Continuing the Continuing Resolution

CQ.com ($) reports that the House has passed an extension of the stopgap funding measure known as the FY 2007 continuing resolution. The current continuing resolution was set to expire this Friday. Hence, the swift action from the House.

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Wanted: ISO non-partisan D 4 CBO Dir.

CBO Acting Director Donald B. Marron has not endeared himself to the House and Senate Budget Committee chairs of late for his assessment of the federal deficit's long-term sustainability, and now he looks as "unsustainable" as the deficit itself.

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Congress to Restore Oversight Office

Democrats may try to pass a bill reinstituting an Iraqi reconstruction oversight office, which Congress recently abolished, as early as this week. From the NYT: Congressional Democrats say they will press new legislation next week to restore the power of a federal agency in charge of ferreting out waste and corruption in Iraq and greatly increase its investigative reach. The bills, the first of what are likely to be dozens of Democratic efforts to resurrect investigations of war profiteering and financial fraud in government contracting, could be introduced as early as Monday morning.

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Budgeting Time (Part 1)

Word is that the lame duck session of Congress will consist of this week, followed by a two-week break, with a final work period of Monday, December 4 to Friday, December 18. The current Continuing Resolution (CR) funding federal government operations expires this Friday, November 17. So, this week, a new CR is must-pass legislation. Congress is expected to set an expiration date for the new CR of Friday, December 8. The questions before Democrats and Republicans in both the House and Senate are:

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    Cigarette Taxes: Regressive Yet Beneficial (Maybe)

    In their latest edition of Tax Justice Digest, Citizens for Tax Justice rundown the various tax propositions which appeared around the country on state ballots. CTJ applauds the defeat of a host of dreadful TABOR proposals, estate tax repeals, and a smattering of other awful tax measures, but they also applaud the defeat of cigarette tax increases. But, wait - don’t we want to discourage people from smoking? Now seems like a good time to discuss balancing competing objectives of a just tax code. In this case, the conflict is between degrading tax code progressivity and using the tax code to discourage harmful behavior (harmful not only to the individual who engages in the behavior, but also to those near him or her, and harmful to the economic prosperity of the jurisdiction).

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    Something Stinks at the IRS

    We have previously reported (see here, here, and here) on the IRS's bizarre plans to outsource some of its tax collection responsibilities to private companies.

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    Grand Bargains and Green Bananas -- Pax Tax?

    We noted, prior to the midterm election, Democrats’ moderate and conciliatory tax and budget agenda rhetoric. Today’s New York Times features a piece chock full of post-election quotations from incoming 110th Congress committee chairs echoing that rhetoric. The peace-pipe palaver hints at a “grand bargain”:

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    A Green Light for Pay-Go?

    Having fallen short in the Senate last year by only one vote and this year on a tie vote, and given a new Democratic majority in both houses of the 110th Congress, with budget hawks poised to take over as chairs of the House and Senate Budget Committees, Pay-Go’s time may finally have arrived. Quoted in BNA, OMB Watch’s Director of Federal Fiscal Policy, Adam Hughes, said, "A one-vote difference" in the Senate could be enough to get it through in that body.”

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    Better Late than Never?

    The Cato Institute has a thoughtful blog post challenging a National Review article that said a Democratic-majority Congress means we can say goodbye to the Bush tax cuts.

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    Trifecta's Ghosts

    6 minimum wage ballot initiatives passed yesterday, and an initiative to repeal Washington state's estate tax failed. Pretty much all of these initiatives went the way they did by wide margins. And I haven't seen anything on it, but it would be interesting to see how they affected voter turnout. Meanwhile, USA Today has officialy declared estate tax repeal dead. Time: November 7th. As for the federal minimum wage, it may be the first thing passed in the new Congress. We'll have to see how much money it will be raised by, over what time period, and whether it will be indexed to inflation.

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