Posts Tagged ‘senate’

Climate legislation still possible for 2009

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

From The New Republic’s Environment and Energy blog The Vine:

Swing Senators Still Optimistic About Cap-And-Trade
Darren Samuelsohn of ClimateWire has a very helpful piece re-assessing the prospects for cap-and-trade legislation in the Senate. A carbon cap can’t go into the budget reconciliation bill this year, which means Republicans can filibuster, which means it’ll need 60 votes to pass. But climate legislation isn’t doomed yet. A bevy of swing Democrats, from Mary Landrieu to Carl Levin, still sound sanguine, as they watch the debate over the House energy and climate bill slowly unfurl. One crucial dynamic: If Waxman and Markey can drag along key conservative Dems in the House, that could help garner votes in the Senate, too:

Consider Rep. Mike Ross (D-Ark.), a member of the fiscally conservative Democratic Blue Dog Coalition. Ross also sits on the Energy and Commerce Committee, and his vote could be pivotal to the climate bill’s chances for success both in the House and with Arkansas’ senators, Pryor and Blanche Lincoln (D).

“I guarantee you if Mike Ross is OK with it, it goes a long way with me if he’s with it,” Pryor said. “I still have to make a judgement myself. But if he’s OK with it, it means a lot to me.”

Read the rest of the post here.


Have You Seen the Budget?

Wednesday, April 8th, 2009

All this talk about the budget, but haven’t had the chance to actually see it yet? Well, you’ve come to the right place. Check out the full FY2010 budget proposals below:

So, how it works: Obama released his budget proposal to Congress, outlining his key priorities for investments in America’s future. The House then decided on a “budget resolution”, or a budget proposal of their own, and the Senate did the same. The House Budget Resolution and the Senate Budget Resolution will lead to one final federal budget decided in Conference. Conference is when committees from both chambers of Congress resolve the differences between the budget resolutions to pass one final budget.

So check them out and see how the President and Congress have outlined investments for our future!

For more on how to decipher the archaic and confusing congressional budget process, click here.

One Step Backwards for College Affordability in the Senate?

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Very few seem to have noticed, but Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander managed to introduce an amendment to the 2010 budget, which passed by unanimous consent, that discourages his congressional colleagues from passing the kind of student loan reform necessary to fund the other expansions and reforms to student aid that would make college more affordable and accessible.

Sen. Alexander offered the amendment because he disagrees with a proposal to originate all federal student loans from the direct loan program (DLP), while ending the guaranteed loan program, which is called the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP). Both programs offer the same loans to students, but work in different ways. In the DLP, loans are made from the federal government directly to students, while in the FFELP student loan companies make loans, which are then guaranteed against default by the federal government.

Switching to the DLP is projected to save taxpayers $94 billion over the next ten years, and President Obama and others have proposed using these funds for an expansion of student aid programs, like the Pell grant.

Sen. Alexander received at least $60,000 in campaign contributions associated with FFELP lenders during the 2008 election cycle, according to data from Opensecrets.org. The Institute for America’s Future and US PIRG estimate that an additional 5,225 students in Tennessee—and 260,000 more students nationwide—would receive the Pell grants that student loan reform would fund under President Obama’s 2010 budget proposal.

The language of the amendment would still have to be accepted by the conference committee that will reconcile the House and the Senate versions of the bill if it is to have any affect. The House version of the bill does not include this language, and allows for budget reconciliation on college affordability and health care. If Congress does not approve student loan reform, the administration may be able to effectivly switch to the DLP by other means. You can check out what other amendments passed here.