Revision of on The Hill from July 28, 2008 - 12:19pm
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The Week of July 28
With a mongo housing bill under its belt, Congress turns to tie up a loose legislative ends this week before heading home for a month of sun and fun.
The tax tango. As in years past, a number of popular tax breaks are set to expire and - as in past years - the House and Senate are expected to extend them, but not before they dancing through a familiar debate - whether to pay for those breaks by raising taxes elsewhere (which the House prefers) or just adding them on to our debt (the Senate's choice). This week senators make their move, extending tax credits that add up to $126 billion including a middle class escape from the Alternative Minimum Tax, R&D credits for business and alternative energy incentives.
As part of the tax bill, senators may also end up okaying $4 billion in disaster relief for Midwest farmers and a final insurance bill that gives patients more access to mental health coverage.
Gas and Mirrors: The House continues "pain at the pump" month this week, voting on a measure to giving federal regulators a tighter rein in energy speculators, who are thought by some economists to be inflating the price of oil. A series of energy bills being pushed by Democrats and Republicans are widely seen to be more about political posturing than bringing down the price of gas, but a coalition of House moderates may do the unexpected this week and bring up a bipartisan gas bill that could pass.
- see more on energy legislation in Congress this year and on the gas price debate
The House also votes on their first '09 budget bill, for Military Construction and Veterans, HR 6599, as well as an employment bill giving women more legal muscle to sue for pay discrimination, HR 1338, and possibly a measure placing tobacco under the FDA's regulatory auspices.
Senate leaders are also engaged in an unusual face off this week to try to outmaneuver Sen. Tom Coburn, a one man stand against duplicative spending. Coburn's stopped a slew of minor bills - that normally fly through the Senate under fast-track "unanimous consent" rules - but which Coburn thinks are a waste of money. Having had enough, Senate leader Reid is bundling 35 of those Co-burned bills into one package that should pass into law - via the normal senatorial, sluggish rules of debate. (Washington Post)
