Rules Hearing To Consider Senate Electronic Filing

On March 14, the Senate Rules and Administration Committee will hold a hearing on S.223, the Senate Campaign Disclosure Parity Act to require Senate candidates to file election reports electronically. Currently House candidates, presidential candidates, party committees, and political action committees are required to do so, while Senate candidates are exempt. BNA Money and Politics ($$) reports that the Federal Election Commission (FEC) is fully in favor of the measure, and FEC Staff Director Patrina Clark is set to testify at the hearing.

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High-profile Opposition to Bush Regulatory Changes

The Environmental Forum, a bimonthly publication of the Environmental Law Institute, has published ">six opinions pieces on President Bush's changes to the regulatory process. The magazine features three opinions in favor of the changes and three opposed, including a piece by OMB Watch Executive Director Gary Bass. Of particular concern is the opinion of John G. Knepper, Deputy General Counsel of OMB. One new amendment requires agency Regulatory Policy Officers (RPO) be presidential appointees. Knepper argues this will make those officials more accountable to Congress and the public. But the Executive Order does not require the Senate to approve the RPO. Knepper, presumably involved in the drafting of the changes, should be more forthright in his argument. In opposition, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) reinforced the common conclusion that the White House — in the face of an opposition Congress — is attempting in its last two years to leave an anti-regulatory legacy. Waxman articulates the underhanded Bush tactic with a great simile: "Like a retreating army that mines the road behind it, the Bush administration is erecting new barriers to prevent commonsense safeguards from advancing in the next administration."

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House Dems. to Add Min. Wage to the Supplemental?

Bizarre as it might seem, the Wall Street Journal is reporting "a surprising addition [to the Iraq supplemental bill] by the Democratic leadership: a minimum wage increase." What does this mean, asssuming Pelosi and Co. go forward with the plan?
  • first, the Democratic leadership must be despairing that House liberals aren't seeing enough anti-war ammunition in the supplemental to support it
  • second, leadership impatience with the minimum wage tax package logjam may have reached the point where it simply wants to cut the gordian knot

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Mitt Romney Wants to Repeal McCain-Feingold

Presidential contendor Mitt Romney has publicly stated that he is opposed to the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, calling for its repeal. Romney believes it restricts free speech, and increases an appeal to regulate grassroots organizations. The end of his press releases references the Wisconsin Right To Life case. The blog www.moresoftmoneyhardlaw.com has an interesting response. From Romney's press release:

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Senate Finance Committee Seeks Information on Nonprofit Abuses

Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) and Finance Ranking member Charles Grassley (R-IA) sent letters to Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Commissioner Mark Everson and IRS Chief Counsel Donald Korb asking for "an updated list of the newest, biggest tax avoidance scams — including those using nonprofit groups - that deserve the committee's attention." The Senators are asking that they receive the document by April 1. The letter also referenced the IRS 2007 "Dirty Dozen", a listing of the top tax scams.

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OMB to Launch Earmarks Website next Monday

As promised, OMB will launch its earmark identification-and-tracking database website next Monday, March 12. The database's operational definition of eamarks and the information about them are outlined in attachments included in this January 25 memo from OMB Director Rob Portman. Among the information to be reported on each earmark:
  • earmark cost
  • identification of recipient
  • description of project
  • whether the earmark is statutory or non-binding
  • the relevant bill or report language

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Senate Min. Wage Tax Package: a Closer Look

House Ways and Means chair Charlie Rangel (D-NY) may be figuring that a public airing of the Senate's $8.3 billion tax package will break the impassse on the minimum wage bill now tied up in conference. Rangel has announced a March 14 hearing that will focus on Senate bill provisions he and Committee ranking member Jim McCrery (R-LA) have long objected to, specifically, those which:
  • change the tax treatment of certain leases entered into before March 12, 2004, i.e., very retroactively

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Like Father, Like Son

Bill Gates announced his opposition to estate tax repeal yesterday. Gates' father, Bill Gates Sr., has been a leader in the movement to oppose estate tax repeal and reductions.

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Johnson Continues to be Submissive on EPA Budget, but Congress Investigates

As Reg•Watch has blogged before (here and here), President Bush is attempting to further undermine EPA's ability to promulgate regulations to protect the environment by slashing the agency's budget. Administrator Stephen Johnson has inexplicably defended the cuts, towing the administration line instead of sticking up for his own agency. In a Senate hearing yesterday, Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) expressed this same concern: "To have the EPA administrator talk about how he's not really fought the cuts is very disturbing to me." (Reported in E&E Daily) Today, the House committee on Energy and Commerce is grilling Johnson on the cuts. You can watch the hearing here. Kudos to Congress for putting up a fight where EPA hasn't.

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Walter Reed: At Root, A Budget Issue

Fred Kagan of Slate has a good article on the budget woes that very likely contributed to the situation at Walter Reed and all across the military. His basic point: the discretionary budget for veteran's health benefits has not been keeping up with need (sound familiar?).

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