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DREAM Act Passes House, Awaits Vote in Senate

The House passed its version of the DREAM Act late Wednesday, which would provide a path to citizenship for undocumented children who graduate from college or serve in the military. The Senate today decided to kill its own version of the bill – most likely because of the expectation that it would not receive enough passing votes. There is speculation that the Senate will instead put the House-passed version up for a vote early next week after the taxes and spending legislation is cleared.

Second Temporary Spending Measure Likely (Updated)

**12/3 Update: Congress has approved a CR (referenced below) that will last through 12/18, allowing lawmakers additional time to attempt an omnibus spending bill that would closeout the FY11 appropriations process.**

The House of Representatives is close to a vote on a second continuing resolution (CR) that would continue the level funding of government operations through December 18th. The first CR, which expires on Friday 12/3, was necessitated on October 1st when Congress failed to pass appropriations bills in time for the beginning of the new fiscal year. A CR typically provides temporary level funding to allow Congress more time to complete the appropriations process.

At this point, Senate leaders are still pushing to complete the FY11 appropriations process with an omnibus spending bill before Congress adjourns for the year. Such a move would preserve expected increases for research agencies such as NSF and NIH, as well as congressionally directed appropriations (also knows as earmarks) for this cycle. However, emboldened by election wins and increased numbers in the next Congress, Republicans are far less interested in moving forward with FY11 appropriations bills that do not reflect their priorities.  It remains possible that Democratic attempts to pass an omnibus spending bill will be filibustered in the Senate, requiring the issue to be punted to the new Congress -where agency/program increases and funding for special projects will be met with significant skepticism.

US Senate to Vote on Earmark Ban

The Senate postponed until this morning a vote on a measure that would ban all earmarks for the next three years. The chamber will vote on an amendment to food safety legislation proposed by Senator Coburn (R-OK) that would create a Senate rule effectively prohibiting the chamber from considering any measure containing earmarks.  Coburn’s amendment would require two-thirds of senators present and voting for approval, and it’s unlikely his proposal will meet that threshold.  Read moreabout Coburn’s amendment.

UPDATE:  Earlier today, the Senate passed the most significant overhaul of federal food safety regulations in seven decades, which would expand the FDA’s power over the food supply.  The House should take action before the end of the week and send the measure to Obama for his signature.  During the debate in the Senate, senators effectively killed any further talk about a binding three-year ban on congressional earmarks.  But since earmark projects have nothing to do with food safety, and amendments to a bill are supposed to be germane after cloture is invoked, two-thirds of the Senate would have had to agree to even allow an up-or-down vote on the proposed earmark curb.  Instead, the tally was a decisive 39-56 against allowing a vote on the earmark ban amendment.

First Week of Lame Duck Session Answers Little

Members of Congress returned to DC last week for a lame-duck session intended to address pressing issues, namely the need to finish the fiscal year 2011 appropriations process as well as to extend various tax cut provisions that expire at the end of the calendar year. Members spent the first week of the session largely in party caucuses, electings leaders of the Congress that will be seated in January 2011. Very little was accomplished on any of the substantive issues identified by the current leadership as under consideration. Congress will return from a week-long Thanksgiving recess on November 29th. Given the many issues to address and the intense political maneuvering underway, it is now expected that the lame-duck session will last well into December.

The federal government is currently funded through a continuing resolution (CR) that expires on December 3rd. A CR was required when Congress failed to pass a new budget in time for the beginng of fiscal year 2011 back on October 1st. The CR provides Congress additional time to produce a budget, and temporarily funds agencies/programs at last year’s levels. After the holiday, it appears that Congress will need to pass either a second short-term CR that temporarily continues government operations and rests the final outcome with the new Congress, or pass a year-long CR that essentially ends the FY11 appropriations process. The latter scenario would result in lost opportunities for research agencies (e.g. NIH, NSF) expecting increases over last year’s allocation. Further, a longterm CR would likely provide another setback to attempts to plug a $5.7 billion shortfall in the Pell Grant program. A year-long  CR would also result in the removal of all congressionally directed appropriations from the spending bills. Completion of the FY11 appropriations process through an omnibus spending bill remains a remote possibility.

The extension of Bush era tax cuts seems to be one area drawing some consensus on Capitol Hill. However, the details of a so called “tax extenders” bill remain uncertain. Several provisions of interest to the higher education community are part of the tax debate, though generally less controversial. The items include an extension of the research and development tax credit, IRA charitable rollover that would facilitate giving to our institutions, and the above the line tuition and fees deduction.

At present, Congress also seems likely to pass another fix on physician Medicare reimbursements. On November 18th, the Senate approved an extension of current reimbursement rates through December, which would provide more time to approve a longer-term solution. 

Majority Leader Reid (D-NV) is pushing to fulfill a campaign promise to bring the DREAM Act to a vote. The legislation would provide a path to citizenship for some individuals who entered the country illegally with their parents. Despite support from a majority in the current Senate, and broad backing by the higher education community, the legislation is not likely to garner the 60 votes necessary to break an expected fillibuster.

Leadership announced for 112th Congress

Congress completed their leadership elections last week, which will take effect in January at the beginning of the 112th Congress.

In the House

Speaker of the House: John Boehner (R-OH)
Majority Leader: Eric Cantor (R-VA)
Minority Leader: Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
Majority Whip: Kevin McCarthy (R-CA)
Minority Whip: Steny Hoyer (D-MD)

In the Senate (no changes from current congress)

Majority Leader: Harry Reid (D-NV)
Minority Leader: Mitch McConnell (R-KY)
Majority Whip: Richard Durbin (D-IL)
Minority Whip: Jon Kyl (R-AZ)

Committees

Senate Budget Committee Chairman: Kent Conrad (D-ND)
Ranking Member, House Budget Committee: Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)