Congress Passes $373 Billion Spending Bill
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Jan. 22, 2004
WASHINTON The Senate overcame Democrats' delaying tactics
Thursday and sent President Bush an overdue $373 billion bill
financing a vast swath of government and bearing a bushel of
victories for the White House.
Senators approved the measure 65-28 a month after House passage.
The bill finances agriculture, veterans and most other domestic
programs for the budget year that began Oct. 1, nearly four months
ago.
The mammoth measure protects Bush administration policies
on overtime pay, media ownership and food labeling. Angry over
those issues, Democrats had succeeded Tuesday in blocking a vote
on final passage.
Plenty o' Pork
But on Thursday's showdown, the chamber voted 61-32 to end
Democrats' delays that had slowed the measure since last month, one
more than the 60 votes needed. With the White House and GOP leaders
adamant about not changing the measure, enough Democrats succumbed
to its tons of home-state projects and spending boosts for popular
programs.
"It is time to move on," said Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist, R-Tenn. "The country demands that we complete action on
this bill."
The bill would let the administration proceed with new rules
that would let companies pay overtime to fewer white-collar
workers, and allow media conglomerates to own more television
stations.
Mystery Meat
It would postpone for two years a requirement that meat and
many other foods sold in stores have labels identifying the country
they come from. With last month's discovery that a cow in Washington state
had mad cow disease, many Democrats hoped they had gained
leverage that would let them remove the labeling delay, but the
White House and House GOP leaders refused to budge.
"Take it or leave it," said Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.,
describing what he said was the GOP's attitude on the bill. "This
is one senator who's going to leave it because of what it will do
to working families and women and veterans of this country."
Had Democrats succeeded in blocking the measure, Republican
leaders were threatening to replace it with a bare-bones bill that
would have financed most of government at last year's levels,
about $6 billion less than the stalled legislation.
That would have meant dramatically less money for fighting AIDS
overseas, the FBI and other anti-terrorism efforts, and many other
programs. It was unclear whether GOP leaders would have ever gained
sufficient votes to push such a bill through Congress.
Pro-choice Victories on Schools, Guns, Labor
Policy triumphs for Bush in the bill include eased requirements
for federal gun records, the nation's first federally financed
school vouchers, and language letting him contract out more
government work to contractors.
The bill also has money for Bush priorities including fighting
AIDS in Africa, aid for countries instituting reforms,
the AmeriCorps national service program and funds for disabled
students.
It will also let Bush claim that he held expenditures in the 13
spending bills to just a 3 percent increase this year, though
billions in new expenses for war or other efforts could come in the
next few months.
With the presidential and congressional elections looming in
November, opponents seemed eager to snatch victory from defeat by
keeping the issues alive into the campaigns.
"We're not giving up," said Bill Samuel, legislative director
of the labor organization AFL-CIO. "We'll continue our efforts on
the next bill."
Daschle said Democrats would use special Senate procedures to
try forcing a vote on a resolution rejecting the overtime
regulations when they take effect.
The package wraps seven spending bills into one, covering 11
Cabinet departments and scores of other agencies, plus foreign aid
and the District of Columbia's government. Six other spending
measures - covering the Pentagon, Department of Homeland Security
and several other agencies - have been enacted.
Internal GOP disagreements over spending and policy issues
prevented Congress from finishing the bill on time last year.
Republicans had vowed to finish the measure on time to underscore
their ability to run the government, but their failure to do so
probably won't register on a public more concerned about the
economy, war and terrorism.
Money for Veterans, Farmers, Roads ...
Lawmakers like the bill's increases for veterans' health care,
schools, highway projects, farm conservation efforts, improved
local election systems, and biomedical research.
National Taxpayers' Money for Local Pork
The measure has 7,932 so-called earmarks, for local items
such as museum upgrades and agricultural research, costing $10.7
billion, according to Taxpayers for Common Sense, a group that
pushes for lower spending.
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
FREE e-mail alerts from NewsMax.com – click here now!
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Bush Administration
Guns/Gun Control
School Choice