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  • 5 months ago
At today's House Financial Services Committee hearing, Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-NY) questioned Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent.
Transcript
00:00Mr. Bassett, let me, you know, I'm just a plain, simple man, the average everyday American
00:06is looking at this hearing today. So can you tell me, first, does trade deficits constitute
00:19a national emergency? The hollowing out of the U.S. manufacturing class—
00:27No, just yes or no? Yes or no? Yes or no, sir?
00:30It's a national emergency, sir.
00:31It does, it does. You're telling me trade deficits equals a national, or creates.
00:38Persistent and prolonged, yes, sir.
00:41And do you know also, sir, that for the last four decades, we've had trade deficits in the United
00:52States of America, and nobody said it was an emergency? Democratic and Republican presidents?
01:00You know what that says to me? That it's not an emergency, because it hasn't been for four decades.
01:08It says to me that we should bring tariffs back to the United States Congress,
01:16Congress, so that we can make that determination, as the Constitution has said, and not try to go
01:22around Congress. That's just unbelievable to me. Let me ask this question. Maybe I'm—
01:31I missed it. Who was the president, and who has been the president since January 20th, 2025?
01:43Donald J. Trump. Okay. And who was the president in 2024?
01:53One believes President Biden.
01:54One believes? Are you one of those non-believers that the election, the American people didn't vote?
02:01Uh, I, uh, I am not.
02:05You're not? You said one believes?
02:11Do you believe in the Constitution of the United States?
02:13I believe in the Constitution of the United States.
02:16So you believe in it, without any second thought. You don't have to think about it. You believe in it.
02:24And you would abide by it. Is that correct?
02:26I have, and I do, sir.
02:28Okay. But do you know that a president has said he may or may not? He don't know?
02:35Let me ask this question. I can't—I couldn't believe my ears.
02:42Sunday, during NBC's Meet the Press,
02:46President Trump credited himself for the strong economy in 2024, when Joe Biden was president.
03:02But then he blamed President Biden for a weak economy in 2025, when he was president.
03:12Now, I'm not so sure how the American people puts that together.
03:17In 2024, strong economy, he tried to take the credit. In 2025, when he's the president,
03:25he blames Joe Biden.
03:26That doesn't make sense to me. I don't think it makes sense to most Americans. And I hope,
03:34Mr. Secretary, you're a businessman. It doesn't make sense to you either.
03:39It can't possibly make sense to you. Let me ask this question. If a government—
03:50say, look, Argentina—I remember when I came here, and Argentina kept failing to pay its debt,
03:56not once or twice or three times. And we were all upset about it, and we said that they needed a
04:06host—somebody needed to take over their government. You know, somebody should help the president of
04:15Argentina. If the United States didn't pay his debt or something, we'd be very upset about that,
04:23and we couldn't pay our debt. I mean, that's one of our focuses. Is that not correct?
04:26Sir, the United States will always meet its debt obligations.
04:30Always. Well, let me ask you this.
04:36Donald Trump,
04:39the dealmaker—and you didn't answer Ms. Velasquez's questions—no deals,
04:43although he said three weeks ago that there would be deals—but Donald Trump,
04:46not once, not twice, not three times, not four times, not five times, but six times—failed to pay
04:58his debts and his business and went bankrupt. And you're going to call that a good businessman?
05:03The gentleman's time has expired. The gentleman's time has expired. The gentleman woman from Missouri,
05:11Ms. Wagner, the chair of our subcommittee on capital markets, is recognized for five minutes.
05:16I thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I will try to keep my—
Comments
1
  • rhph5 months ago
    Meeks is no match for Bessent intellectual ly, or in professional accomplishment, or in humor. One guy is out of control suffering apoplexy while rhe Treasury Secretary quietly smiles at the train wreck .
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