Revision of on The Hill from July 20, 2008 - 3:52pm

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The Week of July 21

The Home Stretcher: Reworking a massive homeowner rescue bill to include emergency lifelines for faltering Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac turned out to be too much for Congress to pull off in one week - but hopes are that two weeks will do the trick. Congress had been working on a real estate booster for months to cover refinanced mortgages for up to 400,000 homeowners sinking under risky loans - at the same time as planning to stiffen oversight of Fannie and Freddie, the two "quasi" governmental agencies that back almost half of the nation's mortgages but which - long before their recent tumble - were thought to be on shaky ground. Now the bill will add on provisions to hopefully keep financial faith Frannie and Freddie, by giving the US Treasury the okay to extend unlimited loans to - and possibly investments in - the two giant mortgage-backers. The open bail-out check unnerves some lawmakers, who may try to limit the potential burden to tax payers when the bill goes up for a vote.

It's a Gas: With gas prices still putting the squeeze on its constituents, Congress continues this week to keep - or at least look - busy on the energy front. Republicans are pushing a bill that would open up offshore drilling, a nonstarter with Dems, while House leaders will try to siphon off some oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. House members and senators switch off another energy measures; the Senate will now take a shot at passing a "use it or lose it" bill that would nudge oil companies to drill on leases they're already sitting on (failed twice in the House). Finally both chambers may vote to give federal regulators a rein on energy speculators, who are thought by some economists to be inflating the price of oil.

The House may get around to a $1 billion bridge infrastructure bill, HR 3999, which was on its roste last week while it also takes up a $50 billion in spending over the next five years to combat AIDS, TB and malaria around the world, HR 5501, passed in the Senate last week.