Pelosi Floor Speech in Support of the American Rescue Plan Act
March 10, 2021
Contact: Speaker's Press Office,
202-226-7616
Washington, D.C. – Speaker Nancy Pelosi delivered remarks on the Floor of the House of Representatives in support of H.R. 1319, the American Rescue Plan Act, which implements President Biden's urgently-needed plan to crush the virus, put vaccines in people's arms, money in people's pockets, children safely back in school and workers back in jobs. Below are the Speaker's remarks:
Speaker Pelosi. Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I thank the gentleman for yielding and thank him for his extraordinary leadership in putting nearly $1 trillion into the pockets of the American people. I thank him and Mr. Yarmuth, the Chair of the Budget Committee, for their leadership on this legislation, of course on this debate this afternoon.
It was dazzling to see them and the Democratic chairs and Members speak up about this important legislation. And thank you, Mr. Chairman, for pointing out the inconsistency on the part of our colleagues across the aisle in complaining about money helping the poorest of poor children in our country while they didn't hesitate to give large amounts of money to the richest people in America in the Republican tax scam. Your charts were very, eloquent, Mr. Chairman.
And to hear our Members speak about the terms of this bill, the values that are in it, the plan that it has, why they were voting yes on the bill. And to hear Republicans talk about why they would vote no. It's typical that they vote no and take the dough. And this bill has bipartisan support across the country, not only among the general public, but in mayors and selectmen and city councilpersons and county executives who are Republican, eagerly awaiting the passage of this bill because they know at their level what a difference it will make in the lives of their constituents, the American people.
You know, tomorrow, this is a critical moment in our country's history, tomorrow the world will mark the one year since COVID-19 was officially declared a global pandemic by the World Health Organization. At that time, just over 1,000 Americans had contracted the disease. Thirty-eight had died. Since that day, one year ago from tomorrow, nearly 30 million Americans have become infected. Over half a million Americans have died, more lives than were lost in combat in all of America's wars against foreign enemies combined. Each of those lives is precious to us. We feel each loss profoundly and pray for their families and for the families of those who have contracted the virus and are still affected by it, and through it all, an historic economic crisis has raged.
A full year later, 18 million Americans are still out of work, according to the statistics at the end of last week, and nearly 10 million jobs may have been lost. We hope to stop that, and the most vulnerable among us have been disproportionately affected – moms pushed out of the labor market, women and minority-owned businesses forced to shutter, communities of color facing rising disparities.
Today, we have a real opportunity for change. Mr. Speaker, as we serve in Congress with each other, we learn about each other's districts, each other's priorities and the rest, and we learn about each other's ‘why.' Why did you come to Congress? Why are you here? Each of us has come to Congress with a purpose.
My purpose, my ‘why,' are the children. As a mother of five, raising my kids, seeing all the attention and all that they needed, I was horrified by the fact that one in five children in America lives in poverty and goes to sleep hungry, goes to sleep hungry in America at night. That is my ‘why,' that is why I went from homemaker to the House of Representatives.
And that is why, when people ask me, ‘What do you think the three most important issues are facing the Congress?' I always say the same thing: our children, our children, our children; their health, their education, the economic security of their families, a safe, healthy environment in which they can thrive and a nation at peace in which they can reach their fulfillment. Several of those priorities are addressed in this legislation, again, this legislation, which has bipartisan support throughout the country.
The Biden – and let me heap praises on President Biden for the values, for the vision, the strategic thinking, for the knowledge that he has brought to, what, as you said earlier, we had in the works for a while but freshened up by current events, the vaccines and what those possibilities are. The Biden American Rescue Plan is about the children, their health, their education, the economic security of their families, again.
Our children's health is greatly protected by crushing the virus and by expanding access to health care through the Affordable Care Act expansions in here, Medicaid through FMAP and in other ways as well.
Our children's education is advanced with a $170 billion to open schools safely, including $130 billion for K-12. This funding will help address the social and emotional challenges that children face as well as learning loss as well as opening the schools safely. We know what that requires. It requires ventilation, space, more teachers, more space, to name a few things. In terms of the economic security of children's families, this legislation, as I said earlier, Mr. Neal, puts nearly $1 trillion in the pockets of the American people.
Republicans did not seem to object when they put that much money in the pockets of 83 percent of their tax scam into the top one percent, but they seem to have a discomfort level when it reaches the poorest of the poor or those in the middle class who are struggling.
So, this legislation does that. It includes the refundable tax credit, which will lift 50 percent of children out of poverty. How do you say no to lifting 50 percent of impoverished children in America out of poverty?
Children also benefit from the Earned Income Tax Credit, direct payments and enhanced Unemployment Insurance benefits for their families. And the economic security of children is also enhanced by pension security of their grandparents, which is historically secured in this bill. Sometimes when I have young people come to my office and ask them – it's all about the children, it's all about the future. High school students, college students, they talk about the security of their grandparents as important, because to the extent that their parents can focus on them rather than worry about the financial security of their grandparents, it's very important to the family across the board.
For the children, the American Rescue Plan also includes $12 billion in nutrition assistance to help the estimated 11 million children still going hungry. When I talk about this with my family, I say to my kids, ‘You know, millions of children are food insecure in our country. It's horrible.' They'll say, ‘Mom, just say it another way. They're hungry. They're hungry.' Some only get their food at school. They go to sleep hungry. If you call that food insecurity, okay, but understand this, these little children are hungry; $12 billion.
$43 billion in rental, homeowner and other housing assistance so that children of families who are on the verge of eviction can have the comfort of knowing that that won't happen. They'll have the comfort of home.
$45 billion of child care to keep children learning and parents earning. That is always necessary, but even more so with the 2.3 million women losing their jobs, many of them moms.
Now, everything that I mentioned here is related to the coronavirus. We have hunger issues in our country bigger than even this. We have housing issues. We have child care issues and the rest, very important, in our country and will require more than this, but this is coronavirus-centered.
Child care – I'll say it again, $45 billion, most of it for child care, a little bit of it for Head Start. Parents – children learning, parents earning. This is important and central to how families get through this crisis, coronavirus crisis. All of these provisions in the bill are enhanced by strengthening the support for our heroes at the state and local level, hence, our bill was called the Heroes Act. Much of that is contained in this legislation. Heroes, because our workers at the state, county and local level, our health care workers, our first responders, police and fire, our sanitation, transportation, our food workers, our teachers, our teachers, our teachers make our lives possible and make the existence of our children better. Because many of these jobs are jobs that are needed. Whatever we spend on education in this bill is a small percentage of what state and local government spend on education. More than 90 percent of it comes from the state and local.
So, in this legislation, we are assuring that state and local government keep them in their job, these heroes we talked about and will help fight the fiscal pressure that they have because of the cost of addressing the coronavirus crisis as well as revenue lost because of shutdowns and the rest.
I was raised in a mayor household, as daughter and sister of the Mayor of Baltimore. The recognition of the role that local government plays is very important to me, local and state, but the local government is the first line of defense. We are determined to fight any attempts to weaken what was in this legislation for local government. One of the values respected in this legislation is our commitment to communities of color, including Native Americans especially, who continue to face serious health and economic disparities.
This legislation will, among other steps, address the eight in ten minority-owned businesses on the brink of closure, eight in ten minority-owned businesses. The American Rescue Plan, Mr. Speaker, is a force for fairness and justice in America.
This legislation is one of the most transformative and historic bills any of us will ever have the opportunity to support. It's one of the most transformative that I have seen in my over 30 years in the Congress. It is as consequential as the Affordable Care Act, which expanded health care to more than 20 million people and made benefits much better for over 150 million families.
Today, we have a decision to make of tremendous, tremendous consequence. A decision that will make a difference for millions of Americans, saving lives and livelihoods. And with all of the decisions, it is a decision that we will have to answer for. We will give the American Rescue Plan a resounding and hopefully bipartisan vote to reflect the bipartisan support that it has in the country. And we will get to work immediately to deliver lifesaving resources springing from this bill as soon as it is passed and signed, as we join President Biden in the promise, in his promise that at last Help Is On The Way.
For The People, For The Children, I urge a yes vote and yield back the balance of my time.
# # #