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GOP, Democrats Clash Over Spending Bill

Posted on: Wednesday, 31 January 2007, 15:01 CST

By ANDREW TAYLOR

WASHINGTON - House Republicans complained bitterly Wednesday that they had been shut out of the secretive process in which Democrats assembled a huge spending bill to sweep clear a budgetary mess they inherited.

As the House kicked off debate on the bill, Republicans said the measure was being rushed to the floor without adequate time for lawmakers to read it and without the chance to offer changes.

"I cannot recall in the entire time I've been a member of the House a single appropriations bill that has not been open to amendment at some level," said Rep. James Walsh, R-N.Y., a 10-term veteran. "Frankly, I think that's a travesty."

Such protests got little sympathy from Democrats such as Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., who noted Republicans last year had failed to pass nine of 11 spending bills.

"You forfeited any right to squawk about how we cleaned up your mess," Obey said. "Don't blame us for your screw-ups."

The House Rules Committee, dominated by Democrats, issued a rule governing floor debate that denies Republicans any chance to amend the 137-page measure, which covers 13 Cabinet departments covering the budgets for every domestic agency except for the Department of Homeland Security.

While conservative Republicans pressed for a flat-out budget freeze to save about $6 billion, Rep. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., pushed in vain for $3.3 billion in additional spending for farm disaster aid. GOP Rep. Dave Weldon of Florida complained that a $545 million cut to NASA would jeopardize the agency's plans to send man back to the Moon and on the Mars.

While Republicans complained about how the bill came together, it is, generally speaking, a GOP-tilting measure keeping to the same overall "cap" insisted upon by Bush and congressional Republicans last year.

Most agencies and programs are kept frozen at last year's budget levels, but Obey and Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., negotiated a scores of exceptions for agencies and programs that required increases to avoid imposing furloughs and hiring freezes, or cutting critical services such as medical care for veterans.

Many of the increases came at the expense of White House priorities such as foreign aid and a big Pentagon base closing initiative approved by Congress less than two years ago.

The pending bill has something to please - and offend - every lawmaker, but the overall feeling is simply one of relief that the uncertainty of last year's unresolved budget will soon be gone.

Lawmakers in both parties hailed the bill for freeing highway construction funds, even as the White House complained that the bill will slow aid to communities harmed by a 2005 round of military base closings and cut a request for basic scientific research.

The powerful veterans lobby won a $3.6 billion increase for medical care, earning praise from veterans groups and the White House, while low-income college students would receive a $260 boost in the maximum Pell Grant, to $4,310.

State and local law enforcement agencies, meanwhile, won increases in grants for new equipment and hiring new officers.

Community development block grants, however, were frozen at current levels, as was Amtrak. But advocates for those programs took them as a victory relative to Bush's budget submitted a year ago.

Activists pressing for big boosts to combat AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis overseas won a $1.3 billion increase - to $4.5 billion. That's enough to fund the president's $225 million initiative to fight malaria and increase the U.S. contribution to the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria to $724 million.

Republicans in the Senate appeared unlikely to place procedural hurdles in its path. Still, they took issue with Democrats' claim to have "scrubbed" the bill free of home-state projects. They pointed to $50 million to match last year's funding for the Denali Commission, which funds rural road, sanitation, energy and other infrastructure projects in Alaska.

Then there was the Senate's refusal to kill $45 million in funding for an indoor rainforest project in central Iowa, even though local backers have yet to come up with their required share of funding.

The measure also lifted funding for highways, transit and motor carrier safety programs by $4 billion - to the amount specified in the six-year highway spending bill passed in 2005.

Senate Republicans predicted that Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., would schedule debate close to a Feb. 15 deadline and give them little choice but to pass the bill.

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On the Net:

House Appropriations Committee: http://appropriations.house.gov/


Source: Associated Press/AP Online

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