Congressman Keller stands up for taxpayers, votes against $2 trillion Biden bailout

Press Release

Date: March 10, 2021
Location: Washington, DC

Today, Congressman Fred Keller (R-PA) released the following statement after voting in opposition to President Biden and House Democrats' $2 trillion spending package:

"It is disingenuous to the people we represent to call this legislation "COVID relief' when less than 10 percent of its $2 trillion price tag goes to public health measures. Before Congress spends another cent of the people's money to address the pandemic, we must first drive out the funds already appropriated, $1 trillion of which has yet to be spent. Washington Democrats' endless spending on non-COVID related items is reckless and only serves to hurt those who they claim to help. Americans need relief that is temporary, targeted, and tied to COVID-19. Unfortunately, this bill fails on each of those benchmarks, and our kids and grandkids will be paying for it in higher taxes and lost opportunities for generations to come."

BACKGROUND:

Last month, Congressman Keller penned an Op-Ed on the real cost of Biden's bailout which ran in the Washington Times, as well as the Sunbury Daily Item, Williamsport Sun-Gazette, Lewistown Sentinel, Lock Haven Express, Towanda Daily Review and Milton Standard-Journal.

In his Op-Ed, Keller explained that only 9 percent of this spending plan goes to public health spending, while the other 91 percent addresses political items unrelated to the pandemic, including:

$12 billion in foreign aid
$510 billion in local and state bailouts
$86 billion to prop up multiemployer pension plans
$34 billion to expand Obamacare
$200 million for the Institute of Museum and Library Services
$135 million for the National Endowment for the Arts
$135 million for the National Endowment for the Humanities

The vast majority--95 percent--of the $130 billion for K-12 schools will not actually help get kids back in the classroom because it will not be spent this year.

Because of the exorbitant price-tag of this proposal and how it has been fast-tracked through Congress, the $1.9 trillion cost must be offset, which could trigger cuts to existing federal programs that seniors, veterans, and farmers rely on. That could include an approximately $30 billion cut to the Medicare program every year for the next 10 years starting in 2022, as well as cuts to payments to military retirement and farm support programs.


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