[Pages H1533-H1550]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                              {time}  1630
        CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2025

  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, pursuant to House Resolution 313, I call 
up the concurrent resolution (H. Con. Res. 14) establishing the 
congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 
2025 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal 
years 2026 through 2034, with the Senate amendment thereto, and ask for 
its immediate consideration.
  The Clerk read the title of the concurrent resolution.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Rogers of Alabama). The Clerk will 
designate the Senate amendment.
  Senate amendment:
 Strike all after the resolving clause and insert the following:

     SECTION 1. CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL 
                   YEAR 2025.

       (a) Declaration.--Congress declares that this resolution is 
     the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2025 
     and that this resolution sets forth the appropriate budgetary 
     levels for fiscal years 2026 through 2034.
       (b) Table of Contents.--The table of contents for this 
     concurrent resolution is as follows:

Sec. 1. Concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal year 2025.

                TITLE I--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS

              Subtitle A--Budgetary Levels in Both Houses

Sec. 1101. Recommended levels and amounts.
Sec. 1102. Major functional categories.

[[Page H1534]]

              Subtitle B--Levels and Amounts in the Senate

Sec. 1201. Social Security in the Senate.
Sec. 1202. Postal Service discretionary administrative expenses in the 
              Senate.

                        TITLE II--RECONCILIATION

Sec. 2001. Reconciliation in the House of Representatives.
Sec. 2002. Reconciliation in the Senate.

                        TITLE III--RESERVE FUNDS

Sec. 3001. Reserve fund for reconciliation legislation.
Sec. 3002. Deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to government 
              deregulation.
Sec. 3003. Spending reduction reserve fund to save more than 
              $2,000,000,000,000.
Sec. 3004. Spending-neutral reserve fund related to current tax policy 
              baseline.
Sec. 3005. Deficit-neutral reserve fund relating to protecting Medicare 
              and Medicaid.

                        TITLE IV--OTHER MATTERS

Sec. 4001. Adjustment for spending cuts of at least $2 trillion.
Sec. 4002. Enforcement filing.
Sec. 4003. Budgetary treatment of administrative expenses.
Sec. 4004. Application and effect of changes in allocations, 
              aggregates, and other budgetary levels.
Sec. 4005. Adjustments to reflect changes in concepts and definitions.
Sec. 4006. Adjustment for changes in the baseline.
Sec. 4007. Exercise of rulemaking powers.

       TITLE V--POLICY STATEMENTS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Sec. 5001. Policy statement on economic growth.
Sec. 5002. Policy statement on mandatory spending reduction.
Sec. 5003. Policy statement on Government deregulation.

                TITLE I--RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS

              Subtitle A--Budgetary Levels in Both Houses

     SEC. 1101. RECOMMENDED LEVELS AND AMOUNTS.

       The following budgetary levels are appropriate for each of 
     fiscal years 2025 through 2034:
       (1) Federal revenues.--For purposes of the enforcement of 
     this resolution:
       (A) The recommended levels of Federal revenues are as 
     follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $3,699,743,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $3,850,222,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $3,935,426,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $4,064,380,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $4,187,266,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $4,388,684,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $4,600,466,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $4,800,588,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $5,020,540,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $5,242,537,000,000.
       (B) The amounts by which the aggregate levels of Federal 
     revenues should be changed are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: -$150,000,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: -$150,000,000,000.
       (2) New budget authority.--For purposes of the enforcement 
     of this resolution, the appropriate levels of total new 
     budget authority are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $4,663,769,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $4,795,798,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $4,933,048,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $5,216,255,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $5,375,045,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $5,667,195,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $5,915,714,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $6,191,839,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $6,530,356,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $6,736,948,000,000.
       (3) Budget outlays.--For purposes of the enforcement of 
     this resolution, the appropriate levels of total budget 
     outlays are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $4,636,008,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $4,811,854,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $5,009,263,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $5,304,033,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $5,364,632,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $5,654,106,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $5,882,786,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $6,121,866,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $6,487,182,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $6,647,428,000,000.
       (4) Deficits.--For purposes of the enforcement of this 
     resolution, the amounts of the deficits are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $936,265,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $961,632,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $1,073,837,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $1,239,653,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $1,177,366,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $1,265,422,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $1,282,320,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $1,321,278,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $1,466,642,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $1,404,891,000,000.
       (5) Public debt.--Pursuant to section 301(a)(5) of the 
     Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 632(a)(5)), the 
     appropriate levels of the public debt are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $36,525,094,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $37,838,733,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $39,140,384,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $40,566,455,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $42,102,586,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $43,583,333,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $45,068,345,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $46,595,036,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $48,382,716,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $50,481,979,000,000.
       (6) Debt held by the public.--The appropriate levels of 
     debt held by the public are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $29,294,843,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $30,468,366,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $31,782,489,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $33,298,095,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $34,781,086,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $36,380,984,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $38,027,730,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $39,759,791,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $41,652,745,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $43,515,483,000,000.

     SEC. 1102. MAJOR FUNCTIONAL CATEGORIES.

       Congress determines and declares that the appropriate 
     levels of new budget authority and outlays for fiscal years 
     2025 through 2034 for each major functional category are:
       (1) National Defense (050):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $933,484,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $909,629,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $901,220,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $904,412,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $923,020,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $911,956,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $944,111,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $934,660,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $966,203,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $942,419,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $989,212,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $966,361,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,012,715,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $984,795,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,036,723,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,003,888,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,062,319,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,037,888,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,087,382,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,054,430,000,000.
       (2) International Affairs (150):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $65,962,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $69,206,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $61,716,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $67,669,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $62,249,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $66,456,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $63,512,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $62,391,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $64,944,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $62,832,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $66,408,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $63,077,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $67,878,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $64,002,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $69,343,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $65,176,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $70,874,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $66,517,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $72,435,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $67,889,000,000.
       (3) General Science, Space, and Technology (250):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $42,084,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $41,734,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $41,345,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $41,844,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $42,264,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $41,923,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $43,099,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $42,198,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $44,017,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $42,887,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $44,980,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $43,633,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $45,946,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $44,551,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $46,922,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $45,486,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $47,936,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $46,460,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $48,985,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $47,466,000,000.
       (4) Energy (270):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $39,842,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,587,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $39,958,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $44,514,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $34,098,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $52,768,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $34,825,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $51,623,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $35,770,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $48,582,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $33,946,000,000.

[[Page H1535]]

       (B) Outlays, $42,596,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $35,188,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $40,366,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $39,697,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $41,611,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $24,489,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $25,941,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $16,203,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $17,040,000,000.
       (5) Natural Resources and Environment (300):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $88,319,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $89,764,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $67,633,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $80,552,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $45,140,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $75,844,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $45,985,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $71,673,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $46,956,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $67,691,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $47,707,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $63,948,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $48,854,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $60,580,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $49,918,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $56,444,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $51,246,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $55,797,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $52,225,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $55,480,000,000.
       (6) Agriculture (350):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $58,457,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $41,846,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $28,163,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $46,212,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $31,716,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $33,686,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $33,008,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $34,426,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $33,334,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $32,441,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $30,857,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $30,098,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $30,468,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $29,609,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $31,239,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $30,163,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $32,276,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $30,893,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $32,912,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $31,721,000,000.
       (7) Commerce and Housing Credit (370):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $12,477,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$18,175,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $32,747,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$626,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $28,145,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $7,710,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, -$56,796,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$65,194,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $25,562,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $15,976,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $25,712,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $12,680,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $25,941,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $7,932,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $26,354,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $5,060,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $20,192,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$4,224,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $29,862,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $2,451,000,000.
       (8) Transportation (400):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $173,158,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $144,771,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $167,673,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $152,541,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $132,085,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $158,068,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $133,386,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $162,528,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $134,447,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $160,846,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $129,994,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $150,790,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $130,964,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $147,539,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $138,846,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $150,163,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $140,544,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $149,247,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $142,271,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $149,454,000,000.
       (9) Community and Regional Development (450):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $90,242,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $78,592,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $20,135,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $64,267,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $19,259,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $56,506,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $19,462,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $45,101,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $19,888,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $35,976,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $20,326,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $31,026,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $20,727,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $27,543,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $21,007,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $24,658,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $21,462,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $22,754,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $21,864,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $21,733,000,000.
       (10) Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services 
     (500):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $149,379,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $171,920,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $152,714,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $151,639,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $155,152,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $151,206,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $157,970,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $152,914,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $160,942,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $155,518,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $163,842,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $158,366,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $166,812,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $161,277,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $170,169,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $164,438,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $173,711,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $167,726,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $176,750,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $170,798,000,000.
       (11) Health (550):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $948,957,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $963,482,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $992,092,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $977,707,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,020,326,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,021,663,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,054,949,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,051,917,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,098,389,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,093,560,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,142,669,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,132,096,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,176,497,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,175,451,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,226,824,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,216,998,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,276,881,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,266,068,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,310,000,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,298,975,000,000.
       (12) Medicare (570):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $952,239,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $951,989,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,007,093,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,008,459,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,066,571,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,066,331,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,209,735,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,208,675,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,125,645,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,125,301,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,275,864,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,275,627,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,357,791,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,357,726,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,445,195,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,445,191,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,659,329,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,659,346,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,666,492,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,666,497,000,000.
       (13) Income Security (600):

[[Page H1536]]

       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $712,538,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $709,200,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $691,755,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $690,914,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $708,645,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $703,648,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $727,434,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $727,234,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $728,925,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $714,850,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $748,162,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $739,465,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $760,737,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $751,498,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $778,878,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $768,898,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $800,142,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $796,835,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $808,455,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $798,159,000,000.
       (14) Social Security (650):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $67,259,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $67,259,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $81,690,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $81,690,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $89,447,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $89,447,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $94,419,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $94,419,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $100,138,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $100,138,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $106,208,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $106,208,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $112,114,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $112,114,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $118,485,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $118,485,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $125,325,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $125,325,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $132,539,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $132,539,000,000.
       (15) Veterans Benefits and Services (700):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $361,349,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $357,760,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $382,555,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $378,814,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $404,594,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $401,319,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $427,329,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $444,241,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $447,757,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $422,317,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $466,616,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $461,720,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $486,716,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $481,638,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $507,187,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $502,655,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $528,733,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $548,734,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $550,662,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $547,796,000,000.
       (16) Administration of Justice (750):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $83,111,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $85,235,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $88,992,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $87,024,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $87,701,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $86,420,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $89,687,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $88,514,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $92,142,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $90,690,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $94,574,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $92,986,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $96,848,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $94,869,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $104,463,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $101,844,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $107,160,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $104,339,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $109,431,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $106,934,000,000.
       (17) General Government (800):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $10,089,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,960,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $30,666,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $38,285,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $32,065,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $38,261,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $32,994,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,957,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $33,770,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,793,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $34,614,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,985,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $35,247,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,024,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $36,189,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $36,307,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $36,960,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $36,758,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $37,681,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $37,266,000,000.
       (18) Net Interest (900):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,011,643,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,011,643,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,031,561,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,031,561,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,078,839,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,078,839,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,150,343,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,150,343,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,213,150,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,213,150,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,269,439,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,269,439,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,332,808,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,332,808,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,398,649,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,398,649,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,457,676,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,457,676,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $1,525,604,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $1,525,604,000,000.
       (19) Allowances (920):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, -$1,009,217,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$987,791,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, -$888,800,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$900,514,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, -$890,385,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$894,905,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, -$848,052,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$850,422,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, -$851,534,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$852,928,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, -$874,353,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$874,414,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, -$874,523,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$874,523,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, -$894,135,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$894,135,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, -$940,797,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$940,797,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, -$913,790,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$913,790,000,000.
       (20) Undistributed Offsetting Receipts (950):
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, -$127,603,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$127,603,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, -$135,110,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$135,110,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, -$137,883,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$137,883,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, -$141,145,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$141,165,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, -$145,400,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$145,407,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, -$149,582,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$149,581,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, -$154,014,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$154,013,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, -$160,114,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$160,113,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, -$166,102,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$166,101,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, -$171,015,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, -$171,014,000,000.

              Subtitle B--Levels and Amounts in the Senate

     SEC. 1201. SOCIAL SECURITY IN THE SENATE.

       (a) Social Security Revenues.--For purposes of Senate 
     enforcement under sections 302 and 311 of the Congressional 
     Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633 and 642), the amounts of 
     revenues of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust 
     Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund are as 
     follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $1,303,924,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $1,363,772,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $1,418,548,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $1,471,664,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $1,530,214,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $1,591,009,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $1,654,023,000,000.

[[Page H1537]]

       Fiscal year 2032: $1,717,802,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $1,782,045,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $1,848,436,000,000.
       (b) Social Security Outlays.--For purposes of Senate 
     enforcement under sections 302 and 311 of the Congressional 
     Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633 and 642), the amounts of 
     outlays of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust 
     Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund are as 
     follows:
       Fiscal year 2025: $1,413,704,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026: $1,496,321,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027: $1,585,393,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028: $1,686,625,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029: $1,786,673,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030: $1,890,273,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031: $1,998,509,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032: $2,111,591,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033: $2,224,104,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034: $2,324,902,000,000.
       (c) Social Security Administrative Expenses.--In the 
     Senate, the amounts of new budget authority and budget 
     outlays of the Federal Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust 
     Fund and the Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund for 
     administrative expenses are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $6,400,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $6,332,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $6,268,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $6,287,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $6,455,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $6,422,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $6,644,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $6,584,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $6,832,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $6,765,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $7,033,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $6,963,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $7,233,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $7,162,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $7,437,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $7,365,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $7,651,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $7,576,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $7,869,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $7,792,000,000.

     SEC. 1202. POSTAL SERVICE DISCRETIONARY ADMINISTRATIVE 
                   EXPENSES IN THE SENATE.

       In the Senate, the amounts of new budget authority and 
     budget outlays of the Postal Service for discretionary 
     administrative expenses are as follows:
       Fiscal year 2025:
       (A) New budget authority, $268,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $268,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2026:
       (A) New budget authority, $279,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $279,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2027:
       (A) New budget authority, $289,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $289,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2028:
       (A) New budget authority, $299,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $299,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2029:
       (A) New budget authority, $309,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $309,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2030:
       (A) New budget authority, $319,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $319,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2031:
       (A) New budget authority, $330,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $330,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2032:
       (A) New budget authority, $341,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $341,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2033:
       (A) New budget authority, $352,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $352,000,000.
       Fiscal year 2034:
       (A) New budget authority, $364,000,000.
       (B) Outlays, $364,000,000.

                        TITLE II--RECONCILIATION

     SEC. 2001. RECONCILIATION IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.

       (a) Submissions.--In the House of Representatives, not 
     later than May 9, 2025, the committees named in subsection 
     (b) and subsection (c) shall submit their recommendations on 
     changes in laws within their jurisdictions to the Committee 
     on the Budget of the House of Representatives to carry out 
     this section.
       (b) Instructions.--
       (1) Committee on agriculture.--The Committee on Agriculture 
     shall submit changes in laws within its jurisdiction to 
     reduce the deficit by not less than $230,000,000,000 for the 
     period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (2) Committee on armed services.--The Committee on Armed 
     Services shall submit changes in laws within its jurisdiction 
     that increase the deficit by not more than $100,000,000,000 
     for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (3) Committee on education and workforce.--The Committee on 
     Education and Workforce shall submit changes in laws within 
     its jurisdiction to reduce the deficit by not less than 
     $330,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (4) Committee on energy and commerce.--The Committee on 
     Energy and Commerce shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction to reduce the deficit by not less than 
     $880,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (5) Committee on financial services.--The Committee on 
     Financial Services shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction to reduce the deficit by not less than 
     $1,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (6) Committee on homeland security.--The Committee on 
     Homeland Security shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction that increase the deficit by not more than 
     $90,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (7) Committee on the judiciary.--The Committee on the 
     Judiciary shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction that increase the deficit by not more than 
     $110,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (8) Committee on natural resources.--The Committee on 
     Natural Resources shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction to reduce the deficit by not less than 
     $1,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (9) Committee on oversight and government reform.--The 
     Committee on Oversight and Government Reform shall submit 
     changes in laws within its jurisdiction to reduce the deficit 
     by not less than $50,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal 
     years 2025 through 2034.
       (10) Committee on transportation and infrastructure.--The 
     Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure shall submit 
     changes in laws within its jurisdiction to reduce the deficit 
     by not less than $10,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal 
     years 2025 through 2034.
       (11) Committee on ways and means.--The Committee on Ways 
     and Means shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction that increase the deficit by not more than 
     $4,500,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 
     through 2034.
       (c) Increase in Statutory Debt Limit.--The Committee on 
     Ways and Means shall submit changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction that increase the statutory debt limit by 
     $4,000,000,000,000.

     SEC. 2002. RECONCILIATION IN THE SENATE.

       (a) In General.--
       (1) Submissions.--In the Senate, not later than May 9, 
     2025, the committees named in paragraph (2) shall submit 
     their recommendations to the Committee on the Budget of the 
     Senate. Upon receiving all such recommendations, the 
     Committee on the Budget of the Senate shall report to the 
     Senate a reconciliation bill carrying out all such 
     recommendations without any substantive revision.
       (2) Instructions.--
       (A) Committee on agriculture, nutrition, and forestry.--The 
     Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry of the 
     Senate shall report changes in laws within its jurisdiction 
     that reduce the deficit by not less than $1,000,000,000 for 
     the period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (B) Committee on armed services.--The Committee on Armed 
     Services of the Senate shall report changes in laws within 
     its jurisdiction that increase the deficit by not more than 
     $150,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (C) Committee on banking, housing, and urban affairs.--The 
     Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs of the 
     Senate shall report changes in laws within its jurisdiction 
     that reduce the deficit by not less than $1,000,000,000 for 
     the period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (D) Committee on commerce, science, and transportation.--
     The Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation of the 
     Senate shall report changes in laws within its jurisdiction 
     that increase the deficit by not more than $20,000,000,000 
     for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (E) Committee on energy and natural resources.--The 
     Committee on Energy and Natural Resources of the Senate shall 
     report changes in laws within its jurisdiction that reduce 
     the deficit by not less than $1,000,000,000 for the period of 
     fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (F) Committee on environment and public works.--The 
     Committee on Environment and Public Works of the Senate shall 
     report changes in laws within its jurisdiction that increase 
     the deficit by not more than $1,000,000,000 for the period of 
     fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (G) Committee on finance.--The Committee on Finance of the 
     Senate shall report changes in laws within its jurisdiction 
     that increase the deficit by not more than $1,500,000,000,000 
     for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.
       (H) Committee on health, education, labor, and pensions.--
     The Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of 
     the Senate shall report changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction that reduce the deficit by not less than 
     $1,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (I) Committee on homeland security and governmental 
     affairs.--The Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental 
     Affairs of the Senate shall report changes in laws within its 
     jurisdiction that increase the deficit by not more than 
     $175,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (J) Committee on the judiciary.--The Committee on the 
     Judiciary of the Senate shall report changes in laws within 
     its jurisdiction that increase the deficit by not more than 
     $175,000,000,000 for the period of fiscal years 2025 through 
     2034.
       (b) Increase in Statutory Debt Limit.--In the Senate, not 
     later than May 16, 2025, the Committee on Finance of the 
     Senate shall report changes in laws within its jurisdiction 
     that increase the statutory debt limit by not more than 
     $5,000,000,000,000.

                        TITLE III--RESERVE FUNDS

     SEC. 3001. RESERVE FUND FOR RECONCILIATION LEGISLATION.

       (a) House of Representatives.--
       (1) In general.--In the House of Representatives, the chair 
     of the Committee on the Budget may revise the allocations of 
     a committee or committees, aggregates, and other appropriate 
     levels in this resolution for any bill or joint resolution 
     considered pursuant to section 2001 containing the 
     recommendations of one or more

[[Page H1538]]

     committees, or for one or more amendments to, a conference 
     report on, or an amendment between the Houses in relation to 
     such a bill or joint resolution, by the amounts necessary to 
     accommodate the budgetary effects of the legislation, if the 
     budgetary effects of the legislation comply with the 
     reconciliation instructions under this concurrent resolution.
       (2) Determination of compliance.--For purposes of this 
     subsection, compliance with the reconciliation instructions 
     under this concurrent resolution shall be determined by the 
     chair of the Committee on the Budget of the House of 
     Representatives.
       (b) Senate.--
       (1) In general.--In the Senate, the Chairman of the 
     Committee on the Budget of the Senate may revise the 
     allocations of a committee or committees, aggregates, and 
     other appropriate levels in this resolution, and make 
     adjustments to the pay-as-you-go ledger, for any bill or 
     joint resolution considered pursuant to section 2002 
     containing the recommendations of one or more committees, or 
     for one or more amendments to, a conference report on, or an 
     amendment between the Houses in relation to such a bill or 
     joint resolution, by the amounts necessary to accommodate the 
     budgetary effects of the legislation, if the budgetary 
     effects of the legislation comply with the reconciliation 
     instructions under this concurrent resolution.
       (2) Determination of compliance.--For purposes of this 
     section, compliance with the reconciliation instructions 
     under this concurrent resolution shall be determined by the 
     Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate.
       (3) Exceptions for legislation.--
       (A) Short-term.--Section 404 of S. Con. Res. 13 (111th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2010, as amended by section 3201(b)(2) of S. Con. Res. 
     11 (114th Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget 
     for fiscal year 2016, shall not apply to legislation for 
     which the Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the 
     Senate has exercised the authority under paragraph (1).
       (B) Long-term.--Section 3101 of S. Con. Res. 11 (114th 
     Congress), the concurrent resolution on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2016, shall not apply to legislation for which the 
     Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate has 
     exercised the authority under paragraph (1).

     SEC. 3002. DEFICIT-NEUTRAL RESERVE FUND RELATING TO 
                   GOVERNMENT DEREGULATION.

       The Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate 
     may revise the allocations of a committee or committees, 
     aggregates, and other appropriate levels in this resolution, 
     and make adjustments to the pay-as-you-go ledger, for one or 
     more bills, joint resolutions, amendments, amendments between 
     the Houses, motions, or conference reports relating to 
     reducing burdensome and costly Federal Government regulations 
     by passing legislation focused on government deregulation 
     that will decrease new spending arising from such regulations 
     and reassert the proper constitutional role of Congress in 
     the law-making process by the amounts provided in such 
     legislation for those purposes, provided that such 
     legislation would not increase the deficit over either the 
     period of the total of fiscal years 2025 through 2029 or the 
     period of the total of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.

     SEC. 3003. SPENDING REDUCTION RESERVE FUND TO SAVE MORE THAN 
                   $2,000,000,000,000.

       The Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate 
     may revise the allocations of a committee or committees, 
     aggregates, and other appropriate levels in this resolution 
     for one or more bills, joint resolutions, amendments, 
     amendments between the Houses, motions, or conference reports 
     relating to spending reforms that will--
       (1) scrutinize line item expenditures, especially non-
     defense spending that did not exist prior to or has grown 
     significantly since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic;
       (2) fulfill the President's promise to protect the old-age, 
     survivors, and disability insurance benefits program under 
     title II of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 401 et seq.), 
     the Medicare program under title XVIII of the Social Security 
     Act (42 U.S.C. 1395 et seq.), or the Medicaid program under 
     title XIX of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396 et 
     seq.), including from waste, fraud, and abuse; and
       (3) include policy changes that reduce the deficit through 
     reconciliation, executive action, or rescissions by Congress 
     and the President by more than $2,000,000,000,000 over 10 
     years,
     by the amounts provided in such legislation for those 
     purposes, provided that such legislation would reduce outlays 
     and the deficit over the period of the total of fiscal years 
     2025 through 2034.

     SEC. 3004. SPENDING-NEUTRAL RESERVE FUND RELATED TO CURRENT 
                   TAX POLICY BASELINE.

       The Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate 
     may revise the allocations of a committee or committees, 
     aggregates, and other appropriate levels in this resolution 
     for one or more bills, joint resolutions, amendments, 
     amendments between the Houses, motions, or conference reports 
     relating to using more realistic assumptions regarding 
     current tax policy, which may include extending provisions 
     under Public Law 115-97 (131 Stat. 2054) (commonly known as 
     the ``Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017'') in the baseline in 
     order to prevent massive tax increases on working families 
     and small businesses, and to align treatment of tax policy 
     with major Federal spending programs, without raising 
     revenue, by the amounts provided in such legislation for 
     those purposes, provided that such legislation would not 
     increase the deficit over the period of the total of fiscal 
     years 2025 through 2034.

     SEC. 3005. DEFICIT-NEUTRAL RESERVE FUND RELATING TO 
                   PROTECTING MEDICARE AND MEDICAID.

       The Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate 
     may revise the allocations of a committee or committees, 
     aggregates, and other appropriate levels in this resolution, 
     and make adjustments to the pay-as-you-go ledger, for one or 
     more bills, joint resolutions, amendments, amendments between 
     the Houses, motions, or conference reports relating to 
     protecting the Medicaid program under title XIX of the Social 
     Security Act (42 U.S.C. 1396 et seq.), which may include 
     strengthening and improving Medicaid for the most vulnerable 
     populations, and extending the life of the Federal Hospital 
     Insurance Trust Fund, by the amounts provided in such 
     legislation for those purposes, provided that such 
     legislation would not increase the deficit over the period of 
     the total of fiscal years 2025 through 2034.

                        TITLE IV--OTHER MATTERS

     SEC. 4001. ADJUSTMENT FOR SPENDING CUTS OF AT LEAST $2 
                   TRILLION.

       (a) Adjustment if Deficit Reduction Target Not Achieved.--
     In the House of Representatives, if one or more committees of 
     the House of Representatives submit reconciliation 
     recommendations pursuant to paragraphs (1), (3), (4), (5), 
     (8), (9), or (10) of section 2001(b) and such recommendations 
     do not, in total, achieve at least $2,000,000,000,000 in net 
     deficit reduction over the period of fiscal years 2025 
     through 2034, the chair of the Committee on the Budget of the 
     House shall reduce--
       (1) the $4,500,000,000,000 reconciliation instruction for 
     the Committee on Ways and Means under section 2001(b)(11);
       (2) the allocations to the Committee on Ways and Means 
     under section 302(a) of the Congressional Budget and 
     Impoundment Control Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633(a));
       (3) the aggregates of budget authority, outlays, and 
     revenues; and
       (4) any other appropriate level in this concurrent 
     resolution,
     by an amount equal to the difference between 
     $2,000,000,000,000 and the total dollar amount of such 
     recommendations.
       (b) Adjustment if Deficit Reduction Target Exceeded.--In 
     the House of Representatives, if one or more committees of 
     the House of Representatives submit reconciliation 
     recommendations pursuant to paragraphs (1), (3), (4), (5), 
     (8), (9), or (10) of section 2001(b) and such 
     recommendations, in total, achieve at least 
     $2,000,000,000,000 in net deficit reduction over the period 
     of fiscal years 2025 through 2034, the chair of the Committee 
     on the Budget of the House shall increase the levels 
     described in paragraphs (1) through (4) of subsection (a) by 
     an amount equal to the difference between the total dollar 
     amount of such recommendations and $2,000,000,000,000.
       (c) Certification Required for Adjustment.--No adjustment 
     may be made under subsection (a) or subsection (b) unless the 
     chair of the Committee on the Budget of the House, using cost 
     estimates provided by the Congressional Budget Office and the 
     Joint Committee on Taxation (as appropriate), certifies in 
     writing that the applicable reconciliation recommendations--
       (1) with respect to subsection (a), do not achieve net 
     deficit reduction of at least $2,000,000,000,000 over the 
     period of fiscal years 2025 through 2034; or
       (2) with respect to subsection (b), achieve net deficit 
     reduction of at least $2,000,000,000,000 over the period of 
     such fiscal years.
       (d) Reconciliation Instruction for Ways and Means.--In the 
     House of Representatives, the dollar amount resulting from 
     any adjustment made under this section to the reconciliation 
     instruction for the Committee on Ways and Means under 
     paragraph (11) of section 2001(b) shall be substituted for 
     ``$4,500,000,000,000'' in such section and shall be deemed 
     the reconciliation instructions for such Committee under such 
     section. Any recommendations on changes in law within the 
     jurisdiction of the Committee shall be consistent with the 
     goals of this concurrent resolution, including with respect 
     to spending reduction, tax policy changes, reforms, or other 
     measures deemed appropriate by the chair of the Committee on 
     the Budget of the House.
       (e) Consistency With the Resolution.--Any reconciliation 
     recommendations receiving an allocation adjustment under this 
     section shall not be considered in violation of the budgetary 
     levels established by this concurrent resolution.

     SEC. 4002. ENFORCEMENT FILING.

       (a) In the House of Representatives.--In the House of 
     Representatives, if a concurrent resolution on the budget for 
     fiscal year 2025 is adopted without the appointment of a 
     committee of conference on the disagreeing votes of the two 
     Houses with respect to this concurrent resolution on the 
     budget, for the purpose of enforcing the Congressional Budget 
     Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 621 et seq.) and applicable rules and 
     requirements set forth in the concurrent resolution on the 
     budget, the allocations provided for in this subsection shall 
     apply in the House of Representatives in the same manner as 
     if such allocations were in a joint explanatory statement 
     accompanying a conference report on the budget for fiscal 
     year 2025. The chair of the Committee on the Budget of the 
     House of Representatives shall submit a statement for 
     publication in the Congressional Record containing--
       (1) for the Committee on Appropriations, committee 
     allocations for fiscal year 2025 consistent with title I for 
     the purpose of enforcing section 302 of the Congressional 
     Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633); and
       (2) for all committees other than the Committee on 
     Appropriations, committee allocations consistent with title I 
     for fiscal year 2025 and for the period of fiscal years 2025 
     through 2034 for the purpose of enforcing section 302 of the 
     Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633).

[[Page H1539]]

       (b) In the Senate.--If this concurrent resolution on the 
     budget is agreed to by the Senate and House of 
     Representatives without the appointment of a committee of 
     conference on the disagreeing votes of the two Houses, the 
     Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of the Senate may 
     submit a statement for publication in the Congressional 
     Record containing--
       (1) for the Committee on Appropriations, committee 
     allocations for fiscal year 2025 consistent with the levels 
     in title I for the purpose of enforcing section 302 of the 
     Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633); and
       (2) for all committees other than the Committee on 
     Appropriations, committee allocations for fiscal years 2025, 
     2025 through 2029, and 2025 through 2034 consistent with the 
     levels in title I for the purpose of enforcing section 302 of 
     the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633).

     SEC. 4003. BUDGETARY TREATMENT OF ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES.

       (a) Senate.--
       (1) In general.--In the Senate, notwithstanding section 
     302(a)(1) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 
     633(a)(1)), section 13301 of the Budget Enforcement Act of 
     1990 (2 U.S.C. 632 note), and section 2009a of title 39, 
     United States Code, the report or the joint explanatory 
     statement accompanying this concurrent resolution on the 
     budget or the statement filed pursuant to section 4002(b), as 
     applicable, shall include in an allocation under section 
     302(a) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 
     633(a)) to the Committee on Appropriations of the Senate of 
     amounts for the discretionary administrative expenses of the 
     Social Security Administration and the United States Postal 
     Service.
       (2) Special rule.--In the Senate, for purposes of enforcing 
     section 302(f) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (2 
     U.S.C. 633(f)), estimates of the level of total new budget 
     authority and total outlays provided by a measure shall 
     include any discretionary amounts described in paragraph (1).
       (b) House of Representatives.--
       (1) In general.--In the House of Representatives, 
     notwithstanding section 302(a)(1) of the Congressional Budget 
     Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633(a)(1)), section 13301 of the Budget 
     Enforcement Act of 1990 (2 U.S.C. 632 note), and section 
     2009a of title 39, United States Code, the report or the 
     joint explanatory statement accompanying this concurrent 
     resolution on the budget or the statement filed pursuant to 
     section 4002(a), as applicable, shall include in an 
     allocation under section 302(a) of the Congressional Budget 
     Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633(a)) to the Committee on 
     Appropriations of the House of Representatives of amounts for 
     the discretionary administrative expenses of the Social 
     Security Administration and the United States Postal Service.
       (2) Special rule.--In the House of Representatives, for 
     purposes of enforcing section 302(f) of the Congressional 
     Budget Act of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 633(f)), estimates of the level 
     of total new budget authority and total outlays provided by a 
     measure shall include any discretionary amounts described in 
     paragraph (1).

     SEC. 4004. APPLICATION AND EFFECT OF CHANGES IN ALLOCATIONS, 
                   AGGREGATES, AND OTHER BUDGETARY LEVELS.

       (a) Application.--Any adjustments of allocations, 
     aggregates, and other budgetary levels made pursuant to this 
     concurrent resolution shall--
       (1) apply while that measure is under consideration;
       (2) take effect upon the enactment of that measure; and
       (3) be published in the Congressional Record as soon as 
     practicable.
       (b) Effect of Changed Allocations, Aggregates, and Other 
     Budgetary Levels.--Revised allocations, aggregates, and other 
     budgetary levels resulting from these adjustments shall be 
     considered for the purposes of the Congressional Budget Act 
     of 1974 (2 U.S.C. 621 et seq.) as the allocations, 
     aggregates, and other budgetary levels contained in this 
     concurrent resolution.
       (c) Budget Committee Determinations.--For purposes of this 
     concurrent resolution, the levels of new budget authority, 
     outlays, direct spending, new entitlement authority, 
     revenues, deficits, and surpluses for a fiscal year or period 
     of fiscal years shall be determined on the basis of estimates 
     made by the chair of the Committee on the Budget of the 
     applicable House of Congress.
       (d) Aggregates, Allocations and Application.--In the House 
     of Representatives, for purposes of this concurrent 
     resolution and budget enforcement, the consideration of any 
     bill or joint resolution, or amendment thereto or conference 
     report thereon, for which the chair of the Committee on the 
     Budget makes adjustments or revisions in the allocations, 
     aggregates, and other budgetary levels of this concurrent 
     resolution shall not be subject to the point of order set 
     forth in clause 10 of rule XXI of the Rules of the House of 
     Representatives.

     SEC. 4005. ADJUSTMENTS TO REFLECT CHANGES IN CONCEPTS AND 
                   DEFINITIONS.

       (a) House of Representatives.--In the House of 
     Representatives, the chair of the Committee on the Budget may 
     adjust the appropriate aggregates, allocations, and other 
     budgetary levels in this concurrent resolution for any change 
     in budgetary concepts and definitions consistent with section 
     251(b)(1) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit 
     Control Act of 1985 (2 U.S.C. 901(b)(1)).
       (b) Senate.--In the Senate, upon the enactment of a bill or 
     joint resolution providing for a change in concepts or 
     definitions, the Chairman of the Committee on the Budget of 
     the Senate may make adjustments to the levels and allocations 
     in this concurrent resolution in accordance with section 
     251(b) of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control 
     Act of 1985 (2 U.S.C. 901(b)).

     SEC. 4006. ADJUSTMENT FOR CHANGES IN THE BASELINE.

       The chair of the Committee on the Budget of the House of 
     Representatives and the Chairman of the Committee on the 
     Budget of the Senate may adjust the allocations, aggregates, 
     and other appropriate budgetary levels in this concurrent 
     resolution to reflect changes resulting from the 
     Congressional Budget Office's updates to its baseline for 
     fiscal years 2025 through 2034, including the effects of 
     legislation enacted before the date on which this concurrent 
     resolution is agreed to.

     SEC. 4007. EXERCISE OF RULEMAKING POWERS.

       Congress adopts the provisions of this title--
       (1) as an exercise of the rulemaking power of the Senate 
     and the House of Representatives, respectively, and as such 
     they shall be considered as part of the rules of each House 
     or of that House to which they specifically apply, and such 
     rules shall supersede other rules only to the extent that 
     they are inconsistent with such other rules; and
       (2) with full recognition of the constitutional right of 
     either the Senate or the House of Representatives to change 
     those rules (insofar as they relate to that House) at any 
     time, in the same manner, and to the same extent as is the 
     case of any other rule of the Senate or House of 
     Representatives.

       TITLE V--POLICY STATEMENTS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

     SEC. 5001. POLICY STATEMENT ON ECONOMIC GROWTH.

       (a) Findings.--The House finds the following:
       (1) The rate of economic growth has a significant impact on 
     budget deficits. When the rate of gross domestic product 
     (GDP) increases, projected revenue grows with it and deficits 
     decline. Conversely, slower GDP growth can lead to lagging 
     revenues and mounting deficits.
       (2) Federal policies affect the economy's potential to grow 
     and impact economic performance, influencing budgetary 
     outcomes. Consequently, fiscally responsible policies that 
     improve the economy's long-term growth prospects help reduce 
     the size of budget deficits over a given period.
       (3) The free market, where individuals pursue their own 
     self-interests, has been responsible for greater advancements 
     in quality of life and generation of wealth than any other 
     form of economic system. Federal policies designed to grow 
     the economy should thus allow market forces to operate 
     unhindered rather than pick ``winners'' and ``losers''.
       (b) Policy on Economic Growth.--In the House of 
     Representatives, it is the policy of this concurrent 
     resolution to pursue policies that embrace the free market 
     and promote economic growth policies that--
       (1) reduce Federal spending;
       (2) expand American energy production;
       (3) lower taxes that discourage work, savings, and 
     investment;
       (4) deregulate the economy and enact reforms to diminish 
     bureaucratic red tape; and
       (5) eliminate barriers to work so more Americans enter (or 
     reenter) the job market.

     SEC. 5002. POLICY STATEMENT ON MANDATORY SPENDING REDUCTION.

       (a) Findings.--The House finds the following:
       (1) The United States faces a significant debt crisis, with 
     the national debt currently exceeding $36 trillion, or 123 
     percent of GDP.
       (2) Since 2019, mandatory spending has increased by 59 
     percent.
       (3) This debt poses a significant risk to the country's 
     long-term fiscal sustainability, with implications for future 
     generations.
       (4) Mandatory spending currently accounts for over 70 
     percent of the entire Federal budget.
       (5) The deficit for fiscal year 2025 is projected to be 
     $1.9 trillion, or 6.2 percent of GDP.
       (6) This fiscal year, net interest will total $952 billion, 
     or 3.2 percent of GDP.
       (b) Policy on Mandatory Spending Reduction.--In the House 
     of Representatives, the goal of this concurrent resolution is 
     to reduce mandatory spending by $2 trillion over the budget 
     window. If the combined deficit reduction provided by 
     authorizing committees is below this target, it is the policy 
     of the Committee on the Budget of the House that the 
     instruction provided to the Committee on Ways and Means of 
     the House should be reduced by a commensurate amount to 
     offset the difference.

     SEC. 5003. POLICY STATEMENT ON GOVERNMENT DEREGULATION.

       (a) Findings.--The House finds the following:
       (1) Regulations throughout the Federal Government have been 
     a major issue for decades, continuously growing while 
     negatively impacting the nation's economic and fiscal 
     standing.
       (2) Overregulation has consistently hurt small businesses, 
     strangled domestic energy production, weakened labor market 
     conditions, and expanded government overreach and costs on 
     taxpayers.
       (3) Real (inflation-adjusted) spending on regulatory 
     agencies has increased exponentially since 1960. The total 
     number of pages in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) has 
     increased from 22,877 pages in 1960 to nearly 200,000 today. 
     When compared to 1950, the CFR contained only 9,745 pages in 
     1950, making the size of the CFR today 95% larger than it was 
     in 1950.
       (b) Policy Statement on Government Deregulation.--In this 
     House of Representatives, it is the policy of this concurrent 
     resolution--
       (1) that Congress continues to examine ways to relieve the 
     burdens of overregulation throughout the Federal Government;
       (2) that Congress is ready to promote initiatives that will 
     reduce government bureaucracy, enhance Federalism, and 
     increase economic prosperity through deregulation;

[[Page H1540]]

       (3) to not only reduce burdensome, costly regulations, but 
     to also reassert the role of Congress; and
       (4) to enact legislation through reconciliation that 
     strengthens Congress, scales back Federal regulations, limits 
     future bureaucratic red tape, and unleashes economic growth, 
     such as the Regulations from the Executive in Need of 
     Scrutiny (REINS) Act.


                            Motion to Concur

  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I have a motion at the desk.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Clerk will designate the motion.
  The text of the motion is as follows:

       Mr. Arrington of Texas moves that the House concur in the 
     Senate amendment to House Concurrent Resolution 14.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to House Resolution 313, the motion 
shall be debatable for 1 hour equally divided and controlled by the 
chair and ranking minority member of the Committee on the Budget.
  The gentleman from Texas (Mr. Arrington) and the gentleman from 
Pennsylvania (Mr. Boyle) each will control 30 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Texas.


                             General Leave

  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members 
may have 5 legislative days to revise and extend their remarks and to 
include extraneous material on Senate amendment to H. Con. Res. 14.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the 
gentleman from Texas?
  There was no objection.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may 
consume.
  Mr. Speaker, in the most historic election of our lifetime, Americans 
resoundingly elected President Trump and a Republican-led Congress to 
reverse course on the failed policies and the string of self-inflicted 
disasters of the past 4 years.
  Unbridled spending and bad economic policies have weakened our 
economy, created a cost-of-living disaster for working families, and 
pushed our Nation ever closer to the precipice of the sovereign debt 
crisis.
  Today, our national debt is at wartime levels, Mr. Speaker. Our 
deficit is $2 trillion more than our annual appropriations budget. Half 
of that is interest. Interest on the debt is greater than we spend, Mr. 
Speaker, on all of Defense and, respectively, it is more than we spend 
on all of Medicare services to our seniors.
  It is completely and utterly unsustainable. We are at a critical 
inflection point. We have a generational opportunity to rein in 
wasteful spending, reignite growth, and put our Nation on a responsible 
and sustainable path.
  Members of this Chamber did just that. The Republicans of the House 
fashioned a fiscal framework that was responsible, that put pro-growth 
policies in place to incent growth and job creation, move our country 
forward, strengthen our economic base, which is our power base that 
gives us our global leadership influence.
  We also give tools and resources to our Commander in Chief to provide 
for a common defense. We bend the curve on mandatory spending, which is 
75 percent of the budget, 90 percent of the increase in spending, and 
it is the spending that is bankrupting the United States of America.
  For the next hour, the Democrats will have rhetorical arguments that 
are tired, old, and completely false. They will prey on the fears of 
our most vulnerable Americans and they will try to intimidate my 
Republican colleagues into inaction.
  They will try to convince our seniors and those families and 
individuals who struggle that we will somehow steal their safety net or 
cut their program, which couldn't be further from the truth.
  Mr. Speaker, my Democrat colleagues in the Rules Committee said, 
listen, if you are just talking about cutting waste, you know we are 
there. You know we will meet you half way. We want to ensure that the 
taxpayer dollars are stewarded, and yet they take out their baseball 
bat when we talk about the hundreds of billions of dollars in waste, 
fraud, and abuse, and they politicize it.
  However, when they had full control of the House and Senate and the 
White House, they jammed through their Inflation Reduction Act or the 
American Rescue Plan, there wasn't a jot or tittle, not a single 
measure of fiscal control or a measure of rooting out waste and fraud, 
but they say they are with us.
  Mr. Speaker, instead, there was $2 trillion in wasted tax dollars 
opening up healthcare and welfare to illegals, waived work requirements 
to able-bodied Americans, trapping more people in dependence on the 
government. Of course, they also had bailouts for student loans and 
expansion of the IRS by $80 billion, mandating electric vehicles for 
every American, tax breaks for green energy corporations, and the list 
goes on and on.
  They will also dust off an old playbook where they say that the Tax 
Cuts and Jobs Act was simply a tax cut for the rich.
  Just to dispel that with a few points, The Washington Post gave four 
Pinocchios to their claim that it went to the rich and to the 
corporations. Mr. Speaker, $3 out of $4 went to individuals, and the 
lower 10 percent of our income brackets received the highest tax break. 
The top 1 percent actually had to pay a higher share of taxes.
  In addition, we saw 25-year wage increases for American families with 
a median household income able to put $5,000 back into their pockets 
and 6 million people were raised out of poverty, so all boats rose on 
the tide of prosperity.
  Yet, my Democrat colleagues are trying to stop us from simply 
extending the tax relief to our small businesses and tax breaks to our 
families after a 21 percent inflation tax that they suffered through 
for the last few years.
  If they were successful in opposing the extension of the Tax Cuts and 
Jobs Act, an average American will have a tax hike of 22 percent, 
$1,700 would be the extra expense for families of four, 26 million 
small businesses would lose their comparable tax break through the 20 
percent 199A deduction, child tax credit would be cut in half for 40 
million families, the standard deduction for 91 percent of all 
Americans would be cut in half.
  Mr. Speaker, as we unlock the reconciliation process, I am 
encouraging my colleagues to hold fast to the principles established in 
the House's budget resolution. If we do that, we will preserve the 
blessings of liberty and prosperity for our children and grandchildren 
for generations to come. If we don't, if we shrink back in this 
monumental moment and this historic opportunity, then we will be the 
first generation of Americans who have left our country worse than we 
found it.
  If we are to usher in that golden age of America that President Trump 
is fond of talking about, we must advance a budget resolution bill that 
doesn't just include tax cuts or deregulation or good energy policies. 
All that is good, but also, admittedly, the most difficult part but the 
most necessary, is reining in the runaway spending that is driving the 
greatest country in human history off of a fiscal cliff.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to reverse the curse, and I reserve 
the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I 
may consume.
  Mr. Speaker, I have to say it is like deja vu all over again because 
we were on the House floor about a month ago to have a debate about the 
House Republican budget reconciliation resolution, which included 
trillions of dollars in big giveaways that mostly benefit the top 1 
percent, paid for, in part, by the biggest Medicaid cuts in American 
history, combined with trillions of dollars in new debt.
  Here we are again a month later and after the Senate Republicans made 
their changes, we have even more in tax-cut giveaways. Instead of $4.5 
trillion, it is now $7 trillion, most of which one penny doesn't even 
pay for it, except, again, for cuts to Medicaid, as well as cuts to 
other programs.
  Now, there is a little bit of confusion here on a couple aspects, and 
I will quickly address them.
  First, on tax cuts, there is no question that there will not be a tax 
increase on working Americans. There is widespread agreement, on both 
sides of the aisle, when it comes to tax cuts on those making under a 
million dollars a year.
  In fact, in the Rules Committee a few weeks ago, a Democratic Member 
offered an amendment to say we agree.

[[Page H1541]]

Where the disagreement lies is in those who make more than a million 
dollars a year. The top 1 percent, in fact, the top one-half of 1 
percent.
  Every Democratic Member voted in favor of that amendment that would 
make clear we would be extending the tax cuts for everyone who makes up 
to $1 million. That is a massive amount of money. Every Democrat voted 
for it. Every Republican voted against it.
  Don't be confused and don't be scared by this scare tactic. If you 
are a middle-class American, if you are in the 99 percent, you will not 
see your taxes go up next year. There is no question about that. What 
is at issue is the tax cuts for multimillionaires, billionaires, and 
big corporations.
  Now, there is another part that has gotten confused or obscured, and 
that is with respect to the Medicaid cuts. As CBO confirmed in a letter 
they sent to Mr. Pallone and to me, there is no question that this 
piece of legislation before us calls for hundreds of billions of 
dollars in Medicaid cuts, the largest in American history.
  There are some on the other side who have said the word ``Medicaid'' 
technically doesn't exist in the bill, therefore, these cuts don't 
exist. Give me a break.
  The instruction in this piece of legislation directs the Energy and 
Commerce Committee to identify at least $880 billion of cuts in those 
programs where they have jurisdiction.
  Guess what. Mr. Speaker, 93 percent of their jurisdiction is Medicare 
and Medicaid. You can literally cut everything else that they have 
jurisdiction over and that only gets you about $380 billion, so at 
least $500 billion, by definition, in order to follow and carry out 
these instructions, have to come from Medicaid.
  Now, finally, because I know we have a lot of speakers on this side, 
there is something additional in this new version of the reconciliation 
resolution. It is called current policy baseline. It is a fraud, and to 
House Republicans' credit, actually, in their proposal, they didn't 
rely on this fraud.
  Current policy baseline, with a straight face, wants you to believe 
that permanent extension of the tax cuts won't cost one dime. This 
would establish a dangerous new precedent here.
  For 51 years, we have operated under the Budget and Impoundment 
Control Act. For 51 years, we have had the Congressional Budget Office 
and we have had these rules, as imperfect as they may be, that we have 
to follow, that things have to be paid for within a 10-year window.
  Current policy baseline means that rule goes out the window. If we 
think that, in establishing this new precedent, this will be the only 
time it is ever used, that is crazy. If we think that we have a 
national debt issue right now, which we both agree on, it will get far, 
far worse if the new standard becomes this phony fraud of current 
policy baseline.
  Mr. Speaker, I look forward to the rest of the debate, and I reserve 
the balance of my time.

                              {time}  1645

  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from 
Pennsylvania (Mr. Smucker), a dear friend from the Keystone State and 
vice chair of the Budget Committee.
  Mr. SMUCKER. Mr. Speaker, I thank the chairman for yielding.
  I would first say it has been a great pleasure of mine to work with 
the chairman over the past few months. He has done an incredible job 
leading the Budget Committee and leading our Conference to a resolution 
passed out of the House that not only extended the tax cuts but secured 
the border. It unleashes American energy. It funds our military. All 
the priorities, all the mandates that the American people have given us 
and have given the President in this past election, it makes good on.
  I will say first that it is, I think, important to every Member of 
the Republican Conference in the House and, I believe, every Republican 
Member in the Senate, as well, to extend those tax cuts, drive an 
economy that is working for Americans, and drive additional growth in 
the economy.
  That is what came out of the House, and so I was very disappointed to 
see very different instructions to the Senate that I think are not 
serious.
  I believe that we have to do these tax cuts. What I think is also 
important to every Member of the House--we know the fiscal trajectory 
that we are on, and we know this won't end well if we don't restrain 
our runaway spending. I think this is our opportunity to do it.
  The $4 billion floor in spending savings in that Senate resolution 
just simply is not acceptable. There are those who argue that we will 
be working on this and will still come up with a good resolution, but 
to me, it is important we have the guardrails in the initial 
resolution.
  I think there is a reason for the initial resolution. It is to set up 
the framework for what this reconciliation will look like.
  Unfortunately, today--unusual for me--I will not be able to support 
this resolution on the floor. I will be voting ``no'' on this 
resolution.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The time of the gentleman has expired.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield an additional 15 seconds to the 
gentleman from Pennsylvania.
  Mr. SMUCKER. Mr. Speaker, again, with what I started with, it is very 
important we get this resolution done. There is a better path forward. 
We have an amendment that could be passed in this resolution that would 
satisfy where the Senate is, where the House is. As I said, I can't 
vote for this resolution as it is, but there is a pathway forward here 
that is very important.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentleman from New York (Mr. Jeffries), the Democratic leader.
  Mr. JEFFRIES. Mr. Speaker, let me also thank the distinguished 
gentleman from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Representative Boyle, 
who is doing a tremendous job leading House Democrats on the Budget 
Committee.
  Yesterday, I urged the Speaker to join me on the House floor to 
debate this reckless budget one-on-one so we would have an opportunity 
to fully air, in a transparent way before the American people, 
Democratic values and Republican values, the Democratic perspective on 
this budget and the Republican perspective.
  I am on the House floor right now. I am ready to debate one-on-one, 
prepared to yield to the Speaker for colloquy at any time so we can 
discuss the Democratic vision for building an affordable economy that 
lowers costs and makes life better for the American people and the 
Republican budget proposal that would enact the largest Medicaid cut in 
American history in order to pass massive tax breaks for Republicans' 
billionaire donors like Elon Musk.
  Mr. Speaker, I am ready to yield. I am ready to debate one-on-one on 
this House floor. I promise not to rebuke him in the name of Jesus.
  Here in America, we were told by Donald Trump and House Republicans, 
that they were going to lower the high cost of living for everyday 
Americans. In fact, we were told that Republicans were going to do it 
on day one, and it hasn't happened.
  President Trump and House Republicans told us that they were going to 
deliver the golden age of America. Over the last several months, we 
haven't witnessed the golden age of America. We have witnessed a rotten 
age.
  They are crashing the economy in real time, driving us toward a 
Republican recession that is going to hurt children, hurt families, 
hurt seniors, hurt everyday Americans, hurt veterans, and hurt people 
across the land.
  Republicans haven't done anything to address the high cost of living. 
As Democrats, we recognize that America is too expensive. The cost of 
living in this great country is far too high. Housing costs are too 
high. Grocery costs are too high. Insurance costs are too high. Utility 
costs are too high. Childcare costs are too high. America is too 
expensive. We should be working to lower the high cost of living.
  Far too many people in this country can't get ahead, and they can 
barely get by, struggling to make ends meet, living paycheck to 
paycheck. We should be acting decisively to address the high cost of 
living.
  President Trump promised costs would go down on day one. Costs aren't 
going down. They are going up. Inflation is going up. Consumer 
confidence is coming down.
  These reckless policies, including the Trump tariffs, are driving us 
toward a

[[Page H1542]]

recession. On top of it all, Republicans are presenting a budget that 
is going to make things worse.

  I stand here today in strong opposition to this reckless Republican 
budget. It is a cruel budget. It is a budget that will have 
catastrophic consequences on everyday Americans.
  It is an assault on the economy. It is an assault on Medicaid, an 
assault on healthcare, and an assault on nutritional assistance to 
children and families. It is an assault on older Americans and an 
assault on hospitals, nursing homes, and community health centers. It 
is an assault on veterans. That is why we reject it, because we are 
going to stand on the side of the American people.
  Now, there are so many different problems with this budget 
resolution, but let's begin with the fact that Republicans are setting 
in motion the largest Medicaid cut in American history. That is going 
to hurt people all across this country. In small-town America, in urban 
America, in rural America, in the heartland of America, in Appalachia, 
all across this country, people will be hurt.
  Healthcare will be taken away from children, pregnant women, everyday 
Americans with disabilities, older Americans, people in nursing homes, 
and people who are receiving long-term care. Nursing homes will close. 
That will impact everybody in a given community. Hospitals will shut 
down in rural America and small-town America all across America. The 
largest Medicaid cut in American history is completely and totally 
unacceptable.
  In the same period of time, targeting nutritional assistance for 
children, infants, women, families, veterans, and older Americans, 
literally taking food out of the mouths of babies in the United States 
of America, the wealthiest country in the history of the world, this is 
why we say it is a cruel budget. It is a callous budget. It is a budget 
that will have catastrophic consequences.
  Veterans will be hurt, people who have served this country admirably. 
They stood up for us. We should always stand up for them, not target 
them, as will be the case in this reckless Republican budget.
  Democrats are here to make it clear: Hands off Medicaid. Hands off 
the healthcare of the United States of America. Hands off nutritional 
assistance. Hands off veterans. Hands off everyday Americans struggling 
to make ends meet.
  Republicans do nothing to lower the high cost of living. In fact, 
they are making the affordability crisis in America worse, not better. 
Then, they target earned benefits and things that are important to the 
American people, like Medicaid, to visit upon it such an extreme cut. 
What are they doing it for? What is it in service of? All to pass 
massive tax breaks for their billionaire donors like Elon Musk. The 
President himself has made that clear. At the end of the day, that is 
what this is all about. How extraordinary is that?
  As Democrats, we support tax cuts for everyday Americans, tax cuts 
for small businesses, tax cuts for family farmers, and tax cuts for 
those who need relief, not tax cuts for the wealthy, the well-off, and 
the well-connected.
  I stand in strong opposition to this GOP tax scam. The reason why, 
Mr. Speaker, I have said let's debate this on the House floor directly 
through a colloquy, transparently, is to make it clear to the American 
people where we stand and where Republicans stand at such a fragile 
moment with so many people in this country struggling to make ends 
meet.
  House Democrats are going to continue to stand on the side of the 
American people. We are going to stand on the side of our children, of 
our families, of our veterans, of older Americans, of everyone aspiring 
to achieve the American Dream, stand up in defense of Medicaid, stand 
up in defense of veterans' benefits, stand up in defense of nutritional 
assistance, stand up in defense of economic opportunity and a fair tax 
code that is designed to build an economy that actually works for 
everyday Americans as opposed to an economy of the billionaires, by the 
billionaires, and for the billionaires.
  That is why Democrats strongly oppose this reckless Republican budget 
resolution and will not rest until we bury it in the ground, never to 
rise again.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the 
wages for the bottom 10 percent grew at twice the amount of the top 10 
percent and wealth three times the top 1 percent. If Leader Jeffries is 
successful at killing the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act extension, he will 
raise taxes by $1,739 for families in his district.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from California (Mr. 
McClintock), my good friend.

                              {time}  1700

  Mr. McCLINTOCK. Mr. Speaker, Benjamin Franklin told of a French woman 
who once confided to her sister: ``I don't know how it happens, sister, 
but I meet with nobody but myself that is always in the right.'' He was 
reminding his colleagues that democracies were never designed to make 
perfect decisions, only the most acceptable ones to the most people.
  My disappointment in the Senate version before us is vast, but it has 
one redeeming quality: It is within reach. No, it doesn't begin to 
address the dangerous debt that threatens our Nation's solvency, but it 
does open up a process that is absolutely critical if we are going to 
stop a $4.5 trillion tax increase that would devastate our economy, 
provide the funds to secure our borders, and provide for our defense in 
a dangerous world.
  I am frustrated with the Senate numbers, but in DOGE we trust. I 
think we can achieve a trillion dollars of savings as a result of its 
work. The mass repatriation of millions of illegal aliens should save 
another $150 billion. Restoring the work requirement for able-bodied 
welfare recipients will save hundreds of billions of dollars more 
without touching a single service for the truly needy. The economic 
rebound from the regulatory and fiscal reforms and from the bilateral 
free trade agreements the President intends to negotiate are 
potentially explosive.
  None of these reforms are in this resolution, but all of them depend 
on this resolution. If anybody has a better alternative, they need to 
bring it to a vote in both Houses this week. Otherwise, let us take a 
little of Benjamin Franklin's advice, doubt a little of our own 
infallibility, and get on with the work we were elected to do and upon 
which the prosperity of our people and the future of our Nation 
depends.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Chair, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the 
gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Pallone), the ranking member of the 
Energy and Commerce Committee.
  Mr. PALLONE. Mr. Speaker, I have heard my Republican colleagues today 
admit that they were extending the tax cut for the rich and the large 
corporations. I have heard them say they are worried about the debt. 
Certainly, this resolution would also increase the debt.
  What I have not heard the majority admit is that they are cutting 
Medicaid to pay for all this. They will not admit that. This is the 
second time now the budget resolution passed the House, and the budget 
resolution came over from the Senate. They are going to vote today on 
instructing my committee, the Energy and Commerce Committee, to cut 
$880 billion at least.
  Mr. Boyle, our ranking member, pointed out that the CBO got back to 
us and said that most, if not all, of that has to come from Medicaid 
cuts.
  My Republican colleagues should please admit that they are voting 
today on Medicaid cuts. Do not deny it. Do not try to put it aside. 
That is what this is all about.
  What does that mean? It means there is less money to the States, so 
they are going to cut back on nursing home care and on the money that 
goes to hospitals. Hospitals and nursing homes will close, or they will 
have such terrible quality of service or, in the case of the hospitals, 
will pass on those extra costs to other people who have insurance, and 
their insurance premiums go up.
  What about people with disabilities? Most of them are dependent on 
Medicaid. Their services will be eliminated or cut back, as well.
  Please, understand that a vote for this by the Republicans today is a 
vote to cut people's healthcare, to reduce their services, to kick 
people out of nursing homes, and to make hospitals unavailable.

[[Page H1543]]

  

  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, interestingly enough, the Democrats' 
expansion of ObamaCare actually put 90 cents on the dollar for able-
bodied adults. They robbed our most vulnerable--our disabled, blind, 
and pregnant fellow Americans--of having access to healthcare, reducing 
the quality of outcomes over the years. That was a policy of the 
Democrats, and there are many others that need to be reversed.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Oklahoma (Mr. Hern), my 
friend.
  Mr. HERN of Oklahoma. Mr. Speaker, I rise in support of this 
legislation that will unlock the critical work the American people 
elected us to do.
  Let's not forget that the only reason we are in this position to be 
working on such important legislation is because of President Donald 
Trump. President Trump's message resonated with the American people, 
and they elected him in historic numbers. They delivered Republican 
majorities in the House and the Senate because they want Congress to 
deliver on the promises we made.
  Today, it is time for us to act so that we can get on with the real 
work in our committees. In passing this budget framework, we are 
unlocking the process to deliver on unleashing American energy 
production, permanently securing our southern and northern borders, and 
making tax cuts permanent for small businesses and working families.
  If we fail, every American will see the largest tax increase in 
American history. Just days away from tax day, this is as important a 
time as any to put the American people first. We cannot fail the 
hardworking Americans who are trusting us to get this done or the small 
businesses that rely on consistency in our tax code.
  President Trump has fully secured our border and eliminated over $100 
billion in government spending on waste, fraud, and abuse.
  My Democratic colleagues speak of confusion, as we have heard today. 
Let me remove some of that confusion. President Trump's new proposal on 
tax cuts is for those making tips, not the wealthy; those on overtime, 
not the wealthy; and reducing the tax burden on those receiving Social 
Security, our seniors, not the wealthy.
  The President has talked about giving tax credits or deductibility 
for interest on automobiles made in America so our great union workers 
in America can have better jobs and continue to see jobs grow in 
America, not the wealthy.

  My Democratic colleagues want to talk about fear over facts, as we 
have heard from their leaders today. Let me remind them of what 
happened. They inherited a government in January 2021 with 1.4 percent 
inflation, and they delivered 9.1 percent inflation just 5 months 
later. That was almost a sevenfold, 700 percent, increase in inflation 
on the American people.
  When they talk about being good stewards of the American taxpayers' 
tax dollars, this is an outright abuse of the facts. The facts are they 
are the ones who increased inflation, as my colleague said, over 20 
percent over a 4-year period.
  The reason the American people are suffering today is not because of 
the 70 days that President Trump has been in office. It is because of 
the 4 years of the Biden administration and the Democratic Party.
  Mr. Speaker, I am proud to support this budget, and I am proud to 
fight for President Trump's legislative agenda. I urge every one of my 
colleagues here to vote so we can get on to the debate that the leader 
on the other side of the aisle talked about.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the 
gentlewoman from Minnesota (Ms. Craig), the ranking member of the 
Agriculture Committee.
  Ms. CRAIG. Mr. Speaker, I am actually stunned as we stand here today 
because, as my colleagues talk about their plan, what they are doing, 
in reality, is giving billionaires the national credit card and telling 
them to go hog wild, racking up $14 trillion in national debt over the 
next 10 years so that large corporations can pay less in taxes. That 
doesn't lower costs for middle-class families in this country.
  If this were a bill that we were talking about that would lower taxes 
for the middle class, I would be all for it.
  To make matters worse, part of how they want to pay for this 
resolution is to cut the supplemental nutrition assistance program, or 
SNAP, by $230 billion. This cut would force the average SNAP household 
of four to spend over $2,000 more on food.
  Who are the majority of SNAP recipients? They are seniors living on 
fixed incomes, children, and disabled people. SNAP helps American 
families buy American-grown food. This cut takes a chunk out of the 
farm economy as well when they can least afford it because of the 
whiplash of this administration and Donald Trump's tariffs. This 
resolution would mean that farmers growing our food would make $30 
billion less than anticipated in farm income, placing family farmers at 
risk.
  This Republican budget only stands to make America hungrier and 
poorer so the rich can get richer. It is shameful, and I urge my 
colleagues to vote ``no.''
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, the inflation tax that my colleague put 
on her constituents with unbridled spending and failed economic 
policies actually took $1,100 out of the pockets of our fellow 
Americans, but the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act put $5,000 back into the 
pockets of our fellow Americans in every district.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from Kansas (Mr. 
Estes), my friend and a fellow Budget Committee member.
  Mr. ESTES. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of advancing 
President Trump's America First agenda.
  It was less than 2 months ago that I stood on this House floor as 
Republicans passed our budget resolution, putting a marker in the 
ground to restore and secure our country both physically and 
financially.
  While I don't think this resolution goes far enough, the resolution 
that we are about to pass today is a positive step forward, and it is 
what Americans demanded 5 months ago.
  Yesterday, I had the opportunity to talk directly with President 
Trump in the West Wing. He is asking Republicans to support this budget 
resolution to move the process forward. This resolution is only one 
more step in the process to obtain these positive results.
  Voting ``yes'' means voting for a secure border and economic growth. 
By voting ``yes,'' we are voting for a path to make the Tax Cuts and 
Jobs Act permanent. It means making economic growth provisions like 
research and development, the small business passthrough, interest 
deductibility, and immediate expensing permanent parts of our tax code. 
A ``yes'' vote prevents the largest tax increase for Americans in 
history.
  As a fiscal hawk who will continue to work with the administration to 
rein in reckless spending, I am voting ``yes'' for the American people.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentleman from California (Mr. Peters), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Mr. PETERS. Mr. Speaker, there are a lot of difficult things about 
this, but one thing I want to say is that the Republicans are actually 
trying to change the rules of the game to say that this tax cut doesn't 
cost any money. The Senate is ignoring the rules we have observed for 
decades, ruling out the Parliamentarian, just declaring that extending 
these tax cuts doesn't cost any money, and that is a falsehood. We are 
just changing our accounting rules to do this.

  The other fault with this is the chairman, Mr. Arrington, rightly 
pointed out we are borrowing $2 trillion every year, but this does 
nothing about that. All this does is take money from important programs 
to fund the extension of tax cuts, many of which are for the wealthy. 
Some may be for the nonwealthy, but much of it is for the wealthy. It 
is the wrong thing to do.
  Every independent analysis says this will not lower the budget 
deficit but will increase it. Mr. Speaker, if you don't believe me, 
look at when we vote for the debt ceiling increase; $5 trillion to $18 
trillion. What are we going to vote for? This is the wrong direction.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, after the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, the top 
1 percent of earners in this country, who pay 40 percent of the light 
bills and the expenses of this growing, massive Federal Government, 
paid more of a share of taxes than they did less. The code got more 
progressive.

[[Page H1544]]

  Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from Ohio (Mr. Carey), 
my friend.
  Mr. CAREY. Mr. Speaker, today's vote really marks an essential step 
toward fulfilling the promise to the American people to extend the 2017 
Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, to enshrine border security into law, and to 
move forward toward American energy independence.
  After enduring years of high inflation, American families and small 
businesses urgently need tax relief in order to thrive. We must pass 
our budget resolution today to start the budget reconciliation process 
and advance the policies that our American families expect from us.
  It includes much-needed deficit reduction, as was mentioned earlier, 
which will secure a healthy financial future for our children and 
grandchildren. It will allow us to extend the successful tax cuts from 
2017 that produced the unprecedented job growth and higher wages for 
American workers. I urge everyone to support the resolution.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentleman from California (Mr. Panetta), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Mr. PANETTA. Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to this disastrous, 
debt-inflating budget resolution. Despite what the majority is saying 
today, it is a resolution that inflates our debt and deficit. It will 
hide the cost of tax cuts for billionaires, and it threatens our 
economy.

                              {time}  1715

  Mr. Speaker, it is a resolution that gives the majority a green light 
to selectively choose the score of a Republican tax cuts bill. It is a 
resolution that pretends that tax costs nothing. It is a resolution 
that would do damage to our Nation's finances and add $4.6 trillion to 
our Nation's debt.
  Experts across this political spectrum have called this dishonest, 
fabricated scorekeeping, and it undermines the point of budget rules.
  That is why I introduced an amendment to this resolution so that the 
Senate uses real estimates to determine its cost.
  Instead, they are going to write themselves a blank check to be paid 
by the American people and to be paid by our children. That is why I 
oppose this and I ask my colleagues to oppose this resolution, as well.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I say to Mr. Panetta that if we do 
current policy and don't offset the impact of the deficit, that would 
be a dangerous precedent.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from Michigan (Mr. 
Bergman).
  Mr. BERGMAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise in support of this Senate amendment 
to the fiscal year 2025 budget resolution.
  Let's be clear about what we are voting on today. We are not voting 
on the budget. We are not voting on the numbers. We are voting on the 
framework, a starting point for building a budget that delivers on 
President Trump's priorities.
  Those priorities are securing our border, strengthening national 
security, energy independence, and preventing a tax hike of $4 trillion 
set to hit at the end of the year if we don't act.
  Think of the reconciliation process as a baseball scrimmage. The 
House and Senate can't take the field and start crafting the budget 
until we step out of the dugout. Approving this framework gets us into 
the game.
  Yes, there are concerns about how we achieve the spending cuts and 
reduce the deficit. That is a critical conversation, but it starts 
here.
  In the last 100 years, Republicans have had just four chances to do a 
reconciliation bill. We were given a mandate by the American people. 
Let's not waste it. I urge my colleagues to support it.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from New Jersey (Mrs. Watson Coleman), a distinguished 
member of the House Committee on the Budget.
  Mrs. WATSON COLEMAN. Mr. Speaker, I thank my colleague for yielding 
time.
  Mr. Speaker, this budget is a bad deal. It takes billions of dollars 
from programs that working families rely on and gives that money to the 
very wealthiest Americans in the form of $7 trillion in tax breaks.
  It slashes funding for programs like Medicaid. Nearly 2 million 
people in my State of New Jersey rely on Medicaid for healthcare. It 
raises the healthcare costs for folks who get their coverage through 
the Affordable Care Act. In my district, folks could see their premiums 
go up by $1,400 per year under this budget.
  Though I know my colleagues across the aisle are very concerned with 
the Federal debt, this budget adds more than $5 trillion to the 
deficit. This is a rip-off for working families, and I strongly 
encourage my colleagues to oppose this measure.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from 
Arkansas (Mr. Hill), the chairman of the House Financial Services 
Committee.
  Mr. HILL of Arkansas. Mr. Speaker, I thank the chairman for kindly 
yielding to me.
  Mr. Speaker, the policies of the Biden-Harris administration crushed 
the spirit of the American people under the weight of rising costs from 
a 40-year high inflation, open borders, uncertain futures, and spending 
an avalanche on Biden's Big Government spending priorities that have 
saddled us with an annual deficit of $2 trillion.
  The resolution before us today offers a path forward to rein in 
wasteful spending and put our Nation on a responsible and sustainable 
fiscal path. It reflects the commitment to the American people that 
would secure a better future for all of us.
  This resolution secures the opportunity for tax cuts for hardworking 
American families and small businesses. It reins in the regulatory 
overreach that has long stifled our economic growth. It roots out 
waste, fraud, and abuse in the Federal budget.
  It is simply common sense that we focus on fiscal responsibility and 
rein in wasteful spending to which Washington has become so addicted.
  Mr. Speaker, I look forward to working with my House colleagues, 
Chairman Arrington, and the Members of this body to accomplish the 
President's goals by way of this reconciliation measure.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from the Virgin Islands (Ms. Plaskett), a distinguished 
member of the House Committee on the Budget.
  Ms. PLASKETT. Mr. Speaker, I stand here appalled and terribly 
disappointed at the actions of the Republican majority and the brazen 
cruelty and flagrant deceit with which Republicans in Congress and the 
Trump-Musk administration are trying to shove this fallacy down the 
throats of everyday American people.
  Nearly one in three Americans count on Medicaid. Yet Republicans are 
pushing a cut of at least $880 billion in Medicaid. What is the 
purpose?
  This is the purpose. As I sit on the Committee on Ways and Means, I 
know that they must add $7 trillion, trillion with a t, in giveaways to 
billionaire donors and big corporations, while ripping healthcare and 
food away from veterans, seniors, and children.
  Mr. Speaker, yes, Americans are fed up with the chaos. They are also 
fed up with the cruelty, the lack of humanity, and the willingness to 
help everyday Americans who are being exploited by this.
  They are exposed.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I take that it we don't have the support 
of our Democrat colleague for the hundreds of billions of dollars in 
waste, fraud, and abuse in Medicaid.

  Quite frankly, it is pervasive throughout the Federal Government and 
threatens that program, threatens the benefits to our most vulnerable, 
and threatens the sustainability of that program for future Americans.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from Louisiana (Mr. 
Scalise), my dear friend and our fearless majority leader.
  Mr. SCALISE. Mr. Speaker, I thank my dear friend from the great State 
of Texas, the chairman of the House Committee on the Budget, for 
yielding.
  Mr. Speaker, I rise in strong support of this resolution and in 
moving this process forward. Let's keep in mind that we worked 
incredibly hard, especially here in the House, for months to negotiate 
all the details of what needs to happen in this budget reconciliation. 
It is all laid out in this House budget.

[[Page H1545]]

We also need to get started with the reconciliation process.
  The process is where eleven of our committees in the House will go to 
work to start making improvements in so many areas to get America back 
on track. Ultimately, Mr. Speaker, that is why we all come here. We 
come here to solve big problems.
  We deal with small issues, too. It is not often, but every now and 
then we deal with a big issue that can actually improve the lives of 
families all across this country. We can solve problems that have been 
going unanswered for years and decades. Mr. Speaker, we can address 
that in this resolution.
  Let's go through some of the things that this resolution allows us to 
do because this resolution doesn't do any of those things, it just 
opens the door to start that reconciliation process.
  The product front and center that most people talk about and that is 
a big piece, but surely not the only piece, is to make sure that 
Americans don't face a massive tax increase.
  Mr. Speaker, if we listen to our friends on the other side of the 
aisle, they brag that they want these tax rates to go up. They want the 
2017 tax cuts we passed with President Trump to expire. They don't 
mince any words about that. In fact, it was even talked about during 
the campaign.
  The voters surely had a say on what they wanted when President Trump 
said he wanted to keep tax rates low on hardworking families and his 
opponent said she wanted those cuts to expire so those tax rates would 
go up on those hardworking families.
  The hardworking families of America said where they wanted to go. In 
fact, the majority of all Americans said they don't want their taxes to 
go up.
  Think about which tax rates will go up. On the other side of the 
aisle, Mr. Speaker, my colleagues love to talk about class warfare as 
if that is something Americans should celebrate. I think it is 
insulting to any American who believes in the promise of the American 
Dream to try to insult and separate our country based on how much money 
they make.
  Whatever a person makes today, the greatest thing about America, the 
greatest country in the history of the world, is that whatever someone 
is today, however much they make today, wherever they came from today, 
they can be anything they want to be if they work hard, play by the 
rules, and follow their dreams, whatever that dream is, even if that 
person wants to be a billionaire
  Mr. Speaker, frankly, talk to most billionaires. They didn't start 
off chasing wealth because that is not what gets them there. They 
chased the idea of something bigger than themselves. It usually 
involves bringing a lot of other people along with them. It involves 
creating a lot of wealth for a lot of other people along the way, too.
  I guess the people on the other side of the aisle want to crush that 
ability. Mr. Speaker, go to Marxist countries, which is the utopia of 
some of the people on the left. Those Marxist countries don't have any 
billionaires to beat up on because they don't allow anyone to have that 
opportunity. They tell people what they can do, how much they can make, 
what kind of job they can have, and what their potential is. That is 
not America, and that never should be America.
  Mr. Speaker, Americans can be whatever they want to be because of 
what is great about this country. If a person happens to get success, 
however it is defined--and it doesn't even have to be financial--if 
someone gets success, why should the government want to punish them for 
achieving it?
  Again, there are great examples all over the world of how failed that 
approach is and every one of those countries has experimented with 
that, and it has been a dismal failure. I don't see any of the people, 
that want to change America to that, going to those other countries, 
because those other countries are so failed.
  Let's start with that. Look at the individual income tax rates. We 
want to keep them where they are. We would like to make them lower, but 
we surely don't want them to go up as the other side of the aisle wants 
to do.
  If these tax cuts are allowed to expire, which a ``no'' vote today 
would ensure, if the tax rates expire, it is not millionaires and the 
billionaires they keep talking about; it is 95 percent of all families 
in America who would see their taxes go up.
  Unless a person makes $70,000 a year and thinks they are a 
billionaire, their taxes are going to go up. If they make $50,000 a 
year, their taxes will go up. The alternative minimum tax comes back. A 
lot of people don't know what that is because we got rid of it in 2017. 
Every member of the Democratic Party voted ``no'' because they didn't 
want those taxes to go away, but, luckily, we got the votes without 
them and passed it.
  For the middle class of this country, that was a kick to the gut. We 
got rid of that. That would come back 100 percent, and all of those 
people in the middle class would see a massive tax hike.
  Think about small businesses. People love to come here and talk about 
small businesses. We should do everything we can to help the creation 
of more small businesses and to help the growth of our existing small 
businesses.

  Mr. Speaker, what happens if there is a ``no'' vote on this 
resolution?
  There is a tax provision called 199A. Very few people might be able 
to explain it if they were asked to explain it.
  Let me tell you what it is. 199A, that would expire if we keep going 
with this resolution, is the equalizer for small businesses to be able 
to compete on the same level playing field as a large business, a 
massive, multinational corporation.
  The massive, multinational corporations already have their tax rates 
set at 21 percent. Think of the small business down the street, the 
mom-and-pop store, the business that is hiring three people, that is 
allowing that person to maybe be the next billionaire. They are not 
there today, but they might want to get there. If 199A goes away, all 
of a sudden that small business and every small business in America 
goes from paying a 21 percent equivalent to almost 43 percent.
  Mr. Speaker, the small businesses will get crushed because they won't 
be able to compete with the big, multinational corporations.

                              {time}  1730

  I don't know why the Democrats who oppose this resolution want 
multinational corporations to get a two-times advantage over every 
small business in America, but that is what a ``no'' vote means.
  The Democrats can hide behind billionaires all day long. The 
billionaires will benefit from that. We want to allow those small 
businesses to keep thriving. Yes, maybe some of them will become 
billionaires, and I am not going to attack them if they do. We ought to 
celebrate it if they do.
  Some of them actually don't make it. A lot of them won't make it if 
this resolution fails, Mr. Speaker. We protect that as well so they can 
have their shot at the American Dream; so the single mom who has maybe 
never had a family that was able to afford their own house can go own 
their own business and one day buy their own house, maybe get a nice 
car, and maybe get the nice things in life. They don't have that 
opportunity if this resolution fails. That is what is at stake.
  We do a lot of other things that we will open up the door to go do in 
reconciliation by passing this resolution. We secure America's border. 
Now, again, this was a major issue on the campaign, and I know the 
folks on the other side want an open border. Thank God President Trump 
won and followed through on his promise to secure the border. We now 
have a 95-percent reduction in illegal crossings at our border. 
However, that doesn't solve the problem, Mr. Speaker.
  President Trump wants to continue to give our Border Patrol agents 
the tools they need to do their job effectively. Why the previous 
administration denied them these tools we can all debate, but the 
voters of this country made a decision in November. They said: We don't 
want our Border Patrol agents to be at a disadvantage with the drug 
cartels in Mexico, which they are.
  Drug cartels have better technology today than America's Border 
Patrol agents. That is a disgrace. Mr. Speaker, you can see drones, and 
you can see night vision goggles not with our Border Patrol agents. Do 
you know who has got them? It is the Mexican drug cartels. Our Border 
Patrol agents who risk their lives to keep our families safe don't have 
that same ability. Shame on anybody who wants to deny

[[Page H1546]]

them that ability to have at minimum the same technology, if not more 
and better, than the drug cartels. We give them that better technology 
in this resolution.
  We also do something, Mr. Speaker, that we used to all agree on in 
this Chamber, and now, unfortunately, it has become a partisan issue. 
We still believe in strengthening America's defense. Believe it or not, 
the bad guys are still out there. There are not necessarily more of 
them, but it is the same people who have been bad for generations, and 
if we sit back and stay complacent and don't keep up, go look at 
China's military right now, how much they are advancing their naval 
fleet that we are not.
  We can look at all the other countries, Iran and Russia, those 
countries still intend bad things on our friends, but one day they want 
to have those bad things apply to us too, Mr. Speaker.
  How do we stop it? It is by having a strong national defense. We 
bolster our national defense in this resolution.
  Why does President Trump call it one big, beautiful bill? It is 
because it does a lot of critically important things all in one 
resolution that helps get this country back on a strong footing.
  What else it does is it produces incredibly needed savings, Mr. 
Speaker, savings that the American taxpayers want, as well. They want 
their tax dollars being spent better. They want to see this Congress 
find a way to get back to balanced Federal budgets.
  Why don't we all work together to do that? We are here working 
together to do that. Unfortunately, the other side of the aisle doesn't 
want to achieve that. They want to vote against any attempt to save 
money. They criticize DOGE when they identify hundreds of billions of 
dollars of tax dollars being wasted in foreign countries and here on 
American soil wasted.
  People who work two and three jobs and are working their tails off to 
help provide for their family are incensed when they hear about this 
waste.
  They say: When is somebody going to do something about it? President 
Trump said: I am going to do something about it. He actually campaigned 
about that too, Mr. Speaker. He said what he would do, and he is doing 
it. There should be a parade applauding a President who actually ran on 
saying I am going to do things and then he is actually following 
through on the promises.
  The other side can still be upset that they lost the election, and 
they will keep losing elections as long as they stay in denial about 
what this country wants, but this country, the American people, 77 
million of them, went to the polls and said: These are the things we 
want our President to do, and their President whom they voted for is 
doing those things. He needs help from this Congress to continue to 
follow through on that.
  That is what passing this resolution today does. It starts that 
process. There will be more time to debate every one of these items I 
talked about, and the people who are against all the things I laid out 
can still talk about why they are against them. They can make up fake 
bogeymen: Oh, it is the billionaires, it is this, it is that the 
disabled people are going to lose benefits.
  Do you know what we do, Mr. Speaker? We strengthen benefits for 
people that are truly needed, Mr. Speaker, because so many of these 
programs that once used to be so great and talked about and lofty have 
been abused.
  How many illegals are here, people who are here in this country 
illegally, are on some of these programs that are going bust? Yes, they 
are going bankrupt. Those aren't my numbers, Mr. Speaker. You can go 
look at Biden's own actuaries on those programs. Biden's actuaries said 
that those programs are going bankrupt, and the other side just wants 
to demagogue and say: Leave them alone; leave them be.
  To let them go bankrupt would be irresponsible. We can make them work 
better for the people who are actually here in America who pay into 
those programs and who have earned those programs or who had something 
bad happen in their life where they have to be on one of those 
programs, instead of people who are stealing from those programs. As 
far as the waste, fraud, and abuse alone, government agencies have 
given reports on $60 billion a year in waste just in Medicaid, and they 
want that waste to continue on the other side.

  That is what a ``no'' gets us. It is allowing the $60 billion a year 
in waste in Medicaid and fraud in Medicaid to continue. That is the 
theft of hardworking taxpayers' money. That is taking healthcare away 
from the disabled who need it.
  Let's actually get back to having these programs work for the people 
who funded them, who paid into them, who deserve to be on them, and who 
need to be on them. That is what we do with this resolution.
  Let the other side keep demagoguing and keep making up stories, false 
stories, and personality fights with a person they don't like who won 
an election and they are still angry about that result.
  They should look in the mirror, and maybe one day they will say: Why? 
Why did all those people, 77 million of them, go to the polls and say: 
We want President Trump to be in the White House to go do those things 
he said he would do?
  He is doing them. Let's help him do it. Everybody should be 
supporting this. Whoever is not can still try to be roadblocks. We are 
going to keep moving forward, Mr. Speaker, because the future direction 
of this country demands it. The people in this country demand that we 
keep moving forward and fixing the problems that are holding them back 
and holding more greatness for this country back.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge everybody to vote ``no,'' but anybody who doesn't 
want to vote ``no'' needs to understand what they are blocking and 
understand what they are voting ``no'' on.
  The rest of us are going to keep going to work for those hardworking 
people who are tired of struggling, Mr. Speaker. They are tired of 
waiting for the right kind of things to happen in Washington. We can 
finally make those right things happen. We do it by voting for this 
resolution.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge approval of the resolution.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, the majority leader just said 
something absolutely remarkable. He said that there should be a parade 
for President Trump.
  I have very good news for him. There is going to be a parade for 
President Trump thrown by Donald Trump in honor of himself paid for by 
taxpayers to the tune of $92 million.
  Oh, but to the 72 million Americans watching at home and are on 
Medicaid: You are still going to get your Medicaid cut.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from Texas (Mr. 
Doggett), who is a distinguished member of the Budget Committee.
  Mr. DOGGETT. Mr. Speaker, Speaker Johnson calls our soaring national 
debt the ``number one threat'' to our Nation. The Republican Senate 
leader says that it is a ``ticking time bomb'' just before he lights 
the fuse with this sorry resolution that hikes the debt by $6 trillion.
  The independent Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget urges us 
to reject this ``unprecedented level of fiscal recklessness.''
  Republicans are borrowing trillions more so Elon and his billionaire 
buddies can get more.
  Already a wrecking ball to our democracy, Trump, the self-described 
``king of debt,'' is king today with his schemes to spike the debt as 
the Musk DOGE charade wrecks public services and Trump's ``beautiful'' 
tariff wrecks our economy and heads us straight toward a recession.
  With soaring debt, plummeting markets, and a measles outbreak, I have 
to give the Republicans credit for turning America red, but not the way 
we expected.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from Texas (Ms. Escobar), who is a distinguished member of 
the Budget Committee
  Ms. ESCOBAR. Mr. Speaker, Republicans spent the last 4 years telling 
Americans to trust them on the economy, and Donald Trump promised to 
lower costs for Americans on day one.
  Months into this administration, with Republicans in complete 
control, prices are up, inflation is up, joblessness is up, the stock 
market is all over the place with American retirees losing

[[Page H1547]]

trillions of dollars in just 72 hours, and a recession is looming.
  Let's be clear: Republicans have no plan to prioritize hardworking 
Americans, but they have a $7 trillion plan to help billionaires. They 
will do that by cutting Medicaid and nutrition programs and 
exploding the national debt by $6 trillion.

  This budget resolution makes Americans sicker and poorer, and it will 
make the rich richer.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to have some common sense and work 
with Democratic colleagues. Together we can address all of this. I will 
be voting ``no'' on this resolution.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from Ohio (Ms. Kaptur), who is a distinguished member of 
the Budget Committee.
  Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, I thank Ranking Member Boyle for yielding.
  Mr. Speaker, I rise today to stand against the GOP's billionaire 
bonanza. It cashes out precious healthcare dollars and enriches 
ultrawealthy billionaires and leaves ordinary Americans to pick up the 
tab.
  My colleagues across the aisle proposed to add an astounding $14 
trillion more to our debt over the next decade.
  Why? It is to fund more tax cuts for billionaires.
  How? Speaker Johnson cuts hundreds of billions of dollars from 
Medicaid, a lifeline for millions of our citizens, including more than 
200,000 in the district I represent. Every hospital I represent 
sustains itself with Medicaid and Medicare.
  This debate isn't just about the numbers on a balance sheet. It is 
about the health of the American people. How will we keep our hospitals 
open and our nursing homes open? How do we take care of the American 
people's health?
  This Republican resolution is totally irresponsible. It is an 
abdication of our duty to serve all the American people, not just those 
at the top.
  Mr. Speaker, the top 1 percent of earners in this Nation control more 
wealth than the bottom 50 percent. It is time for economic fairness. 
Vote ``no'' on this resolution.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from 
Arkansas (Mr. Westerman), who is chairman of the Natural Resources 
Committee.
  Mr. WESTERMAN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of the Senate 
amendment. The American people gave Congress a clear mandate to lower 
costs, reduce burdensome regulations, and unlock American resources.
  Passing the resolution before us will allow committees to 
thoughtfully craft and debate legislation to extend the 2017 Trump tax 
cuts, averting a $4 trillion to $5 trillion tax increase on the 
American people, and to use our resources to generate more revenue and 
to cut wasteful spending.
  The resolution in itself is not the solution, but it unleashes 
committees to put pen to paper and craft reconciliation legislation 
that fully delivers on the promises the President and House Republicans 
have made the American people.
  Mr. Speaker, if we look in this beautiful Chamber, I have only 
located one quote from our past that is displayed here, and it is up 
above you up close to the ceiling. We are getting close to celebrating 
the 200-year anniversary of those words that Daniel Webster spoke in 
1825 when he said: ``Let us develop the resources of our land, call 
forth our powers, build up its institutions, promote all its great 
interests, and see whether we also, in our day and generation, may not 
perform something worthy to be remembered.''
  Mr. Speaker, the House Committee on Natural Resources looks forward 
to taking action to develop our Nation's resources and to do that 
responsibly. Our resources are among our Nation's greatest assets and 
revenue generators.
  This resolution starts the process to do something worthy to be 
remembered in our day and generation, a process to keep taxes low for 
working Americans, to unlock the full potential of our natural 
resources, and to deliver on Speaker Johnson's directive to have the 
resolution on the President's desk by Memorial Day.
  Mr. Speaker, I support it, and I urge my colleagues to do the same.

                              {time}  1745

  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the 
gentleman from Virginia (Mr. Scott), the distinguished ranking member 
of the Education and Workforce Committee and also a member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Mr. SCOTT of Virginia. Mr. Speaker, I rise in opposition to this 
resolution, yet again.
  I hear speech after speech from the other side about the deficit and 
debt, and here I see this resolution, which increases the deficit.
  Let's start with some facts. Every single Democratic Presidential 
administration since Kennedy has left for their Republican successor a 
better deficit situation than they inherited, and every Republican 
President since Nixon has left for the Democrats a worse deficit 
situation than they inherited, all without exception.
  Here we are again. A Republican President following a Democratic 
President and, once again, a budget that would explode the deficit and 
national debt, just like clockwork, with their tax cuts for 
corporations and the top 1 percent.
  Trump's first term added over $7 trillion to the national debt, and 
he wants to double down and do it all over again.
  As the ranking member of the Committee on Education and Workforce, I 
am particularly outraged that Republicans want to partially fund these 
tax cuts for corporations and billionaires by making cuts to education 
programs and child nutrition programs. This resolution will direct them 
to cut Medicaid, ripping healthcare away from millions of Americans.
  There is nothing fiscally responsible about this budget. It will add 
to the deficit, and the resolution wants to further inflict pain on 
working families and the middle class.
  Mr. Speaker, I ask my colleagues to oppose this resolution for the 
damage it will do to the economy and to the deficit.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from 
Pennsylvania (Mr. Meuser), my friend.
  Mr. MEUSER. Mr. Speaker, I thank my friend from Texas for his 
leadership.
  Mr. Speaker, in order for us to deliver one big, beautiful 
reconciliation bill, one that extends the provisions of the Tax Cuts 
and Jobs Act, reins in regulations of wasteful spending, unleashes 
American energy, secures the border, curbs inflation, and restores 
American growth and competitiveness, we first must pass the budget 
resolution.
  This resolution, Mr. Speaker, is no more than a bridge to 
reconciliation and to the golden era of the American economy. Frankly, 
what that bridge is made of really makes no difference, so long as we 
cross it. Delaying this vote in a symbolic protest only weakens our 
ability to act.
  Every day we wait, we put our economy, our national security, and our 
momentum at risk.
  The American people voted for bold action, Mr. Speaker, and President 
Trump and we in Congress intend to deliver.
  The reconciliation process begins with this resolution. Let's not 
protest the bridge that gets us there. Let's cross it and achieve the 
results the American people expect from the Republican majority.
  Let's pass this and deliver a new golden age in America.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1\1/2\ minutes to the 
gentleman from Massachusetts (Mr. Neal), the ranking member of the Ways 
and Means Committee.
  (Mr. NEAL asked and was given permission to revise and extend his 
remarks.)
  Mr. NEAL. Mr. Speaker, the proposal that we are hearing from the 
other side is reckless and irresponsible.
  What they are saying is what they usually say: Let's complain about 
the size of the national debt and then borrow the money for tax cuts to 
go to people at the very top.
  I defy anybody on this side to say right now that that is not what 
happened in 2017. They borrowed $2.3 trillion, gave a tax cut to the 
wealthiest amongst us, and then complained about Biden running up the 
national debt.

[[Page H1548]]

  The arithmetic doesn't work on this. The messaging might remain 
consistent, but what I have just said is entirely accurate. The money 
was borrowed in 2017. Then, when you look at tax distribution tables, 
just take a look at who got the money. The tax cut for the person at 
the top was 288 times what it was for the person making less than 
$50,000 a year.
  These are the numbers. They don't lie. The messaging that comes from 
the other side would have you believe that they are on top of defending 
Medicare, Social Security, and Medicaid. They are threatening all three 
with these proposals.
  I have not seen anything in my time like this, making massive cuts to 
Medicaid, closing Social Security offices, threatening Medicare, laying 
off veterans at veteran services offices, and then providing a tax cut 
to those in billionaire heaven down in the Cabinet.
  Let's have an honest discussion between the two parties about fiscal 
policy.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield 2 minutes to the gentleman from 
Texas (Mr. Roy), a fellow Budget Committee member.
  Mr. ROY. Mr. Speaker, I thank my friend from Texas for yielding. I 
appreciate the able job that he has done in ushering through a 
responsible budget on the House side of the Capitol. Unfortunately, we 
are here debating an irresponsible budget sent over to us from the 
Senate.
  First, before my colleagues on the other side of the aisle applaud me 
for my opposition to the Senate bill, my colleagues on the other side 
of the aisle refuse to acknowledge any program that they don't think 
they can just continue to shovel money out from, despite the fact it 
has terrible outcomes.
  Medicaid is debilitating the vulnerable, not helping them. We are 
shoveling money out to the able-bodied on the back of expansion of 
ObamaCare. We are crippling the very program they say they want to 
uphold while we allow money laundering to California, which they brag 
about openly, to give money to those who are here illegally and to 
destroy the program with an FMAP rate that is higher than the 
vulnerable, giving out more money than we even give to Medicare.

  To my friends on this side of the aisle: When are we going to get 
serious about spending?
  The House budget actually does a job of trying to get to budget 
neutrality, balancing tax policy and spending policy. The Senate sent 
over a joke, and we are going to capitulate to the Senate, knowing full 
well that the Senate instructions carry the day.
  We are going to be sitting there in a reconciliation debate where we 
are going to end up on the short end of the stick. Worse, the American 
people are going to end up on the short end of the stick because it 
absolutely increases deficits. No one can deny it.
  Anyone who wants to get in a room and come debate me with a 
whiteboard, show me the math. At some point, if you are in Congress, 
pass a math test because the Senate bill doesn't add up. It will 
destroy this country with more deficits and the inflation tax that is 
crippling the average American family.
  Mr. Speaker, I will not vote for the Senate bill.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from California (Ms. Chu), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Ms. CHU. Mr. Speaker, I once again rise in opposition to the 
Republican rip-off.
  Let's be crystal clear about what Senate Republicans did to this 
budget resolution. They made a terrible bill that rips off middle-class 
Americans even worse.
  They are telling you that two plus two equals zero in this budget 
resolution to obfuscate the truth. It will explode our national debt. 
It will make the Trump tax scam permanent. It will make devastating and 
inhumane cuts to lifesaving services for working Americans to fund tax 
giveaways to the ultrarich.
  Instead of standing up for their constituents, Republicans bend the 
knee to their wannabe emperor and his court of jesters and lackeys in 
the White House.
  This budget resolution tells us exactly who the Republicans are 
working for and who they want to help, and it is not the American 
people.
  Mr. Speaker, it is a betrayal, and I won't stand for it.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentleman from Kentucky (Mr. McGarvey), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Mr. McGARVEY. Mr. Speaker, I can tell you exactly what is going on in 
Louisville, Kentucky, right now. Grocery prices are up, and retirement 
savings are in chaos.
  Republicans could put an end to this crisis, but instead, they are 
going to make things worse.
  Republicans are about to hand billionaires like Elon Musk $5.3 
trillion in tax cuts, the biggest billionaire tax cut in American 
history. To pay for it, Republicans are cutting health insurance for 
families; ripping away food from kids, seniors, and veterans; and 
cutting public education, all while increasing the national debt by $5 
trillion.
  I don't ever want to hear a Republican complain about the debt again 
because no matter how they try to cook the books--believe me, they are 
doing that, too--they cannot hide from the negative impact this budget 
will have.
  Seniors will lose healthcare coverage. Veterans will lose coverage 
for the medications they need. Kids will go hungry. For what? So Elon 
Musk pays even less in taxes? It is reckless and it is wrong.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentleman from Rhode Island (Mr. Amo), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Mr. AMO. Mr. Speaker, Republicans refuse to listen. They refused in 
February when they spiked my amendments to support Medicaid and SNAP, 
and they refused again today. This is despite the pleas of Americans 
protesting Donald Trump and Republicans' plan to steal their healthcare 
and let kids go hungry and despite the overwhelming majority crying out 
for everyday Americans over the whims of billionaires.
  Clearly, Republicans don't care about the facts or figures. Maybe 
they will listen to my constituent Al. Al is a 74-year-old resident of 
an assisted living facility in East Providence. He is petrified of 
Republican cuts that will force him onto the street. Al needs Medicare 
and Medicaid to make ends meet. Even with assistance, he lives on $120 
a month. That is $30 a week.
  It is not fear-mongering to say that Republicans' plans would hurt Al 
to prop up billionaires.
  I will be voting ``no'' for the middle class, for families, for 
seniors, and for folks like Al.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from Minnesota (Ms. Omar), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.
  Ms. OMAR. Mr. Speaker, this budget resolution isn't about fiscal 
responsibility. It is about enriching the ultrawealthy and betraying 
working people. It is about gutting Medicaid and SNAP so that the rich 
can continue to hoard more tax breaks.
  These cuts do not make our country stronger. They make it sicker, 
hungrier, and more unfair.
  This time, Republicans are not even pretending to pay for it. Senate 
Republicans are rewriting the rules and inventing fake budget math to 
claim that these tax cuts will not cost us anything.
  In truth, they cost the American people $7 trillion in total. All of 
this is being done to pave the way for a Trump term built on fear, 
lawlessness, and vengeance.
  President Trump is firing public servants, slashing critical 
programs, and enacting chaotic tariffs that will raise costs. This 
chaotic administration is trying to drag us into a recession. Instead 
of stopping it, congressional Republicans are acting as willing 
accomplices.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from Vermont (Ms. Balint), a distinguished member of the 
Budget Committee.

[[Page H1549]]

  

  Ms. BALINT. Mr. Speaker, I rise in strong opposition to the 
Republican budget.
  Let's lay out where we are. Republicans control the House, the 
Senate, and the White House, and they could be passing legislation 
right now to actually lower costs for families on groceries, 
prescription drugs, and housing.
  Instead, they are attacking the very programs that working people and 
middle-class people across this country rely on. They have proposed a 
budget that gives massive tax cuts to the wealthiest and the 
corporations.
  How will they pay for it? They will pay for it by making cuts to 
Medicaid to the tune of $880 billion and deep cuts to SNAP benefits, 
food assistance to families. On top of that, they will add to the 
deficit.

                              {time}  1800

  When I vote against this Republican budget, I will be thinking about 
all of the working families back in Vermont, thinking of the families 
who aren't going to be able to drop their kids off at a Head Start 
program, and thinking about the small businesses who tell me that the 
Trump on-again, off-again global tariffs are crushing them.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to reject this reckless budget.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from Washington (Ms. Jayapal), a distinguished member of 
the Budget Committee.
  Ms. JAYAPAL. Mr. Speaker, the Republican majority leader said: You 
can be what you want in America.
  That is what he said, but you can't be what you want in Republicans' 
America. Factually, the top 1 percent of billionaires and millionaires 
in America are worth more than 291 million Americans, 90 percent of the 
country, because we are rigging the economy against them. That is what 
Republicans are doing.
  There are 801 U.S. billionaires who have $6 trillion of wealth, and 
Republicans now want to give a $4.5 trillion tax cut to the wealthiest 
billionaires.
  That is what Donald Trump said: ``You're rich as hell.'' ``We're 
going to give you tax cuts.'' This is on the backs of working Americans 
because voting ``yes'' for this resolution is voting for a minimum of 
$880 billion in cuts to Medicaid.
  That is healthcare taken away from 72 million Americans. That is 
nursing homes taken away for five out of eight seniors, and that is 
healthcare taken away for 38 million kids. Vote ``no'' on this 
disastrous Republican resolution.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I wonder how my colleagues justified the 
$800 billion tax break for multibillion dollar, multinational green 
energy corporations.
  Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the gentleman from North Carolina 
(Mr. Moore), my friend and former speaker of the house from the Tar 
Heel State.
  Mr. MOORE of North Carolina. Mr. Speaker, this is an opportunity this 
evening to vote for a budget resolution that extends tax relief for 
working families.
  If Members want to support working families in America, vote for 
this. It makes the Trump tax cuts permanent. It also provides security 
for our southern border. It unleashes American energy, and it sets the 
stage for generational spending reform. This is an opportunity today to 
move this resolution forward.
  There is a lot of fear-mongering on the other side. As has been said 
before, the words ``Medicaid'' and ``Medicare'' are not in there. It is 
simply wrong. ``Medicaid'' is not in there.
  It keeps getting said, and I guess if you don't have the facts on 
your side, sometimes you make up facts, and that is what is happening 
from the other side. Yet, the American people know, which is why they 
elected Donald Trump this year. They know what a responsible budget 
means, and that is why we need to pass this.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentleman from the Commonwealth of Virginia (Mr. Beyer), the 
distinguished senior Democrat on the Joint Economic Committee.
  Mr. BEYER. Mr. Speaker, I rise today in strong opposition to this 
budget resolution, which is a recipe for economic disaster for our 
country.
  Americans have been clear. They want lower prices and an economy that 
works for them. Yet, at every turn, this administration and my 
Republican colleagues are doubling down on policies that raise prices, 
undermine our economy, and make our wealth inequality even worse.
  Mr. Speaker, I spent much of today with U.S. Trade Ambassador Greer, 
and it is clear that the administration's myth that tariffs will 
reshape the economy by bullying our closest allies is nothing more than 
a fantasy.
  The Trump tariffs represent the largest tax hike in American history. 
They have caused chaos in the markets and stripped millions from 
Americans' retirement plans. Consumer confidence is plummeting, 
reaching its lowest level in 12 years, and economists are increasingly 
convinced that we are heading for a recession.
  This budget will balloon our deficit, leading to higher interest 
rates. It will slash critical investments and will decimate essential 
programs that support the people who we represent, all of this to help 
billionaires and corporations get tax cuts that they do not need and 
that our country cannot afford.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, may I inquire as to how much 
time is remaining.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Rutherford). The gentleman from 
Pennsylvania has 3\1/2\ minutes remaining. The gentleman from Texas has 
2 minutes remaining.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 1 minute to the 
gentlewoman from New Mexico (Ms. Stansbury), distinguished member of 
the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
  Ms. STANSBURY. Mr. Speaker, the amount of gaslighting in this Chamber 
this afternoon has been absolutely stunning, truly, as I sat here this 
afternoon.
  What the GOP is doing is they are introducing a budget resolution 
that takes the worst of the House and the worst of the Senate and puts 
it in one big, beautiful bill that is going to blow a hole through the 
national debt. It will do that by raising the debt ceiling by $4 
trillion, cutting $1.5 trillion in vital programs, giving $7 trillion 
in permanent tax breaks to billionaires, and raising the debt by $37 
trillion over the next 30 years.
  How are Republicans going to pay for it? On the backs of the American 
people with cuts to Medicaid, food assistance, housing, school meals, 
clean energy, and selling your public lands.
  Mr. Speaker, the craziest thing is the majority said that Republicans 
wouldn't vote for it if it would raise the debt and the debt ceiling, 
and here they are.

  Bravo to my friends. My Republican colleagues are blowing a hole 
through the debt ceiling, and we will vote ``no.''
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield 30 seconds to the 
gentleman from Tennessee (Mr. Cohen), distinguished member of the 
Committee on the Judiciary.
  Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, this is about the billionaires. It is not 
about the middle class. It is not about a budget deficit because the 
majority wouldn't have to give the money to the billionaires if my 
colleagues on the other side of the aisle gave it to decreasing the 
deficit.
  This is the party that is trying to kill Social Security through the 
DOGE boys, who are cutting out services for people who use the phone to 
deal with their Social Security and eliminating employees from Social 
Security. The majority is trying to kill Social Security. That is who 
it is, and Republicans want to help the billionaires and hurt the folks 
who live on Social Security.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I am prepared to close and I reserve the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. BOYLE of Pennsylvania. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the balance of 
my time.
  Mr. Speaker, I think it has been a good debate that has brought out a 
couple of clear facts. Even though President Trump directed House 
Republicans last night to ``close your eyes'' and just pass the 
resolution, I believe the speakers on this side have opened the eyes of 
the American people.

[[Page H1550]]

  These are indisputable facts: the largest cut to Medicaid in American 
history in order to help pay for a tax cut, 83 percent of which goes to 
the richest 1 percent of Americans.
  Indeed, this is a big, beautiful bill for billionaires. Vote ``no.''
  Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
  Mr. ARRINGTON. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself the balance of my time.
  Mr. Speaker, I am obsessed with the threat of a looming debt crisis 
and the irreparable harm it would do to our great economy, our national 
security, our leadership in the world, and our children's future.
  We have an opportunity. It is a historic generational opportunity to 
right this ship, but we have to grow the economy. We have to have 
progrowth policies in place that will unleash growth and prosperity, 
and we have to get serious about the first and most important job of 
the Federal Government, which is providing for the common defense.
  We did that in the House bill, but what we did in the House bill that 
the Senate fell far short in doing is to have a balanced budget 
resolution, to have a commitment to enforceable spending reduction 
targets that would bring the debt to GDP down and put our Nation on 
good fiscal footing and a sustainable path.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues today to demand that the House 
budget resolution and that our fiscal framework with our budget targets 
guide the final reconciliation bill.
  Mr. Speaker, again, this may be the last best opportunity to save our 
country from fiscal ruin. The formula is all there in the House budget 
resolution.
  Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues to demand that that is what drives 
the bill at the end of the day. God bless America, and I yield back the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. BISHOP. Mr. Speaker, the House will vote on the Senate revised 
budget resolution this evening.
  The budget resolution requires seven House committees to cut a 
minimum of $1.5 trillion in mandatory spending combined over the next 
decade. Of that amount, at least $880 billion is directed to come from 
the House Energy and Commerce Committee. Most budget experts have 
agreed that it would require deep cuts in Medicaid to produce these 
savings.
  In my home state of Georgia, Medicaid is a lifeline for its low-
income populations, seniors, disabled individuals, and children. It is 
the primary source of long-term care, the single largest payer in the 
country for behavioral health services, and a principal source of 
insurance for pregnant women and children with disabilities.
  One of the proposals that is now being discussed in Congress to 
achieve Medicaid savings is adding work requirements. In fact, Georgia 
added work requirements to its Medicaid program in July 2023 through 
its Pathways to Coverage program. It is currently the only state to 
offer Medicaid coverage to low-income adults that is contingent on work 
and other qualifying activities.
  According to the Georgia Budget and Policy Institute, however, there 
have been significant problems since this experiment in Medicaid reform 
was established two years ago. It is failing to achieve its two primary 
objectives of enrolling people in health care and getting them to work.
  Georgia's Pathways to Coverage program is supposed to cover nearly a 
quarter-million low-income Georgians who can prove they are working, 
studying or volunteering. Only about 6,500 of them, however have been 
able to gain and maintain coverage.
  In Georgia's Second Congressional District, which I represent, some 
of the poorest counties have fewer than 10 enrollees despite having 
high percentages of uninsured populations.
  The Georgia Budget and Policy Institute also found that Georgia's 
Pathways to Coverage program created burdensome red tape and paperwork 
for state agencies and Medicaid recipients.
  Georgia's experience offers a stark warning for the Nation as 
Republicans consider steep Medicaid cuts and work requirements for low-
income Americans. The focus must be on increasing enrollment in health 
insurance for people who need it. The focus should not be on wasting 
taxpayer dollars and creating more administrative burdens.
  We want people to be healthy so that they can work. It shouldn't be 
the other way around.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Womack). All time for debate has 
expired. Pursuant to House Resolution 313, the previous question is 
ordered.
  Pursuant to clause 1(c) of Rule XIX, further consideration of H. Con. 
Res. 14 is postponed.

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