when
you spent $4 billion, the Internal Revenue Code was so complicated that
they could not make it work. I think the message is not to build a $6
billion computer, it is to dramatically simplify the Internal Revenue
Code. That is going to take some serious work. We have asked the
President to submit to the Congress a proposal for tax simplification.
We believe it may be possible for as many as 40 million Americans to no
longer have to file their income tax. That is American taxpayers who
are currently filing.
We believe it should be possible to dramatically decrease complexity
so that the IRS office can give the same answer everywhere in the
country. As you probably know, today if you call different IRS offices,
you often get a different answer to the same question. So it is very
hard to know exactly how to fill out some of the more complex parts of
the code. So we are committed to dramatically simplifying the tax law
in order to end the IRS as we know it and to get to a much simpler
system with much less Government intrusion.
Finally, we believe the Internal Revenue Service itself should be
audited. After all, it has 110,000 employees. You can compare that with
the Border Patrol, which has about 5,500 employees, or with the Drug
Enforcement Administration, which has about 7,400 employees. So that
110,000 people working for the Internal Revenue Service, they just
failed completely with a $4 billion computer project. And it is very
clear that we need to have a thorough management audit, not just a
financial audit but a management audit of exactly how the Internal
Revenue Service is run and exactly why it has had these major
management problems.
Our fifth goal is to improve access to quality health care. We
believe it is possible for every American to have dramatically better
health care because science is moving us into an era where the
breakthroughs in scientific knowledge are going to be quite remarkable.
The fact is the research, much of it done by the National Institutes of
Health, others done by universities and private corporations, by
research centers, that research is beginning to give us, in the human
genome project, a level of knowledge about how humans operate which is
greater than anything we have ever seen before. In fact, it is fair to
say that in the next 20 to 30 years, we will have a level of knowledge
that would have been unimaginable just 20 years ago. We are entering
what one scientist called the age of molecular medicine, a period where
our knowledge of our body is going to be so dramatic and our ability to
look at birth defects, to look at cancer, to look at a variety of
issues is going to be a dramatic change.
In that framework, we want to start by working on health care for
senior citizens. We want to start by saving Medicare from impending
bankruptcy. Even though we in the Congress have been talking now for 2
years about the danger of Medicare going bankrupt, we still do not have
an adequate solution. We are working with the President. He has sent up
some ideas. We hope if he submits a balanced budget proposal, he will
have even more ideas for how to save Medicare.
We believe it is important to save Medicare by increasing the number
of choices available for senior citizens so that they have the same
right to choose as do their children and their grandchildren. We
believe it is important to fight fraud and in part to at least
experiment with giving senior citizens a financial incentive to help us
fight fraud.
We believe it is important to create provider-sponsored networks
where doctors and hospitals get together to compete with health
maintenance organizations so we can have lower-cost, competitive
choices so senior citizens are not trapped by any one kind of care. We
also believe it is important to give senior citizens the same right to
have a medical savings account as their children and grandchildren do.
That is a program where you get a fairly high deductible. But if you
take good care of yourself and if you watch your health, you get to
keep all the money you save, if you do not in fact spend all of your
deductible.
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It is now being offered in the private sector. We believe it should
be offered to senior citizens and that it has very many opportunities,
particularly for folks who want to have more control over their own
lives and who are willing to look at the cost of medical care and to
look at the cost of medicine. We think there are big savings to be made
through medical savings accounts.
In addition to saving Medicare so it does not go broke, we want to
improve it. We believe it is important to promote wellness through
enhanced disease research and to improve Medicare preventive benefits,
for example, diabetes and breast cancer screening. We think it is very
important to recognize that the current model of the Health Care
Financing Administration, which is the Government agency that runs
Medicare, does not put enough emphasis on wellness and on preventive
care.
Diabetes is a topic I am particularly interested in because my
mother-in-law is 81 and she is diabetic, and because she has really
managed her diabetic care and she has watched her blood sugar and she
has watched her insulin, she has in fact been able to take pretty good
care of herself. Yet the tragedy is that of the 16 million Americans who
have diabetes, 8 million do not know it. They will not learn it until they
have had it for 6 or 7 years, and they begin to get sick enough that they
show up at the doctor and the doctor then tests them and discovers they
have diabetes.
If we can find somebody early enough and if we can teach them how to
take care of themselves, the evidence is that we may be able to save
between 80 and 90 percent of the people who go blind, so that they can
retain their sight and continue to see. Think of that. Think about a
program where by early screening and early prevention and early
education, 80 to 90 percent of the people who go blind because of
diabetes would be able to keep their sight. We believe at least half
the people who lose their kidneys or have severe heart disease or lose
their feet to amputation, at least half would be able to avoid those
problems.
Imagine you could wave a magic wand, and by preventive care and
education and a focus on wellness, you could stop half the people in
the next 10 years who will lose their kidneys due to diabetes. You
could stop half the people who will have their feet amputated. You
could save half the people who will end up in intensive care with
severe heart disease.
That is the opportunity that an aggressive, active diabetes program
in the short run gives us, and then beyond that, beyond the focus on
prevention and wellness and education there is the opportunity for
continued research at the National Institutes of Health, where I
particularly want to commend Chairman John Porter who has done just a
magnificent job over the last 3 years of really making sure that we
continue to fund health research at the most basic levels, which is
going to pay off for every American.
But to go back to diabetes, let me give just a couple of numbers
because they are so startling. One out of every three American Indians
suffers from diabetes. What a tremendous opportunity to improve health
among American Indians by really working on preventive care and
education in diabetes. Some 19 percent of the people on Medicare suffer
from diabetes, and 1 out of every 4 dollars in Medicare cost is spent
on people who have diabetes. It is a tremendous opportunity for a
better quality of life, a tremendous opportunity to save resources for
the taxpayer, and it is the right thing to do.
In addition, we want to improve the quality and coverage of Medicaid.
We have been working with the Governors to develop more flexibility so
each Governor can apply to their State the local solution that will let
them serve the widest number of people in their State. It is important
to remember this is a big country, there is no simple answer that
solves everybody, and so we have an obligation to reach out and to do
everything we can to make sure that the Governors have the flexibility,
so that Tennessee is different from Nevada and Maine is different from
California.
Each State ought to have the opportunity to spend their Medicaid
money as intelligently as possible so they can then cover more people
and in particular extend coverage to children. We believe as many as 3
million children could be covered by Medicaid who currently are not
covered because the system is being run too much from Washington, with
too much red tape and with too many bureaucrats.
In addition to that, we believe that private citizens should have an
expanded access to medical savings accounts. Right now the total number
you can have in the whole country is 750,000. We think that that is an
unrealistic cap. We believe if you want to have a medical savings
account, which is a system where you basically pay a fairly high
deductible, you are paying a much lower insurance premium because you
are taking the risk of paying maybe as much as $2,000 or $3,000 in your
deductible. But if you do not spend it, you are then in a position to
put it away in a savings account so it begins to work for you and it
adds up over the years.
It is getting very wide-range approval. It leads people to start to
shop for their medical care. They do not automatically just go in to
any doctor, automatically just take any prescription drug. They begin
to look at what does it cost and where can I get it less expensively
and what is at stake, just like any other marketplace, and it has a
dramatic impact on cost.
We believe that it is going to be a system where people, those people
who are willing to take the time, who want to engage in preventive care
and wellness, and who are willing to shop for the best possible health
care are going to find medical savings accounts very desirable, and we
do not think that they should be limited to only 750,000 in a country
of 260 million people.
Finally, we want to improve access to quality health care by
modernizing the Food and Drug Administration to speed up approval of
medical advances that save lives. Whether it is medical technology or
medical devices, or whether it is prescription drugs or the brand new
breakthroughs in biotechnology, we are entering an age of dramatic
change in health care.
The faster we can get to the market, to the customer or the consumer
and to the sick person, the best possible medicine, the best possible
medical technology, the best possible biotechnology and the best
possible medical devices, we are not only going to have better health
care in America, we are also going to have a bigger American work
force. Because in most of those areas, if we can get the Food and Drug
Administration to certify products in a reasonable length of time, we
have an opportunity to dramatically expand jobs in America selling
better technology, better devices, better biotechnology and better
medicine all over the world. We have a real interest in overhauling and
modernizing the Food and Drug Administration.
Our sixth agenda goal is to increase economic growth and create more
jobs through regulatory reform.
We recognize that with Washington bureaucrats engaged in regulations,
many of them years and years out of date, that it is time to adopt
commonsense regulatory reforms based on the principles of flexibility,
consensus, private property ownership, free enterprise, local control,
sound scientific evidence and the latest technology. We think that
there is all too much time and money tied up in Washington red tape
that could be used looking at creating more jobs, competing better in
the world market, and having new scientific developments.
We want to protect the public, to make sure the Government does the
policing necessary, for example, for safe food, for clean water, for a
healthy environment, for public health, but at the same time we
recognize that there are an awful lot of bureaucratic regulations that
either are not necessary or are more expensive than their benefit, or
are just outmoded. They might have made sense 25 years ago but they do
not make sense today.
We want to apply sound science, we want to look at new ways of doing
things, and what we want to do is have a better approach where we have
the right incentive. We think it is possible to have commonsense
regulatory reforms that allow small business and the private sector to
create more jobs, which is particularly important, as I will discuss in
a minute, when you get to welfare reform, because we need more jobs in
America if we are going to take all the folks who are leaving welfare
and make sure they can go into the private sector work force.
In addition, we want the money spent on scientific research and on
investment in new technology and new machinery rather than on red tape
and regulations, so that Americans can have the best jobs in the world
with the highest take-home pay, so that we can have the best quality of
life.
We are also going to work toward introducing competition into the
American electricity marketplace. Just as introducing
telecommunications reform over the last 10 years has brought down the
cost of long distance telephones, just as we have seen competition both
in airlines and in trucking bring down the cost of transportation, we
believe that we can get to a marketplace where anybody who produces
electricity can sell it and anybody who wants to buy it can purchase
from a wide range of people.
There are a lot of hearings that have to be held, but I particularly
want to commend Chairman Dan Schaefer of the subcommittee that will be
looking into this and Chairman Tom Bliley of the Committee on Commerce,
who are going to be leading extensive hearings into the question: Can
we reduce the cost of electricity? The estimates are we could save the
consumer possibly as much as $60 billion by lowering the cost of
electricity through competition. We need to look at it carefully, we
need to make sure that we know what we are doing because it is a big,
complicated topic, but competition in the electric marketplace might
save you, the consumer, $60 billion a year in lower electric bills, and
that is something that we have to look at very, very seriously.
We also want to encourage greater competition in financial services
by modernizing outdated regulations. We now live in the age of the
worldwide market. We see on our television the Tokyo Exchange, the
Shanghai Exchange, the Frankfurt Exchange, the London Exchange, Mexico
City. We recognize that through the Internet and through international
financial electronic transmissions, money moves worldwide literally in
nanoseconds. A million dollars can be in New York at this second, in
Hong Kong a minute later and in Seattle a minute after that.
So we need to modernize our financial services and recognize that we
adopted many regulations in a different era when different things
happened, but that now with the computer and the Internet we have a
whole new need to rethink how we provide the best financial services at
the lowest cost to maximize the American public's opportunity to use
finances and to save and borrow at the lowest possible cost.
We also are encouraging State and local governments to review all
existing unfunded mandates. The last Congress took a major step forward
by ending future unfunded mandates. We said no longer could Congress
pass a requirement, that is what a mandate is, without paying for it;
that we were not going to be able to say to a local county government
or a local school board or a local city or a State, ``You are going to
have to raise your taxes to pay for something this Congress has
required but refused to pay for.''
But what we did not do is go back and look at the existing mandates.
So in meetings with mayors, with State legislators, with county
commissioners and with governors, we have been urging them to review
the current list, find the ones that make no sense, find the mandates
that are very, very expensive and do not meet any kind of rational
cost-benefit test, find the mandates that are based on bad science,
bring them to us, and we hope this year to be able to repeal the least
effective and most expensive of the unfunded mandates.
Finally, we want to ensure full compliance with the Results Act to
force government to meet set performance standards. We believe it is
important that government not just measure input, how many billion
dollars do we spend in a department, but that government measure
output: What do we get for our money? If we have spent $579 billion in
Federal aid to education, why have scores gone down? If there are 14
different literacy programs, which ones are effective and which ones do
not get the job done? If we spend $3 billion a year on drug
rehabilitation, which drug rehabilitation programs work and which ones
do not? We think this is a very, very important area for us to be
reviewing.
Our seventh area is to fight gang violence and drugs. We want to
prevent juvenile crime and target gangs and hard core juvenile
offenders, and we are working with President Clinton on a Juvenile
Justice Act that we hope will lower the amount of violent crime among
young people and give us a better chance to have safe neighborhoods. We
also want to renew our commitment to stigmatized drug use, to say
flatly, as Nancy Reagan said it, ``Don't do it.'' ``Just say no''
worked.
We are challenging the news media and the commercial networks and the
cable channel operators to put anti-drug ads and antidrug messages on
the air. We believe we have to fight drugs on MTV and on VH-1, and we
have to fight drugs at the local level with local parents and local
schools.
We are also calling on the Clinton administration to provide a
strategy for winning the war on drugs, and we want to restore the
needed resources for the war on drugs. We passed a bill last week out
of this House which draws the line very clearly. We are committed to
saving our children from a drug culture which threatens to destroy
them. We have had 5 straight years of increased drug use in this
country. For 5 straight years, more and more young people have been
using drugs, marijuana, cocaine, heroin, and the modern marijuana is
much stronger, much more addictive and much more dangerous than the
drug of 25 years ago.
We are faced with a great challenge. We believe it is vital to have a
strategy to win the war on drugs, and we are prepared to work with the
Clinton administration on winning that war.
Our eighth goal is community renewal and investment. We want to help
people move from poverty to prosperity by enacting community renewal
initiatives. Here I want to particularly commend on a bipartisan basis
Congressmen J.C. Watts and Jim Talent and Floyd Flake, who have worked
together on a bipartisan basis to develop a community renewal
initiative. I also want to commend Senator Dan Coats and Congressman
John Kasich, who have developed ideas on tax credits for volunteers to
be involved in volunteerism and to donate to charities, because I think
it is very important that we get more money to charitable
organizations, and particularly to faith-based charities which we
believe have the best possible chance to help people.
{time} 1445
I think it is possible to reform public housing. We think we can have
dramatically better public housing where people have a better quality
of life, more control over their neighborhood, a better way of living
in a drug-free environment.
We want to promote home ownership so people move from public housing
into an opportunity to own a home, and I am very proud of my Habitat
for Humanity pin, and the gentleman from California [Mr. Lewis] is
particularly to be commended for working with Habitat for Humanity, and
we hope to have this summer a house that Members of Congress will build
here in Washington, DC, to prove our commitment and then go back home
and work back home in building houses because Habitat for Humanity is
the model example. It both grows the family and builds the house. It
requires people to meet a test of character and hard work. It requires
them to spend a hundred hours working to help build somebody else's
house. It requires them to spend 300 hours working to build their own
home. It requires them to take a 20-hour course in home ownership.
Habitat understands that you have to worry about the people inside the
building or the building will rapidly fall into disrepair.
It is a tremendous concept, and the gentleman from California [Mr.
Lewis] and the gentleman from New York [Mr. Lazio], chairman of the
housing subcommittee, are working together. Congressman Lewis is
chairman of an appropriations subcommittee, and they are working
together on a range of housing reforms, and I must say that from early
reports Secretary Andrew Cuomo seems to be moving in the right
direction and have the right ideas, and we want to work with him in
developing dramatic reform in housing in America.
We also want to increase educational opportunity scholarships, and we
want to have incentives to create jobs, and to help people in the
poorest neighborhoods. You cannot move from welfare to work if there is
no work, and so we are looking at opportunities, including enterprise
zones and tax breaks and deregulatory steps to help small businesses
and others provide more jobs in poor neighborhoods to help people move
from welfare to work, and finally, as I said, we are working to promote
charitable giving, both directly by saying people ought to do it and by
creating a tax incentive led by the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Kasich],
and Senator Dan Coats.
We also are working to rebuild America's transportation system to
support the 21st century economy. The ISTEA legislation, the interstate
transportation legislation, is very, very important. The gentleman from
Pennsylvania [Mr. Shuster] and the Committee on Transportation and
Infrastructure is going to be offering some major steps in the right
direction to continue to develop, but let me say I do disagree with one
thing the President said last week when he proposed toll roads on the
interstate system:
I am against double taxation. Every time you buy a gallon of gasoline
you are paying for the Federal highway program. Much of that money
currently is hidden and not being spent in order to cover social
spending that it was never designed to raise. We believe you should
spend the money in the trust fund to build and modernize and repair the
highways because you have already paid that tax when you paid for the
gasoline. I think it is wrong to have you pay a toll tax on top of the
gas tax that you are already paying.
Finally we are committed to making Washington, DC, the finest capital
city in the world. Every American should want their national capital to
be a city they can be proud of, and I think it is vital that we work
with the citizens in Washington, D.C. and with the delegate from
Washington, DC, Ms. Norton. I commend in particular the gentleman from
Virginia [Mr. Davis] who has done a tremendous job of working on this.
Last year's chairman of the Committee on Appropriations' Subcommittee
on the District of Columbia, the gentleman from New York [Mr. Walsh],
who is a former mayor and council member back home in Syracuse, has a
great understanding of what was needed and did a very, very good job,
and now the gentleman from North Carolina [Mr. Taylor], the new
chairman of the DC Subcommittee of Appropriations. This is very
important for every American, I believe. We should be dedicated to our
national capital being a capital we can be proud of, and we should work
to make sure that with the help of the local citizenry that we can
reform and rebuild.
Our ninth goal is to reform the civil justice system. We think it is
important that we send the signal that judges are appointed to
interpret the law, not to make the law. We think the judicial activism
where judges become petty dictators and they impose their opinion is
dangerous and wrong. It is a violation of the constitutional separation
of power. I am proud that the gentleman from Illinois [Mr. Hyde],
chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary, is going to be holding
hearings on judicial activism. It is an important topic.
In addition, we need to reduce the time, expense, and burden of using
our courts. It should not be so expensive to go to court that you
cannot afford it, it should not be such an inconvenience that it is a
major burden, and we need to make sure that it is easy to gain access
to our court system.
Finally, we should enact bipartisan product liability reform and
other commonsense legal reforms, including protecting charities and
local governments from abusive lawsuits. I hope we are going to be able
to pass a Volunteerism Liability Protection Act before the Philadelphia
summit on volunteerism. It just seems to me if you go out and you are a
volunteer, you should not be a target for some trial lawyer, that there
ought to be reasonable protections and reasonable caps, and as long as
you are not grossly negligent, you should not have any dangers at all,
and there is something wrong when you to try to help the Boy Scouts or
help the Girl Scouts or be involved in the Salvation Army and it leads
you to potential bankruptcy through some trial lawyer trying to make
money off of your activities.
So we hope to pass both bipartisan product liability reform and
protecting charities from abusive lawsuits.
Our 10th goal is to make our environmental protection efforts smarter
and more effective. I used to teach environmental studies, and I
believe deeply that we can have an effective environmental program,
that we can secure biodiversity around the planet, that we can do a
better job of using our resources, that we can have cleaner air and
cleaner water, that we can clean up the toxic waste sites. The fact is
today we are spending too much money on lawyers and too much money on
bureaucrats and not enough money on engineers and not enough money on
actual cleanups. We think we can reform that process so that we
actually get better cleanups at lower cost faster.
We also believe we can clean up the brown fields of our cities so
they can be reused to create jobs by setting proper standards and
proper commonsense regulations so that our cities can use the already
industrial areas rather than forcing industry to go out to new green
areas and tear down existing natural areas to build new factories. We
think they ought to be able to reuse the areas that already exist in
our cities, and today government makes that too difficult and too
complicated.
We also believe in improving our existing conservation programs. We
want to save every possible endangered species. We think it can be done
in a practical commonsense manner with local leadership involved in
local efforts to maximize the kind of diversity that we all want for
our children and grandchildren.
Our 14th goal is to rebuild a strong national defense to remain the
leader of the world. We want to reverse the neglect of defense
modernization, of high tech research and development and of the quality
of life of veterans, service personnel, and their families. The fact is
that this administration is underfunding defense, it is not modernizing
the weapon systems, and it has cut the amount of money that would be
spent on military service personnel and apparently has outyear cuts on
veterans that will be horrendous in terms of cutting the quality of
their health care and their services.
We believe it is important that American men and women in uniform be
the best trained, the best equipped, and the best prepared in the
world. We are able to do what we do with very low casualties because
our young men and women have the support of their country year in and
year out in developing the best possible military. That requires
investing in research and development and investing in defense
modernization, and if we are going to keep a high quality force, they
have to have a decent standard of living back home and a decent
standard of living on their bases, and that requires the kind of
modernization we need, for example, in terms of barracks and housing.
We also though think that you should not just salute waste because it
is in uniform. We believe that it is possible to improve efficiency in
defense spending and to reduce bureaucracy. We are committed, if I
might say this symbolically, to reducing the Pentagon to a triangle in
terms of the amount of mid-level management. We think you could have a
40-percent reduction in the mid-level managers in the Pentagon. We
believe you could go to multiyear contracting and have a dramatic
improvement in the ability to buy weapons, to buy fighter aircraft and
ships and other things.
There is no reason to buy a complex big system 1 year at a time that
makes them the most expensive possible way to do it, and so we hope we
will see a major shift toward multiyear contracting so we can buy the
most equipment at the lowest cost to give our men and women the best
chance to survive on the battlefield of the future.
We also think it is important to expand the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization to ensure peace in Europe for future generations. We
strongly support having Poland and Hungary and the Republic of Czech
entered as soon as possible, hopefully by July of this year. We believe
that Romania certainly deserves consideration, so does Slovakia. There
are a number of places that we need to look at and realize that it is
important for countries that want to be free, countries that are
democracies, countries that seek only the right to associate themselves
with a strong defense organization to protect their freedom
collectively. We have every interest in being the allies of those kinds
of countries.
Finally, on defense it is vital that we protect American territory
from missiles from terrorist states or from dictatorships. We need to
be honest about the threat to this country. There are missiles today
that can reach America and eliminate our greatest cities literally in
30 minutes. Some of those missiles are held by states that may not be
favorable to us. Within a decade other countries that we know are not
favorable to us are going to have similar missiles. Whether the weapon
of mass destruction is nuclear or chemical or biological, we are faced
with a tremendous threat in the next 20 years. The time to begin to
defend America from that threat is now. Just as Britain had to have the
foresight to build radar in the 1930's to survive the Battle of Britain,
the time to prepare to defend ourselves is not when the crisis occurs,
not when we are blackmailed, but now. And every evidence, I think, of
every independent observer is that the threat is real, it is already here
and that we should be building today a national missile defense system
capable of protecting the United States, capable of protecting Europe and
Israel, and capable of protecting our allies in the Far East, if necessary,
so that no one who has a missile can think that with impunity they can
blackmail the free countries of the world.
Our 12th goal is to reform the United Nations. We believe that the
United States should get full credit for its financial contributions to
the United Nations, including military capabilities, facilities, local
government services, and the security we provide. We believe that it is
important that the American taxpayer have wasteful bureaucracy reduced
at the United Nations and have the United Nations reformed in general.
We believe it is important to control expanding U.N. troop deployments
around the globe to ensure that U.S. troops are not placed under U.N.
command and to improve the consultation with Congress.
We are in a different world than the one of our Founding Fathers. We
now have real-time 24-hour a day television news on CNN. We have an
ability for something to happen in minutes all around the world. And so
we need a better consultation process between the executive and
legislative branches if, in fact, we are going to be able to continue
to have the will of the American people expressed. We support the
United Nations, but we think we have every right as its largest donor
to insist on reforms in return for that support.
Our 13th goal is to ensure the integrity of American elections. We
have been very bothered by the number of cases of fraud, including
voting by illegal aliens or voting by immigrants who are not yet legal.
We have the evidence that as many as 10,000 convicted felons may have
become American citizens last year, which is illegal; the evidence that
there was an all-out effort in some communities to have government-
funded agencies registering people who were not American citizens. We
think that preventing voter fraud and ensuring the voters of an honest
election is very important.
We also think that it is vital to preserve and protect the
constitutional right to free speech. The efforts to make speech
bureaucratic have failed. We need to really look at this question:
Should the Government really have controls over what people can say?
Should the Government really have the ability to tell you you cannot
buy a television ad or a newspaper ad, you cannot say what you believe
in? Is that not the opposite of what Americans stand for? So we are
committed to protecting our constitutional rights to free speech.
We also believe that union members ought to have the right to know
how much of their union dues are spent on politics and how much are
spent on representation, and we believe that the political part of
their dues should only be taken out voluntarily with the written
permission of the union member, that they should not be coerced into
automatically paying political money to pay for an ad against the
opponent they are going to vote for. We think it is not the American
way to have somebody have to buy ads for their own opponent, but that
instead political contributions should be voluntary. We also believe
citizens should be encouraged to participate in grassroots political
involvement, and we would require full and timely disclosure of all
campaign contributions.
So we believe that with the Internet it is now possible for every
campaign at the end of business every day to file electronically all of
its contributions for that day with the FEC and to have those
contributions be made available to the public so that your right to
know who is donating to a candidate would appear immediately and you
could know that night if you wanted to look it up or the next day in
the newspaper.
{time} 1500
So my first theme, which was that we have a 2-year agenda, has been
long because the agenda is long. Thirteen major areas:
Balance the Federal budget;
Improving learning for all Americans;
Strengthening America's families;
Increasing family income by lifting the burden of excessive taxes
from working Americans;
Improving access to quality health care;
Increasing economic growth and creating jobs through regulatory
reform;
Fighting gang violence and drugs;
Community renewal and investment;
Reforming the civil justice system;
Making our environmental protection efforts smarter and more
effective;
Rebuilding a strong national defense to remain the leader of the free
world;
Reforming the United Nations;
and
Ensuring the integrity of American elections.
That is a powerful agenda. It covers, really, the three topics that I
listed as the next three, keeping our children's communities safe by
winning the war on drugs, which is really, I think, one of our highest
priorities. When we realize the children who are being destroyed by the
drug trade, when we look at the violence that is directly related to
drugs, when we look at the child abuse and the spouse abuse that grows
directly out of drugs, winning the war on drugs should be as high a
priority as any priority this country has.
I am very proud of the resolution we adopted last week, and of the
leadership of the gentleman from Illinois, Denny Hastert, in offering
the amendment, which really made clear our commitment is to win the war
on drugs, to work with Mexico, to work with Columbia, to make sure that
everybody who is committed to fighting the drug dealers is on the same
team.
As I said, we are also committed to lowering interest rates and
creating better jobs by producing a better balanced budget this year;
and we are committed to ending the IRS as we know it, to have tax
relief, and to simplifying the tax system.
But the other item I want to spend a moment on is welfare reform. I
want to take a moment because not only is it very, very important to
the country, but it is proof that the Republican Congress has
succeeded. The 104th Republican Congress made a major commitment to
reform welfare. It took us over a year. We passed welfare reform twice,
and twice President Clinton vetoed it. The third time we passed it he
signed it. It ends the 61-year-old Federal entitlement to welfare, and
says if you are an able-bodied adult, you should have expectations of
working.
Our goal is to help people move from poverty to prosperity by moving
from welfare to work. Because there was so much talk about reforming
welfare, people began to hear about it on radio, on television, in the
news media, and welfare recipients began to voluntarily come into the
welfare offices and say to the welfare workers, I guess I am going to
have to get trained. I guess I am going to have to go find a job.
In 22 States welfare caseloads have already fallen by 20 percent or
more. Think about that. The bill has only been in effect since January
1, yet with the psychological momentum, the news media coverage, the
conversation on the street in 22 States, they have already had a drop
of 20 percent or more in the number of cases on welfare.
By the way, because we block-granted the money, we gave the States a
set amount of money that allows them now to have more money per welfare
family; in fact, one estimate is that there will be 56 percent more
money available for the families still on welfare to help with child
care, with retraining, and with job placement. So we see this welfare
reform as important, not important because of the poor in terms of let
us get them off welfare so we do not have to pay for it, but important
for the poor because it helps them become prosperous.
Our goal is not to save the taxpayer, it is to save those in poverty.
It is to make sure that every citizen has an opportunity to pursue
happiness which, after all, in our Declaration of Independence, we say
that we are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights,
among which are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. So we are
trying to get that Creator-given unalienable right to the welfare
recipient so they get in the habit of going to work, they get in the
habit of having a job, they get in the habit of saving on their paycheck,
they begin to acquire private property.
Then maybe they work with Habitat for Humanity or, the other pin I
wear, Earning by Learning, a program to help poor children learn how to
read; and in a few years they are on the road to prosperity, to
becoming middle class, to becoming normal Americans engaged in the
normal business of going to work and studying, and engaged in the
normal process of having a home and having a better future.
We are committed. We think we proved with welfare that we can get a
lot done. We are committed to continuing to work to get a lot done. I
just believe, as our colleagues go home for the Easter break, that they
are in a position to report on a very exciting agenda, to report on a
very exciting success with welfare reform.
We are in a position to work on the Crossroads project, visiting
local schools and other programs of excellence, conducting town
meetings on education. We have a chance to have a school superintendent
survey to establish an education advisory board to meet with our
Governor and our State superintendent of education to talk about
educational excellence.
I think we really have an opportunity on a bipartisan basis, and I
hope every Democrat and every Republican will join in the Crossroads
project, and contact Chairman Hoekstra and Chairman Goodling to work on
how to improve education.
I believe, based on the record of the last Congress, that we have
proven that while it takes a while to get it done, if you keep working
at it, it is amazing what we can get accomplished here in this
Congress. We are going to build on our success with welfare reform, we
are going to have more successes over the next 18 months.
I just think starting this weekend, Members have a chance during
their district work period to really carry out a message of
opportunity, a message of hope, and a message of working together as a
team on a principled, bipartisanship that gets good things done for
America. That is my message for the Easter break that is coming up.
____________________


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