WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. John Tanner said in a
district-wide radio address that the current economic crisis is negatively
impacting thousands of 8th District families and that
Congressional action is necessary to help economic recovery. The House
Friday passed the final version of the American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act with Congressman Tanner’s support.
Following is a transcript of Tanner’s remarks, aired on
radio stations throughout West and Middle Tennessee:
This is John Tanner. I wanted to talk to you a minute
about this recovery act that was voted on in the House. This is truly a
very, very hard vote for me, given my record of financial responsibility,
and trying to do what I can with the other Blue Dogs here and others about
the financial unsustainability of our federal government. I think this is an
economic crisis that I have not seen in my 60+ years. The recession is far
deeper and wider than any that I have ever lived through or witnessed,
probably since the Great Depression.
The numbers are grim. There are 3.6 million people in
this country out of work since the downturn started about 13 months ago. In
our district here in Tennessee, over 6,000 workers have been laid off in the
last 13 months. Many of our small businesses are closing or having severe
financial struggles. There are eight counties in our Congressional district
that have unemployment rates above 10%.
These are not just numbers. These are families and
people that are directly and adversely, sometimes irreversibly, affected
negatively by this.
Most reputable economists across the board, from the
right to the left, to all in between, have said that the government needs to
act and that inaction is really not an option if we are going to break this
deflationary cycle that we are in.
There are several things about this bill that I, quite
frankly, wouldn’t have written, but there are some good things in it.
Ninety-five percent of the people in our district will receive a tax cut.
That will put money in their pockets and hopefully spur some economic
recovery. It’s been estimated that there will be somewhere between 7,500 and
8,000 private-sector jobs created in our Congressional district. Hopefully,
that will put some of people who have been laid off back to work.
I have talked with our constituents and our neighbors
often about the grave consequences of our growing national debt,
particularly the money we have borrowed from foreign lenders over the last
eight years. Because of all this, it wasn’t easy for me to take this vote
that so dramatically will add to this deficit. But I worry that if we don’t
start turning the economy around and get economic activity once again
started, that the country will continue this deflationary downward spiral
with really no end or bottom in sight.
I think by building roads, schools, hospitals and so
forth here, rather than in some of the other places we’ve been doing it –
like Iraq – in the past eight years, we need this opportunity to invest in
our country and in Tennessee again.
It is my hope that this will begin to turn the
recessionary deflationary cycle around and create a sustainable path that we
can then continue to worry and do something about the financial long-term
challenges that our country faces.
I had a bill a couple weeks ago that demands that
Congress has a systematic review on waste, fraud and abuse. If programs that
have already passed are wasting money or are not performing as they were
intended, they need to be cut out. If we have abuse of programs, we need to
stop that. And, of course, anywhere there’s fraud, we want to see
prosecution take place or ensue from that.
I just don’t think that inaction right now is going to
stop this deflationary spiral. Again, I would not have written the bill as
it was, but, on balance, even though there are some things in there I don’t
agree with, inaction is just not a very attractive alternative right now.
The economic situation is deteriorating almost daily.
Anybody who watches the newscasts at night knows that. People are continuing
to be laid off. Small businesses are having trouble making payroll, and some
of them are closing their doors.
This injection, as large as it is, into our economy,
hopefully will turn that around. We cannot do anything about the long-term
fiscal burden that we are placing on our country and those who come after us
until we get the economic system either stabilized or turned around, and it
is my hope that this bill will do that.
Tanner, a founding member of the fiscally conservative
Blue Dog Democrats, represents Tennessee’s 8th Congressional
district in West and Middle Tennessee. He serves on the House Ways and Means
Committee, where he chairs the Subcommittee on Social Security. Tanner also
serves on the House Foreign Affairs Committee and as President of the NATO
Parliamentary Assembly.