KINGSTON REJECTS
PRESIDENT’S DEBT LIMIT INCREASE
Congressman calls for
action to reduce national debt, restore American Dream
WASHINGTON, DC – The House of
Representatives resoundingly rejected President Obama’s
request to increase the nation’s debt limit by $1.2
trillion, rebuking the sixth such request since he took
office.
Congressman Jack Kingston (R-GA) voted against the
President’s requested increase and called on Congress and
the President to come together to significantly reduce the
nation’s growing debt.
“President Obama promised to change
the way Washington worked but this request is an acceptance
of the status quo” said Kingston. “As he said
himself, increases in the national debt are ‘a sign of
leadership failure.’ To increase the debt limit without
changing the trajectory of spending ignores our
responsibility to govern and subjects our children and
grandchildren to a life indebted to China.
“That is not a future I am willing
to accept. The failure of the so-called ‘Super Committee’
does not preclude the rest of us from coming together to
address this problem. We can tighten our belts and balance
the budget just like families do every month. This is about
more than reducing the national debt: it is about restoring
the American dream.”
The President’s request comes just days
after the total national debt is now
greater than the size of the entire national economy.
Among advanced economies, that ominous distinction is shared
only with Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Portugal and Italy.
The national debt also imperils the
U.S. economy. According to independent economists and the
economic models used by the Obama Administration, current
debt levels could be preventing the creation of
as many as 1 million jobs.
Kingston, long known as a fiscal hawk,
has fought to reduce spending as a means paying down the
national debt. To that end, he and his colleagues in the
House have enacted close to $1 trillion in spending cuts
over the past year but he is not ready to stop there.
That is why Kingston introduced the “Returning
to Responsible Fiscal Policies Act” which would bring
total government spending in line with historic revenues.
His proposal would implement statutory limits which could
only be overridden by a two-thirds majority in both the
House and the Senate. Under current projections, Kingston’s
proposal would achieve budget surpluses in less than five
years.
“Our national debt was not
accumulated because the American people are taxed too
little, it has skyrocketed because Washington spends too
much,” said Kingston. “For too long, Washington
kicked the can down the road and ignored the consequences
but now we have the chance to get it right. I hope the
Senate will join us in rejecting the President’s debt limit
increase and return to Washington prepared to do the job we
were sent here to do.”
Kingston’s bill has received widespread
support and has been endorsed by Americans for Prosperity,
National Taxpayers Union, Club for Growth, Americans for Tax
Reform, Citizens United, and Americans for Limited
Government. He believes that it and any proposal to address
the national debt should be brought to the floor for an up
or down vote to get the conversation rolling.
Kingston also believes the Senate should take action on the
27 bipartisan jobs bills passed by the House which have
been stalled in the Senate.
“One percent of economic growth
would do exponentially more to reduce our national debt than
tax increases or spending cuts,” Kingston said.
“Instead of pushing for tax increases that could kill 2
million jobs, President Obama and Senator Reid should back
the bipartisan jobs bill passed by the House.”