No, He Wouldn’t — Would He?
House Speaker’s State May Get $450 Million Extra
This article was published by the Center for American Progress.
By Scott Lilly
There are two things the leaders of the new majority in the House of Representatives have made clear since they began to assume the reins of power three months ago. They would:
The bill would shred, among other things, the social safety net in hard-pressed localities across America with reductions in nutrition programs for infants and pregnant mothers. And it would cut federal support to keep destitute families from having their heat and electricity cut off during one of the coldest winters in recent memory. Preliminary analysis also indicates that Head Start programs may be forced to shut down a month early in many communities across the country. Finally, the bill would deliver a particularly hard blow to struggling local governments, canceling out billions of dollars in assistance to law enforcement, sewer construction, support of local schools, and so forth.
But buried deeply in these 359 pages of ugly surprises is a provision that would mean one community in America would do a lot better than all of the others. The legislation added an estimated $450 million for a particular bit of defense spending that the Department of Defense did not ask for and does not want.
(More here.)
This article was published by the Center for American Progress.
By Scott Lilly
There are two things the leaders of the new majority in the House of Representatives have made clear since they began to assume the reins of power three months ago. They would:
- Cut spending
- Eliminate earmarks
The bill would shred, among other things, the social safety net in hard-pressed localities across America with reductions in nutrition programs for infants and pregnant mothers. And it would cut federal support to keep destitute families from having their heat and electricity cut off during one of the coldest winters in recent memory. Preliminary analysis also indicates that Head Start programs may be forced to shut down a month early in many communities across the country. Finally, the bill would deliver a particularly hard blow to struggling local governments, canceling out billions of dollars in assistance to law enforcement, sewer construction, support of local schools, and so forth.
But buried deeply in these 359 pages of ugly surprises is a provision that would mean one community in America would do a lot better than all of the others. The legislation added an estimated $450 million for a particular bit of defense spending that the Department of Defense did not ask for and does not want.
(More here.)
1 Comments:
Funding for the alternate JSF engine has been a prime concern since Congress failed to enact a full budget bill .... as the last session wound down, Congress authorized a continuing resolution to keep the government going but based on the wording it meant the funding for the alternate JSF engine was not included ... so members of House were pressuring the OMB to make an exception for this program.
Like most sausage bills, by including the alternate JSF engine funding buried in with everything else, this will make it hard for the Senate to not approve it ... the Senate Armed Services Committee did not fund it in their legislation -- and Obama said he would veto it --- but by burial, it could survive.
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