The Delaware Gazette

Spending bills begin on bipartisan note

ANDREW TAYLOR

Asso­ci­ated Press

WASHINGTON — Sen­ate Repub­li­cans on Thurs­day rejected cut­ting agency bud­gets below lev­els agreed to in last summer’s bud­get and debt pact with Pres­i­dent Barack Obama as a key com­mit­tee kicked off action on a round of 12 annual spend­ing bills total­ing more than $1.1 trillion.

It’s a break with their GOP coun­ter­parts in the tea party-flavored House, who are mov­ing ahead with bills that ignore the bud­get pact by cut­ting $19 bil­lion from annual agency bud­gets and shift­ing fur­ther money from domes­tic pro­grams to the Pentagon.

The House GOP moves caused the White House on Wednes­day to vow to veto spend­ing bills unless GOP lead­ers promise to add back the money they’re cut­ting from pro­grams like edu­ca­tion and housing.

Sen­ate Minor­ity Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., was among those break­ing ways with House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, in sup­port­ing the bud­get pact spend­ing lev­els in a Sen­ate Appro­pri­a­tions Com­mit­tee vote. The panel also gave over­whelm­ing 28–1 approval to spend­ing bills set­ting the bud­gets for agen­cies like NASA, the FBI and pro­grams rang­ing from air traf­fic con­trol to sci­en­tific research.

The Sen­ate panel, along with its House coun­ter­part, is get­ting off to an unusu­ally early start to the annual round of appro­pri­a­tions bills in hopes of get­ting the polit­i­cally shaky process back on track. Foot-tall omnibus mea­sures have been the norm in recent years as the House and Sen­ate have failed to pass the 12 bills sep­a­rately under the tra­di­tional rules.

Both McConnell and Major­ity Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., say they want to try to restore the bro­ken appro­pri­a­tions process, but plenty of hur­dles are in their way, not the least of which are stalling tac­tics by con­ser­v­a­tives and polit­i­cally inspired amend­ments that Democ­rats may not want to vote on.

But the biggest obsta­cle remains the House, where the deci­sion to break with the bud­get accord means that some mea­sures are unlikely to advance because of Demo­c­ra­tic oppo­si­tion. The prag­matic chair­man of the House Appro­pri­a­tions Com­mit­tee, Rep. Harold Rogers, R-Ky., has started off on a bipar­ti­san note by fore­stalling major cuts to energy and water devel­op­ment pro­grams and the depart­ments of Com­merce and Jus­tice, in the open­ing round of bills.

Still, GOP cuts to edu­ca­tion, hous­ing, Amtrak and other pro­grams will guar­an­tee bat­tles with Democ­rats and the White House as the sum­mer wears on.

Democ­rats, how­ever, went along Thurs­day with a House mea­sure fund­ing the Com­merce and Jus­tice depart­ments, sci­ence pro­grams and NASA in a sub­com­mit­tee vote, despite cuts to police hir­ing grants that Democ­rats have long fought for. Top Appro­pri­a­tions Com­mit­tee Demo­c­rat Norm Dicks of Wash­ing­ton said he’ll try to sup­port bills that reflect spend­ing lev­els con­sis­tent with the bud­get accord — which set a cap of $1.047 tril­lion for agency bud­gets. War costs add almost $100 bil­lion more.

“When we have agree­ment on the bill … and we’re close to what it would be at $1.047 tril­lion, we’ll be sup­port­ive,” Dicks said.

In the Sen­ate, Thursday’s ses­sion was bipar­ti­san through­out as the Appro­pri­a­tions panel approved two bills. The FBI won a mod­est bud­get increase while the NASA bud­get was essen­tially frozen. The money-losing Amtrak rail sys­tem would receive $1.6 bil­lion and the Wash­ing­ton, D.C., Metro tran­sit sys­tem would receive a $150 mil­lion subsidy.

A much-criticized pro­gram that sub­si­dizes air­lines serv­ing rural air­ports would receive a 10 per­cent bud­get boost to $214 mil­lion. But the Trans­porta­tion Depart­ment has begun cut­ting off air­ports like Alam­ogodo, N.M., where sub­si­dies exceed $1,000 per pas­sen­ger. Ely, Nev., also looks likely to lose air ser­vice used by an aver­age 1.4 peo­ple a day.

At a House panel ses­sion Thurs­day morn­ing, law­mak­ers approved a NASA bud­get of $17.6 bil­lion, slightly less than cur­rent spend­ing. Rogers, the pow­er­ful chair­man of the Appro­pri­a­tions Com­mit­tee, seemed to reveal some skep­ti­cism about the agency, now that the shut­tle pro­gram has ended.

“What is the mis­sion of NASA,” Rogers asked.

AP News Posted by on Apr 19 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Comments can be made below.

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