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Hi, everybody. Our top priority as a nation must be growing the economy, creating good
jobs, and rebuilding opportunity for the middle class.
But two months ago, Congress allowed a series of automatic budget cuts to fall across the
federal government that would do the opposite. In Washington-speak, these cuts were called
the "sequester." It was a bad idea then. And as the country saw this week, it's a bad
idea now. Because of these reckless cuts, there are
parents whose kids just got kicked out of Head Start programs scrambling for a solution.
There are seniors who depend on programs like Meals on Wheels to live independently looking
for help. There are military communities -- families that have already sacrificed enough
-- coping under new strains. All because of these cuts.
This week, the sequester hurt travelers, who were stuck for hours in airports and on planes,
and rightly frustrated by it. And, maybe because they fly home each weekend, the Members
of Congress who insisted these cuts take hold finally realized that they actually apply
to them too. Republicans claimed victory when the sequester
first took effect, and now they've decided it was a bad idea all along. Well, first,
they should look at their own budget. If the cuts they propose were applied across
the board, the FAA would suffer cuts three times deeper.
So Congress passed a temporary fix. A Band-Aid. But these cuts are scheduled to keep falling
across other parts of the government that provide vital services for the American people.
And we can't just keep putting Band-Aids on every cut. It's not a responsible way to
govern. There is only one way to truly fix the sequester: by replacing it before it causes
further damage. A couple weeks ago, I put forward a budget
that replaces the next several years of these dumb cuts with smarter cuts; reforms our tax
code to close wasteful special interest loopholes; and invests in things like education, research,
and manufacturing that will create new jobs right now.
So I hope Members of Congress will find the same sense of urgency and bipartisan cooperation
to help the families still in the crosshairs of these cuts. They may not feel the pain
felt by kids kicked off Head Start, or the 750,000 Americans projected to lose their
jobs because of these cuts, or the long-term unemployed who will be further hurt by them.
But that pain is real. The American people worked too hard, for too
long, rebuilding from one economic crisis just to see your elected officials keep causing
more. Our economy is growing. Our deficits are shrinking. We're creating jobs on a
consistent basis. But we need to do more to help middle-class families get ahead, and
give more folks a chance to earn their way into the middle class. And we can, if we
work together. That's what you expect. That's what I'm going to work every single
day to help deliver. Thank you.