Congresspedia Preview: This Week in Congress (June 6-13, 2008)

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By Congresspedia assistant editor Avelino Maestas

The House and Senate have yet to reconcile their versions of an Iraq/Afghanistan war spending supplemental, though the House should take up the measure again this week. The level of domestic spending in the bill is the sticking point, so look for debate on offsets and unemployment insurance. Meanwhile, the Senate will consider a package of energy legislation, and might get to tax legislation already approved by the House.

Extended unemployment insurance has been a priority for majority Democrats all year, especially in the Senate: it was originally in that chamber’s economic stimulus package. Though the benefits were not included in the measure signed by President Bush in February, the Senate majority leadership has continued to promote them.

When time came to debate a new spending supplemental for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) saw an opportunity to include domestic priorities in what the White House has traditionally called must-pass legislation. Extended unemployment insurance was one such measure attached to the defense spending.

The snag: a new House “pay as you go” rule enacted to reign in spiraling costs: all new spending would have to be offset, either by raising taxes or trimming programs elsewhere. And while the Iraq supplemental is treated as “emergency” spending – it’s outside the normal budget process – that hasn’t stopped conservative House Democrats from trying to enforce the spirit of “pay-go.” That presents a problem for Pelosi, because Reid said the offsets won’t make it through the Senate.

This week, the House will debate whether to include the benefits, which received an additional endorsement this weekend from Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine).

The Senate this week will begin consideration of the Consumer-First Energy Act, a series of measures that would take a bite out of the oil industry’s profits and repeal tax breaks those companies currently receive. The White House has threatened to veto the bill, especially due to a provision allowing the U.S. to seek legal damages from OPEC for oil-related market manipulation.

Hearings Schedules:
June 10, 2008

Senate

House

June 11, 2008

Senate

  • Senate Committee on Foreign Relations Hearings to examine sovereign wealth funds, focusing on foreign policy consequences in an era of new money. 9:30 am SD-419
  • Senate Committee on the Judiciary Hearings to examine short-change for consumers and short-shrift for Congress, focusing on the Supreme Court's treatment of laws that protect Americans health, safety, jobs, and retirement. SD-226 10:00 am
  • Senate Committee on the Judiciary Hearings to examine the nominations of Paul G. Gardephe, and Cathy Seibel, both to be a United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York, Kiyo A. Matsumoto, to be United States District Judge for the Eastern District of New York, and Glenn T. Suddaby, to be United States District Judge for the Northern District of New York. SD-226 2:00 pm
  • Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation Hearings to examine the impact and policy implications of spyware on consumers and businesses.SR-253 3:00 pm

House

June 12, 2008

Senate

House