Final vote set Sunday afternoon
on $1.1 trillion measure
WASHINGTON
(AP) December 12, 2009 — The Democratic-controlled Senate on Saturday turned
back a Republican effort to block a final vote on a huge end-of-year spending
bill that rewards most federal agencies with generous budget boosts.
The $1.1
trillion measure combines much of the year's unfinished budget work — only a
$626 billion Pentagon spending measure would remain — into a 1,000-plus-page
spending bill that would give the Education Department, the State Department,
the Department of Health and Human Services and others increases far exceeding
inflation.
The 60-34
vote largely along party lines met the minimum threshold to end the Republican
filibuster, a legislative maneuver to delay a final vote on a bill. A final vote
on the spending package was set for Sunday afternoon to send the measure to
President Barack Obama to sign.
Independent
Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, an Orthodox Jew who walks miles to the
Capitol when voting on the Sabbath, wore a black wool overcoat and brilliant
orange scarf — as well as a wide grin — as he provided the crucial 60th vote an
hour after the tally started.
Home-state projects
The measure
combines $447 billion in operating budgets with about $650 billion in mandatory
payments for federal benefit programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, which
provide health coverage for the elderly, disabled and poor. It wraps together
six individual spending bills and also contains more than 5,000 home-state
projects sought by lawmakers in both parties.
The measure
provides spending increases averaging about 10 percent to programs under
immediate control of Congress, blending increases for veterans' programs, the
NASA space agency and the FBI with a pay raise for federal workers and help for
car dealers.
It bundles
six of the 12 annual spending bills, capping a dysfunctional appropriations
process in which House leaders blocked Republicans from debating key issues
while Republican lawmakers dragged out debates.
Just the
$626 billion defense bill would remain. That's being held back to serve as a
vehicle to advance must-pass legislation such as a plan to allow the
government's debt to swell by nearly $2 trillion. The government's total debt
has nearly doubled in the past seven years and is expected to exceed the current
ceiling of $12.1 trillion before Jan. 1.
Republicans
said the measure — on top of February's $787 billion economic stimulus bill and
a generous omnibus measure for the 2009 budget year — spends too much money at a
time when the government is running astronomical deficits.
"Obviously
we need to run the government, but do you suppose the government could be a
little bit like families and be just a little bit prudent in how much it
spends?" said Sen. Jon Kyl, an Arizona Republican.
But the
second-ranking Senate Democrat, Dick Durbin of Illinois, said the measure
restores money for programs cut under President George W. Bush such as popular
grant programs for local police departments to purchase equipment and put more
officers on the beat.
The measure
contains 5,224 pet projects for lawmakers totaling $3.9 billion, according to
Taxpayers for Common Sense, a Washington-based watchdog group.
Saturday's
bill would offer an improved binding arbitration process to challenge the
decision by General Motors and Chrysler to close more than 2,000 dealerships,
which often anchor fading small town business districts. It also would renew for
two more years a federal loan guarantee program for steel companies.
Gitmo, abortion and AIDS prevention
The bill
also caps a heated debate over Obama's order to close the military-run prison
for terrorist suspects at the U.S. Navy base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. It would
permit detainees held there to be transferred to the United States to stand
trial but not to be released.
The bill
would void a long-standing ban on the funding of abortion by the District of
Columbia government and overturns a ban on federal money for needle exchange
programs in the nation's capital. It also would phase out a D.C. school voucher
program favored by Republicans and opens the door for the city to permit medical
marijuana.
It would
also lift a nationwide ban on the use of federal funds for needle-exchange
programs. These AIDS-prevention programs allow addicts to exchange needles used
for injecting drugs to cut down the risk of spreading the HIV virus by sharing
needles.
Federal
workers would receive pay increases averaging 2 percent, with people in areas
with higher living costs receiving slightly higher increases.
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