We cannot continue to push our debt on to future generations.
From 2019 to 2023, the Federal spending grew by 40 percent.
Interest payments on our debt are going to be the single most expensive thing we do in the Federal Government.
It is very important that we have our Federal finances in as strong of a position as possible, and an emergency fund could very well be an i...
They have a fairly--they have got somewhat larger central Government, probably budget, but they don't borrow money to spend what they want t...
Last week, I joined Sanders, Lee, Blumenthal, Crapo, Risch, and Murphy as a broad bipartisan effort to introduce the Article I Act.
I think it is great advice and I think that data was coming in while we were contending with it, and we just were stubborn in not focusing o...
I think sooner or later, when you have any understanding of fiscal policy and macroeconomics, you are going to pay the piper with inflation ...
Prudent budgeting and planning are integral for both emergency preparedness and response to be successful.
This is an expensive lesson that we have learned, and we have--Chairman Casey mentioned how it ravaged senior citizens.
Disaster can strike anyone anywhere.
We cannot adopt the model of panicked crisis governance as a standard response for emergencies.
over the last two decades, it is north of maybe $10 trillion that have been added to the Federal debt.
We are always prepared, and if you don't do that, you have to dig your hole even deeper.
I don't think we will do that until you hit the ditch fairly hard.
More money borrowed, more money spent, and it really didn't do a great job on protecting those that needed it most.