In response to the military’s widely publicized abuse of prisoners, last night the Senate added a provision to the defense authorization bill (S 2400) that would require the Pentagon to inform Congress of the status of detainees. At the end of a long day of hearings, briefings and debate, five Republicans and all but one Democrat voted to require both reporting and justification of all instances where detainees are denied POW status. The result of over a month of debate, the $447.2 billion defense bill passed Wednesday night with Patrick J. Leahy’s (D-Vermont) prisoner abuse amendment added. This amendment stipulates that detainees whose status is ambiguous must be granted the protections of the Geneva Convention and their cases be rapidly prosecuted. It is unlikely that Leahy’s amendment will survive in conference with the House, who passed their version of the defense bill May 20.
Since the defense bill authorizes an additional $25 billion for military operations that will be available upon its enactment, many have been anxious to have the measure pass quickly. Many other Democratic amendments to the defense bill were blocked by the Republican leadership, including one requiring the president to give Congress an estimate of the number of US troops that will be in Iraq next year. The Senate also agreed to an amendment proposed by John McCain (R-Arizona) that would ensure future Pentagon contracts with Boeing Co. are done responsibly.
While the House debates a 30-day extension of TEA-21, a conference committee will meet today to discuss HR 3550, which would reauthorize the existing act for six years. While many of the staff recommendations aimed at mediating the differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill are likely to be adopted by the committee, there are still large discrepancies that present real hurdles to passage. Negotiations have been complicated by a letter sent from Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta, objecting to many portions contained in versions of the bill, as well as the overall spending levels called for. Mineta's full letter is located on the analysis side of out website.
A fight is expected during the conference over what Rep. Judy Biggert (R-Illinois) sees as an inappropriate expansion of worker protections. The current language of the House bill would require all transit agencies receiving federal funds to protect the rights and benefits of workers paid with these dollars, enlarging the scope of the Davis-Bacon Act. Biggert maintains that the provision, which expands the Department of Labor’s existing jurisdiction, does not belong in a transportation bill. Seen by some as part of a larger strategy by Republicans to weaken laws governing labor relations, this push by Biggert marks the second time in two years that she has publicly battled labor unions. In 2003, she sponsored a bill that would have overhauled overtime pay regulations.
On Tuesday the Senate voted to add a provision increasing the maximum fine for broadcast indecency to the fiscal 2005 defense authorization bill. Although this provision has had broad support, it will likely be difficult to hold on to in conference, along with two more controversial ones added by the Senate on media ownership rules and television violence. Sam Brownback (R-Kansas) offered this provision, which raises the maximum fine to $275,000 from $32,500 per violation, with a $3 million cap on related violations, as a rider to the defense bill because it is almost certain to clear this year.
The Senate proposal to repeal the FCC’s rules that had made it easier for media consolidation may die in conference due to opposition from House leaders and the White House despite strong support in both the House and the Senate membership. The Senate adopted amendments that have the FCC both evaluate a broadcaster’s size and resources before levying fines as well as attempt to eliminate violent programming from prime time.
Today the House will take up HR 4613, which would provide the Pentagon with $418 billion, with $25 billion for ongoing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. The bill was approved by a voice vote by the Appropriations Committee on June 16 and House GOP leaders say they do not expect contentious floor debate. The House Rules Committee approved an open rule for the bill, allowing any germane amendment to be offered during debate.
In the Senate, Ted Stevens, R-AK, the chairman of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee and full Appropriations Committee, has scheduled markups of the Senate’s defense spending measure. Working in coordination with Senate Majority leader Bill Frist (R-Tennessee), Stevens intends to bring the spending bill to floor Wednesday. In order to complete the bill before the July 4 recess, Frist has threatened to keep the Senate in session over the weekend if work on it is not completed by Friday.
Advocates of a Senate bill (S 1700) that would provide death row inmates access to potentially exonerating DNA tests as well as enhance the quality of legal counsel in capital cases are starting to look for a new approach. While this bill has been held up on the Judiciary Committee’s agenda for weeks due to opposition from conservatives, a similar measure was easily passed in the House in the fall. The panel, scheduled to mark up the bill on Thursday, should expect a fight from Judiciary Republicans Jon Kyl of Arizona and Jeff Sessions of Alabama. While the bill’s backers do not want to abandon their stand-alone measure, they have begun exploring other options, such as offering it as an amendment to legislation that is more likely to pass.
This legislation, sponsored by Judiciary Chairman Orrin G. Hatch (R-Utah) would grant over $1 billion in five years to increase resources for forensic laboratories, test stored biological evidence, and improve law enforcement’s use of these tests. The legislation also embraces a Bush initiative to reduce the backlog of biological evidence by authorizing $755 million over 5 years to accelerate the processing of stored biological samples. Critics of the bill, including Kyl and Sessions, are wary of provisions that make $100 million in federal grants contingent on states meeting certain conditions, including ensuring that defendants have access to competent legal representation. They are expected to offer amendments to strip the bill title when the legislation is considered by the Senate committee. Assistant Attorney General William E. Moschella also recently criticized the bill for not sufficiently protecting against abusive litigation and fears these provisions will interfere with the states’ ability to carry out the death penalty.
The House followed the Senate’s lead today and passed S. 2232 by a voice vote, extending the federal flood insurance program through 2008. Funded through homeowner premiums and backed by the credit lines of the Treasury Department, the program covers almost 4.4 million homes in flood prone areas. Efforts to reduce overall costs and repeated payments to homes in frequently flooded communities yielded a $40 million pilot program that will shift payments towards federal buyout and relocation of damaged homes rather than repeated rebuilding. The House was acting under a June 30 deadline, when a temporary authorization for the program expires.
This week the House Appropriations Committee will decide whether to leave a provision in the agriculture spending bill that would make it easier for Americans to import cheaper prescription drugs. The House Agriculture Appropriations Subcommittee approved an $83.1 billion draft bill that would bar the FDA from enforcing the current ban on importing drugs. The amendment, sponsored by the subcommittee’s ranking Democrat, Marcy Kaptur of Ohio and opposed by Subcommittee Chairman Henry Bonilla (R-Texas), was adopted with the support of three Republicans.
Last year a similar proposal, opposed by both Bonilla and the White House, was added to the fiscal 2004 agriculture appropriations bill, however, it was stripped in conference. On July 25, 2003, the House passed the proposal making prescription drug imports a separate bill. According to CQ, Appropriations Chairman C.W. Bill Young (R-Florida), who supports legalizing prescription drug imports but not in an appropriations bill, this legislation has a good chance of surviving in the bill in full committee. The bill, which would fund agriculture, nutrition, rural development programs and the FDA, is scheduled to be considered on Wednesday and would provide $16.8 billion in discretionary spending. Mandatory programs, including crop subsidies and food stamp and nutrition programs, would receive $66.4 billion. While conservation programs would take a hard hit, a 17% decrease from the 2002 farm law and a 29% decrease from the authorized levels in the Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program, agencies managing food safety would all receive more money.
Tomorrow, the House is expected to pass a temporary extension of the 1996 welfare law. The bill (HR 4589) will be considered under suspension of the rules, which bars amendments, limits debate and requires two-thirds support for passage. Democrats are expected to complain that House Republican reauthorization efforts have been excessively partisan.
The law originally was set to expire Sept. 30, 2002 but lawmakers have renewed it for short periods while they work on a full reauthorization. The House measure extends the program through Sept. 30.
The House passed a reauthorization bill in Feb. 2003 that would require participants to work 40 hours a week by 2008 and would fund new programs to promote marriage. The bill backed by the Bush administration, would provide an additional $1 billion in mandatory child care funding over the next five years.
The Senate Finance Committee amended the House bill last year with a measure that would require recipients to work 34 hours a week, with a requirement of 24 hours a week for parents with children younger than 6.
When Senate Republicans brought the measure to the floor last March, Sen. Grassley (R-Iowa) thought he would be able to get the bill passed after the Senate added an additional $6 billion in mandatory child care funding. The sum would be a significant increase for states, which currently receive $4.8 billion annually in child care funding from the government.
However, Senate Democrats demanded that they be allowed to offer an amendment by Sen. Boxer (D-California) that would increase the minimum wage from $5.15 to $7 an hour over the next two years.
Republicans refused to allow that vote, complaining that the minimum wage was unrelated to the welfare debate and that Democrats were more interested in tying up the Senate floor than passing legislation. Senate Republicans fell nine votes short of invoking cloture on the bill, which would have limited debate and blocked further Democratic amendments on a series of workplace and labor issues.
Governors and state welfare officials are lobbying for both sides to reach a compromise and pass a reauthorization bill this year. The fear is that additional child care money in future years could be difficult to secure because of deepening budget deficits.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tennessee) on June 18 told the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB) that he and House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Illinois) have reached agreement on a path forward on the highway/transit reauthorization which could result in the bill being completed before the August recess.
Staff sources are indicating the two leaders may be planning to advance a bill which would set the funding level for the programs at $275 billion over six years. No one has indicated yet whether the White House has backed-down from its threat to veto any bill with a price tag over $256 billion.
It remains to be seen whether any enthusiasm can be generated amongst rank and file senators for a bill at this funding level. Obtaining a veto-proof majority at this level may be impossible if the pursuit of "equity" in the highway formula continues to be the foremost goal of Senate conference leaders.
We will be taking the pulse of key leaders on Capitol Hill on this issue in the days ahead and will have frequent updates.
In keeping with the intention of House and Senate leaders to complete action this summer on at least the Defense and Homeland Security appropriation bills, both sides of the Capitol have reported the Homeland Security bill from their respective committees. The bills are virtually identical in aggregate spending, but differences exist in providing grants for first responders.
Both bills reduce funding for first responders from last year’s levels with the House providing $1.2 billion, 26 percent less than FY 2004. The Senate bill provides $940 million, a 45 percent decrease.
The Senate bill provides $100 million more than the House in firefighter grants, but both bills reduce spending from last year’s level of $750 million. The Senate also provides higher funding for Urban Area Security Initiative grants of $1.4 billion compared to $1 billion in the House. House members have engaged in heated debate over urban versus rural area funding and defeated an amendment directing an additional $450 million to urban areas considered most susceptible to terrorist activities. This urban versus rural debate continues in the authorizing committees as well, where four different House committees have adopted three competing bills to restructure the grant distribution system.
Urban Search and Rescue (USAR) teams can also expect reduced funding from levels of the past two years, which provided appropriations of $60 million each year. The Senate bill halves that amount. The House bill does not provide a specific line item for USAR but is likely consistent with the Administration’s budget request of $7 million. Both bills express concern about and set priority for completing funding for dual response caches. The House bill also asks for a report from DHS about the prospect of expanding the number of existing USAR teams beyond 28.
Last night 48 House Democrats joined 203 Republicans to pass the long-stalled coporate tax bill, moving the measure to conference with the Senate. The 251-178 vote for HR 4520 came after provisions were added including a federal buyout of tobacco farmers and an additional income tax deduction for state sales taxes. The bill still achieves its original goal of bringing the United States into compliance with World Trade Organization (WTO) rules that resulted in European Union (EU) trade sanctions being applied. The EU sanctions will still be in effect until the legislation is signed, according to the EU.
The eventual conference with the Senate will focus on the tobacco buyout provisions, with some Senate Democrats objecting to the method used by the House.
AARP has agreed to endorse a bipartisan Senate bill that would allow consumers to import prescription drugs from countries where they often sell for less than in the United States. This endorsement will likely result in creating a greater urgency for passage of a legislative measure (S.2328) sponsored by Senators Dorgan (D-North Dakota), Kennedy (D-Massachusetts), McCain (R-Arizona) and Snowe (R-Maine).
Last year AARP endorsement of the Medicare prescription drug bill angered many AARP members who considered the new law’s drug coverage inadequate. The group’s support for drug importation reflects an attempt to mend ties with dissatisfied members and shake any perception of partisan leanings by backing a practice the Bush administration opposes.
S.2328 is one of several that propose lifting restrictions on the importation of drugs from abroad. The administration opposes the measure on safety grounds, saying it could open the U.S. market to a flood of ineffective or counterfeit medicines.
A rival measure (S.2493) sponsored by Sen. Judd Gregg (R-New Hampshire) and having the backing of Republican leaders, takes a more conservative approach and is the most likely candidate to be advanced this year.
S.2493 would give the Food and Drug Administration one year to create a system allowing the reimportation of prescription drugs from Canada, eventually expanding the practice to European Union countries.
The bipartisan bill, by contrast, would direct the FDA to implement a reimportation system within 90 days of enactment. It would also place penalties on manufacturers that interfere with importation for example, by limiting supply or increasing prices.
AARP is working with the bipartisan bill’s sponsors to strengthen some of its safety provisions, adding that some changes have already been made.
On June 16, House Appropriations Committee Chairman C.W. "Bill" Young (R-Florida) announced to committee members that he intends to move forward with a plan to bundle all of the 13 annual spending bills for FY 2005 into one large omnibus measure that would move in September after lawmakers return from their political conventions. Young has been discussing his plan with House Republican leaders throughout the spring, but he made his preference for an earlier omnibus official at a markup yesterday.
Young said his goal is to have all 13 measures passed before the House departs for the August recess, which begins July 23. He expressed confidence about that schedule, given that the panel has already marked up six of the bills in subcommittee and four are being marked up in full committee the week of June 14.
Young proposed the idea of an early omnibus in private meetings with GOP leaders this spring, but the plan has gained momentum in recent days as Senate Republicans have been unable to report any breakthrough on a final FY 2005 budget plan. Senate Appropriators have been waiting for a final budget to set their discretionary limits. . Without one, they are forced to rely on the spending limits put in last year's budget for FY 2005 to help them develop their bills.
Among others, Senate Budget Committee Chairman Don Nickles (R-Oklahoma) and Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) both said June 15 that, minus a budget, an omnibus bill is a distinct possibility. Stevens has specifically expressed support for an omnibus, saying he favors it over any yearlong continuing resolution to cover federal government spending. Senate Appropriations Committee ranking member Robert C. Byrd (D-West Virginia), however, has said he would oppose such an effort and would push Stevens to proceed under regular procedures.
Young made clear that the grave funding levels proposed for many programs would worsen the prospects for many of the individual bills and combined with the short legislative year would make an omnibus a likely vehicle for bringing the appropriations process to a close before the November election.
After a series of markups ended June 16, the House committee was readying for floor action the bills for Homeland Security, Defense, Energy and Water, Legislative Affairs, and Interior. Interior has been on the House floor the last couple days and Homeland Security is expected to come up on the floor later today.
Meanwhile, the bills for Agriculture and Commerce, Justice, and State have been marked up in subcommittee and are expected to be taken up by the full committee soon. A full committee markup for C-J-S has been scheduled for June 23. The bills that have yet to be marked up either at subcommittee or full committee are those for the District of Columbia; Foreign Operations; Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education; Military Construction; Transportation-Treasury; and Veterans Affairs and Housing and Urban Development.
The Senate Appropriations Committee held its first subcommittee markup of a FY 2005 bill on June 16. The Homeland Security Subcommittee chaired by Senator Thad Cochran (R-Mississippi) marked up and approved its version of their bill.
House and Senate transportation authorizers are hoping to move a 30-day extension of highway and transit programs, but might face opposition from House and Senate leadership. The Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA-21) expired last Sept. 30, and the third extension of the program is set to expire June 30. With lawmakers leaving town June 25 for a 10-day 4th of July recess, an extension must be sent to President Bush before then, or the program will lapse, resulting in the furlough of some 5,000 Federal Highway Administration employees.
Conference and Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chairman Senator James Inhofe's (R-Oklahoma) draft extension would statutorily run through the end of July, but practically until about July 23, which is the last day of the session before Congress adjourns for a five-week summer break that is longer than in past years to accommodate both the Democrat and Republican conventions. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Don Young (R-Alaska) also is said to prefer a 30-day extension.
Leadership is floating the idea of a three-month extension to take the program through the end of September, which also is the end of fiscal year 2004. However, Inhofe, Young, and the Democrats are expected to oppose that plan because they want to keep the deadlines as tight as possible. There already is acknowledgement that given the slow pace of the ongoing conference committee, there is no way an agreement will be ready by July 23, but they want to keep the extensions short as a way of pushing the work to be done. Democrat leaders have said getting the work done as soon as possible is important, but noted that they cannot finish the conference nor delve too deep into the merits of the legislation until they resolve the overall funding issue.
Committee staffers have said if the leadership wants the extension to go beyond 30 days, they would have to tell the committee "as soon as possible" because it will need time to run the dollar amounts that would fund the various Transportation Department agencies and programs requiring reauthorization.
Conferees are scheduled to meet next Wednesday, June 23.
While the House Appropriations Committee is planning to mark up its $417 billion fiscal 2005 defense spending bill Wednesday, sending it to the floor as early as next week, the Senate has come across obstacles with their companion measure and might not begin until after the upcoming recess. President Bush’s $25 billion war fund will be the most controversial issue on Wednesday’s markup. Rep. David R Obey (D-Wisconsin), is attempting to increase the size of the fund to $65 billion in order to more accurately reflect the cost of the war operations and tighten reporting requirements on the Pentagon’s spending.
The measure constitutes a 7% increase over the Defense Department’s current non-war budget providing the Pentagon with $392 billion in fiscal 2005, not including the $25 billion war fund. Since the war fund will be available once the measure is enacted, there has been pressure on the appropriators to pass a final bill before the August recess. In the Senate Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), chairman of the Appropriations Committee, is not moving forward until the defense authorization bill is finalized because he has expressed concern that the many pending amendments will be offered on the appropriations measure if he begins a markup. According to Congressional Quarterly, Stevens does not want to leave for recess with the defense bill still open for debate, and thus will not begin markup unless he believes he can complete the floor action before Congress departs.
By moving forward to adopt an amendment that would include sexual orientation in the definition of hate crimes, the Senate has sparked a debate on gay rights. Another contentious vote is expected for the Senate in July on the proposed amendment to the Constitution banning same-sex marriages.
The hate crimes amendment, sponsored by Edward M. Kennedy (D-Massachusetts), and Gordon H. Smith (R-Oregon), was easily adopted and added to a defense authorization bill. This amendment would expand the current law, which protects people attacked because of their race, ethnicity, or religion, to include assaults based on sexual orientation, gender or disability. If passed, this would be the first protection for gays and lesbians in federal civil rights law. However, the GOP leadership has successfully blocked all previous attempts to add this amendment, often waiting until conference to eliminate the provisions in question.
The proposed constitutional amendment (S J Res 30) would define marriage as “the union of a man and woman,” as well as bar judges from interpreting the Constitution in such a way as to allow same-sex couples to wed. Since it is unlikely that the vote will get the necessary two-thirds supermajority in both houses of Congress, the move is calculated to put Democrats on record regarding this controversial issue as the national conventions and elections approach.
Although presumptive Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kerry of Massachusetts is against gay marriage, he and most of his fellow Democrats, as well as some Republicans, oppose amending the constitution in order to ban it.
Republican leaders in the House are waiting to see the outcome in the Senate before moving forward with a similar resolution (H J Res 56).
House Republicans hope to use money from the Nuclear Waste Fund to revitalize the Bush administration’s plan to deposit nuclear waste at Nevada’s Yucca Mountain.
Joe L. Barton (R-Texas), chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, is sponsoring a bill that would authorize the use of $749 million from the fund in fiscal 2005. The Subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality plans to mark up the bill on Wednesday. Due to strong opposition from Senator Harry Reid (D-Nevada), this legislation is not likely to get enacted.
Last week the House Energy and Water Development Appropriations Subcommittee endorsed legislation providing only $131 million of the $880 million request for this project. The full Appropriations Committee will consider the bill Wednesday. Barton’s bill, even if it does not make it to the floor itself, may have laid the foundation for an amendment to the House energy and water bill.
Senate appropriators are moving on with markup of spending bills after talks stalled on the fiscal 2005 budget resolution. A last minute proposal to woo Senate passage of the stalled FY05 budget resolution seems likely to garner as much opposition from GOP conservatives as it does support from moderate Republicans.
It is likely that many of the fiscal 2005 spending bills will not make it to the floor in upcoming months because of the increased partisanship during election years.
Having a budget resolution is important to the GOP leadership because it will allow them to move a tax cut package through the Senate more easily. Without a budget resolution, it will be difficult to fight Democratic amendments seeking to peel off moderate GOP members.
Both the Homeland Security and the Defense Appropriations subcommittees plan on marking up their bills Wednesday and sending them to full committee Thursday.