Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Try Wiping Your Ass with MoveOn

In their ongoing mode of class warfare that conveniently excludes the billionaire Soros, MoveOn is suggesting that their followers buy the products of companies competitive to the Koch brothers.

If the progressives want to boycott Koch products, I've got no problem with the exercise of choice.  The duplicity of the the leaders is what I find so disgusting.
Here we have an organization that exists with the dominant support of a person who has been convicted crimes in Europe involving stock and monetary manipulation; a man who makes no bones about manipulating governments with the intent of financial gain; an organization that attacks a business that is involved in industry, employing the blue collar workers they claim to support.
Well, I work in the paper industry and support companies they've saved like Georgia-Pacific with my purchases.
If you agree with this you might purchase thosevery items you are being asked to ignore.

Get your priorities straight MoveOn!
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MegaVote

Congress.org (congress.org) presents: M E G A V O T E  June 25, 2012

In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:

 

 
Recent Congressional Votes -
  • Senate: Motion to Proceed; Disapproval Resolution EPA Regulations
  • Senate: Farm Bill Final Passage
  • Senate: Cloture Flood Insurance Reauthorization
  • House: Land and Water Projects
  • House: Domestic Energy Policy
  • House: Motion to Instruct Conferees Highway Bill

 
Upcoming Congressional Bills -

  • Senate: Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act
  • Senate: Flood Insurance Reform and Modernization Act
  • House: Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013
  • House: Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013
  • House: Surface Transportation Extension Act 

Recent Senate Votes:


Motion to Proceed; Disapproval Resolution EPA Regulations


Vote Rejected (46-53, 1 Not Voting)

The latest in Republicans' war on the EPAs "war on coal" came last Wednesday with an attempt to halt rules intended to strengthen limits on emissions of mercury and other toxins by coal- and oil-fired utilities, among other sources. Led by James Inhofe, R-Okla., most Republicans argue that the EPA has overstepped its authority and is endangering both the livelihood of coal-dependent regions and even the reliability of the electricity grid. Five Democrats and five Republicans each voted with the other side. The president had threatened a veto of this measure. Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn, and Mark Pryor, D-Ark. are reportedly working on a bill that would lengthen the compliance timeline of the new rules rather than stopping them outright.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES

Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES

The President through the EPS has overstepped his Constitutional authority.  Restrictions on coal usage will drive drive up the cost of electricity and follow with increased pressure on natural gas production, a commodity that has been know to widely fluctuate in price. If the EPA gets their way citizens better figure out where he closest trees are for burning in the wood stove.  Natural gas production is not nearly as stable as coal production.  On that same line, the same groups are fighting fracking which would improve natural gas harvesting. 

Farm Bill Final Passage http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=164&chamber=S&congress=1122

Vote Passed (64-35, 1 Not Voting)

Following a binge of amendment votes (41 in all) over three days of debate, the Senate passed its version of a five-year agriculture and nutrition policy bill. After coming to agreement Monday on which amendments would be given floor time, the vote-a-rama began in earnest Tuesday, culminating in a Thursday afternoon vote on final passage (the same agreement required 60 votes for the bill to pass). At the heart of the sprawling, $969 billion bill is an overhaul of the farm safety net. Direct and countercyclical payments are out, their critics having successfully argued that they manipulated markets and were unnecessary at a time of sky-high commodity prices. Bill sponsors Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich. and Pat Roberts, R-Kan., opted for a lighter touch, creating two new crop insurance policies and a subsidy program meant to backstop traditional insurance. These changes have sparked regional disagreements, with Midwest and Great Plains senators supporting the changes and those from the South vehemently opposed. Southerners have been insisting that a program maintaining target prices is necessary to protect their rice and peanut growers, who are less subject to yield volatility and so less dependent on traditional insurance. It is expected that the House bill will have the types of provisions the Southerners are asking for. Two amendments would make changes long sought after by crop insurance critics. The first, from Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga. would force policyholders to abide by the same conservation requirements that are currently tied to crop subsidies. The other, offered by Dick Durbin, D-Ill. and Tom Coburn, R-Okla. would raise subsidized premiums for farmers with AGI above $750,000/year, pending a USDA study. Another major plank of the underlying bill is a roughly $4.5 billion reduction in food stamps. The program has come under fire from Republicans for its rapid expansion in recent years and the bill has specific provisions banning lottery winners from eligibility and stopping automatic enrollment of persons receiving heating assistance. The ball is now in the House's court, and a markup is scheduled for July 11. President Obama has previously backed the Senate bill, though he called for more cuts than the upper chamber could stomach.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted NO

Sen. Johnny Isakson voted NO

It looks like the guys were in there fighting for Georgia which I can apprecate.
 
Cloture Flood Insurance Reauthorization


Vote Agreed to (96-2, 2 Not Voting)

The last piece of business for the Senate last week was a successful cloture vote on the motion to proceed to a multi-year reauthorization of the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). The program has been in the red since having to make huge payouts for Hurricanes Rita, Katrina and Wilma and negotiations have been going on for months on a path forward that would bring NFIP to a position of long-term fiscal health. At this point there appears to be a tentative agreement, but at least one outstanding bone of contention concerns whether properties protected by levees and other flood-control structures should be required to buy insurance. (The House's long-term bill, HR 5740, does not have this requirement.) The current extension expires July 31. If coverage is allowed to lapse, homeowners in flood-prone areas will be unable to buy insurance or renew policies.  
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES

Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES

I have problems with this, though I am not sure what the solution is.  With Federal support homes are in an ever increasing proliferation being built in high flood risk zones.  There seems to be a willingness to take greater risks that the government supports.  Flood zones have long been the domain of persons that could not afford safer land, those people did and do need support, but some asshole who builds a million plus valued home on the beach doesn't deserve squat.

 
Recent House Votes:


Land and Water Projects

Vote Passed (232-188, 12 Not Voting)

The House last week passed two smorgasbord bills that combined a number of disparate provisions under one legislative roof. The first bill concerned regulations on federal lands. Among other things, it would allow the usage of recreational vehicles in Cape Hatteras National Seashore in North Carolinas Outer Banks; grant tracts of land in the Tongass National Forest to the Native Alaskan-run Sealaska Corporation, partially for logging purposes; and permit the "taking" of California sea lions, which have been preying on lucrative and fragile salmon populations in the Columbia River. The most contentious provision would waive 16 environmental and conservation laws on federal land within 100 miles of the Mexican and Canadian borders. Under the bill, these laws would not apply to U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) in their anti-terror and immigration enforcement missions. CBP would be allowed to build roads, fences and surveillance equipment without regard to such laws as the Endangered Species Act and National Environmental Policy Act. President Obama opposes this bill.

Rep. David Scott voted NO

I've got no problem with David voting against this one. The euphmism "taking" of sea lions is classic Congression bs.
 
Domestic Energy Policy

Vote Passed (248-163, 21 Not Voting)

The second catch-all measure combined several provisions aimed at boosting domestic energy production. Drawdowns from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve would be coupled with an equivalent percentage of federal land being made available for oil and gas production. Various EPA rules would be suspended while a new task force studies their effect on gas prices. A process similar to the Pentagon's Quadrennial Defense Review would be created to examine America's long-term energy needs. Permitting for energy projects would be streamlined, including the creation of a $5,000 fee for filing protests against drilling permits. The bill would also allow live auctions conducted over the Internet for Bureau of Land Management leases and would mandate oil and gas leasing in Alaska's National Petroleum Reserve. Democrats offered a motion to recommit that would have prohibited the biggest oil companies from receiving new leases under the bill unless they waived certain tax benefits. Not surprisingly that idea didn't have legs with Republicans. Conversely, the bill itself will go nowhere with the Democratic Senate. If it does somehow pass both houses, the president has issued a veto threat.

Rep. David Scott voted NO

The President seems to like throwing the threats of veto around, he's kind of like the bad ass on on the short bus.
 
Motion to Instruct Conferees Highway Bill

http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=411&chamber=H&congress=1122

Vote Passed (260-138, 34 Not Voting)

Late last week it appeared that there was momentum toward agreement on passage of a two-year surface transportation reauthorization measure. Supposedly Senate negotiators have made concessions to House demands on issues such as environmental permitting and transportation enhancements funding. Another point of contention has been the potential regulation by EPA of coal ash, a byproduct of coal combustion that road builders in some states use when making asphalt. House negotiators have insisted on pre-empting EPA and allowing states to regulate coal ash as they see fit. This House vote would insist on a measure to that effect being included in any final highway bill.

Rep. David Scott voted NO

Damn EPA, gut them. 

 
Upcoming Votes:

 
Food and Drug Administration Safety and Innovation Act - S.3187

A cloture vote is also scheduled on the FDA user fee bill. The House passed an amended version of the bill by voice vote last week, so the Senate needs to clear that version before sending the bill to the president's desk.

 

Flood Insurance Reform and Modernization Act - S.1940

The Senate will continue debate on the motion to proceed to the flood insurance bill.

 
Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013 - H.R.5972

The House is scheduled to take up this appropriations bill covering the departments of Transportation and Housing and Urban Development.

 
Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013 - H.R.5973

The House is also scheduled to take up this appropriations bill covering the USDA and FDA.

 
Surface Transportation Extension Act - H.R.4348

Negotiations on surface transportation funding are ongoing and a vote either on a longer-term bill or another extension will have to take place before week's end, when the current extension expires.

 
MegaVote is powered by the CQ-Roll Call Group (http://corporate.cqrollcall.com) Copyright (c) 2012.

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Monday, June 25, 2012

Send the Bill to the Mother

I suppose this kind of thing happens any time that an indigent driver kills.
Goverment expects some person to pay, logic and sensitivity be damned.
 
After drunken driver kills son, mother billed for cleanup | Greenville News - WYFF Home

Friday, June 22, 2012

Fear and Loathing in White America



Progressive education and media in America teaches people to embrace self loathing.  Citizens are taught that all things bad are the fault of those with priviledge.
Priviledge in the eyes of progressives includes cash in the accounts, land ownership, stock ownership, majority of populace and skin color.
What this is, is teaching prejudice cloaked in the soft words of misguided care.
If minorites feel threatened by the thoughts (not actions mind you) of the majority, perhaps they should make more of an effort to match their behaviour with acceptable norms. 
I guide my life by treating people the way I want to be treated.
I worked my ass off to get an education I could afford.
I work my ass off to have the things I want for myself , coworkers and family.
Seeing this type of diplay assures me there is a large group of people out there that have no chance at competing for the things I desire.
If you want to feel guilty for how you were born, something you cannot control, I suggest you would be more accurate if you felt guilty about being a sniffling fool.

MegaVote

Congress.org (congress.org) presents:  M E G A V O T E  June 19, 2012

 
In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:

 
Recent Congressional Votes -
  • Senate: Motion to Table; Farm Bill Sugar Price Supports Repeal
  • Senate: Motion to Table; Farm Bill Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Elimination

Upcoming Congressional Bills -
  • Senate: Farm Bill
  • House: Domestic Energy and Jobs Act
Recent Senate Votes:

Motion to Table; Farm Bill Sugar Price Supports Repeal
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=119&chamber=S&congress=1122
Vote Agreed to (50-46, 4 Not Voting)
Last week saw the Senate struggling to come to agreement on which amendments it would consider to the five-year reauthorization of agriculture and nutrition programs. The first such amendment - offered by Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., on behalf of Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H. would phase out the federal price support program for sugar producers by 2015. Detractors of the program argue that it artificially inflates prices for consumers and end-users, such as confectioners. The programs backers argue that it actually shields both of these groups from violent swings in market prices by providing a supportive environment for domestic sugar production. The actual vote taken, however, was not on the amendment itself but on a motion to table. The motion passed, thus killing the amendment.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES
Southern Senators voting in the interest of their agricultural states, to protect all farm price supports.  Not so sure that I agree with that, no doubt that price variances can crush farmers but in the end price supports push markets into unnatural positions.

Motion to Table; Farm Bill Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) Elimination
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=120&chamber=S&congress=1122
Vote Agreed to (65-33, 2 Not Voting)
The second amendment brought up for consideration concerned federal nutrition assistance, known by its acronym SNAP. Republicans have raised the alarm that spending under this program has ballooned in recent years and have sought to cut benefits. Democrats have countered that the program is actually functioning as it was designed to do, with more people coming on the rolls because of a weak economy. A sequester-replacement bill (H.R. 5652) passed last month in the House mostly along party lines would cut $34 billion from SNAP in the next 10 years as part of an effort to avoid Pentagon cuts. This Senate amendment, again offered by Reid (this time on behalf of Rand Paul, R-Ky.), would do House Republicans one better by ending SNAP as it currently exists and in its place creating a block grant program that would send a fixed amount of money to the states each year for the overall purpose of nutrition assistance, but with far fewer strings attached than there are currently. The actual vote was once again on a motion to table rather than the amendment itself.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted NO
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted NO
A program ammendment that cuts 34 million dollars over 10 years. Not a lot of money in the big picture. For the life of me the way these men cobble together programs having dunrelated objectives baffles me.  My guess is that the Democrats tagged this onto a Farm Bill that the southern Senators had to vote for.  

  
Upcoming Votes:

 
Farm Bill - S.3240
The Senate will continue consideration of the farm bill.

Domestic Energy and Jobs Act - H.R.4480
The House will consider this bill that would mandate an increase in oil and gas production equivalent to any release from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
Seems logical, why does this require a vote of Congress?

MegaVote is powered by the CQ-Roll Call Group (http://corporate.cqrollcall.com) Copyright (c) 2012.

Monday, June 18, 2012

Try Me

Testing my new iPhone Blogger application.
Bought my first motorcycle last week and cannot seem to concentrate on anything else.
I'll be back.
To the left is the end of a suction roll shell, if you know what that is, you know it costs way more than the Suzuki C90T that I am learning to ride.

MegaVote

Congress.org (congress.org) presents: M E G A V O T E  June 11, 2012

In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:

Recent Congressional Votes -
* Senate: Wage Discrimination
* Senate: Farm Bill
* House: Energy-Water Appropriations
* House: Medical Device Tax Repeal
* House: Homeland Security Appropriations
* House: Legislative Branch Appropriations

Upcoming Congressional Bills -
* Senate: Farm Bill

Editor's Note:  The House is in recess this week.

Recent Senate Votes:

Wage Discrimination
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=115&chamber=S&congress=1122
Vote Rejected (52-47, 1 Not Voting)
The Senate failed to invoke cloture last week on a motion to proceed to a bill that would provide additional legal recourse to individuals who experience gender-based wage discrimination. Among other provisions, the bill would have allowed employees to sue for punitive damages (as opposed to just back pay) and would increase penalties against employers who engage in wage discrimination based on gender. The measure would also make it illegal for employers to retaliate against workers for talking about their wages with each other. Republicans decried the bill as unnecessary and a boon to trial lawyers, while Democrats continued to hammer their election-year theme of the GOP being out of touch with women. The President expressed strong support for the bill.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted NO
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted NO
There is already sufficient law on the books, the Republicans are right to resist.



Farm Bill
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=117&chamber=S&congress=1122
Vote Agreed to (90-8, 2 Not Voting)
After much talk about a revolt among Southern senators, the Senate easily invoked cloture on a motion to proceed to its version of the multi-year reauthorization of farm and nutrition programs. Ultimately the only senators voting against cloture were Republican fiscal hawks who will likely vote against the bill anyway. Nonetheless, battle lines have been drawn between the Agriculture committees top two members, Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich. and Ranking Member Pat Roberts, R-Kan., and about a dozen Southern senators. Stabenow and Roberts have drawn up a bill that eliminates about $5 billion in annual direct payments to farmers and replaces it with a "shallow loss" program that would replace revenue losses of 11 to 21 percent below a five-year average. Southern senators object that this program would be of little help to their farmers, whose rice, peanut and cotton crops are less subject to natural disaster than wheat and corn but more subject to price fluctuation. Southerners are demanding some form of guaranteed price protection. Another battle will center around funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP). Both the Senate and House Agriculture committees have proposed SNAP cuts, with much larger cuts expected to come out of the House. Democrats in both houses are opposed to these cuts. The House has yet to mark up its version of the bill, and there is some question over whether it will happen later in the summer or not at all. Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn., Ranking Democratic on House Ag, has expressed confidence the measure will come to the floor, but a "summer agenda" memo distributed by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va. made no mention of it. President Obama has backed the Senate bill.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES
Agriculture is arguable one of the strongest sectors in the US economy, to a degree recession resistant. Whatever happens here needs to be careful and slow.

Recent House Votes:

Energy-Water Appropriations
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=342&chamber=H&congress=1122
Vote Passed (255-165, 11 Not Voting)
The House passed three FY 2013 appropriations bills last week, the first of which covered funding for the Department of Energy (DOE), Army Corps of Engineers and water development projects under the Interior Department, as well as various independent agencies including the Nuclear Regulatory Commission. This is typically a non-controversial measure, but that did not stop Members from forcing nearly three dozen amendment votes on the floor. Most of these involved either shifting funds from one program area to another or barring funding for an activity disliked by a particular Member. Very few amendments passed. The underlying bill would increase funding for DOEs nuclear weapons programs by $298 million and cut the Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) account within the Energy Department by $428 million. Several Democratic amendments attempted to restore EERE funding, but each was turned aside. The bill would also prohibit the closure of the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste depository, a priority of President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev. The President has issued a veto threat on the measure.
Rep. David Scott voted NO
Of course the Presiddent would threaten a veto, when you want money for stupid assed "green" projects that are the equivalent to a "black" hole, there is never enough money. Never.


Medical Device Tax Repeal
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=361&chamber=H&congress=1122
Vote Passed (270-146, 15 Not Voting)
House Republicans, with the help of 37 Democrats, passed a bill last week repealing the 2.3-percent tax on medical devices that was included as a pay-for in the 2010 health care overhaul. Bundled into the device tax repeal bill was a separate measure ending the overhauls restriction on using certain tax-preferred accounts to buy over-the-count drugs, and a third provision allowing individuals to recoup up to $500 remaining in their FSAs at the end of a plan year. The measure would be paid for by lifting caps on liability for overpayments of subsidized coverage under the overhaul. President Obama has threatened to veto the measure. Senator Scott P. Brown, R-Mass. and Orrin Hatch, R-Utah have introduced device tax repeal bills in the upper chamber, neither of which has attracted Democratic cosponsors.
Rep. David Scott voted NOGut the sumbitch!

Homeland Security Appropriations
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=370&chamber=H&congress=1122
Vote Passed (234-182, 15 Not Voting)
Second on the approps docket last week was funding for the Department of Homeland Security. Several provisions in the House measure have caused consternation among House Democrats and the Administration. These include a new limitation on the ability of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials to provide abortions for detainees and cuts to a program that provides alternatives (such as electronic monitoring) to detention for individuals who are in deportation proceedings. Sure to cause additional heartburn for Democrats is an amendment offered by Steve King, R-Iowa to bar funding for the Administrations "prosecutorial discretion" policy in targeting certain illegal immigrants for deportation. The policy, dating to June 2011, instructs ICE personnel to focus their resources on individuals with criminal records and to consider relevant factors before targeting certain others, including members of the armed forces, those who came to the United States as children, and high school and college graduates. Republicans have called this policy "administrative amnesty." Kings amendment passed, mostly along party lines (Roll Call #363). The president has threatened to veto the bill.
Rep. David Scott voted NO
Is it not interesting that the center for the discussion about illegal aliens is on the arguments about which  should be targets for deportation?  Let's quick screwng around with the Mr. Politician, if you cross the law in any manner, whether that be criminal or other, you're out.  Stop deciding to partially apply law, there are plently of people who are trying to follow the rules of immigration and the Executive keeps wanting to put people in line in front of the the people following the rules. 
Who do you want to become a citizen of our country, a person who acts lawfully or a person who evades the law and is rewarded for that because of the color of his skin?

Legislative Branch Appropriations
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=377&chamber=H&congress=1122
Vote Passed (307-102, 22 Not Voting)
Last but not least (at least not for lawmakers), the House passed its measure funding FY 13 spending on legislative branch operations. The measure provides funding for Member and committee offices and operations of agencies such as the Library of Congress, Capitol Police, Congressional Research Service (CRS), and Government Accountability Office (GAO). The House bill would cut funding for House operations by one percent, hold CRS flat and give bumps of six, two, and one percent to the Capitol Police, GAO and the Congressional Budget Office respectively. A 10 percent cut to the Architect of the Capitol means that ongoing restoration of the Capitol dome would be placed on hold. Funding for Senate operations will be taken up by the Senate Appropriations committee.
Rep. David Scott voted YES
Only in a retorical wany, I am curious as to why the House would bother to bump the funding for the GAO. As often as they have been wrong lately and failed so miserably on the Obama Care projections, thsi might be work better prepared by a disinterested third party.  Let's get those guys that protect the envelopes at the Academy Awards.  With those folks at least soembody will have to openly admit that the legislation written by Congress ALWAYS underestimates the expense and ALWAYS overstates the  positive effects. 

Upcoming Votes:
Farm Bill - S.3240
The Senate is scheduled to continue work on the farm bill.

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Copyright (c) 2012.


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Friday, June 8, 2012

MegaVote

Congress.org (congress.org) presents: M E G A V O T E  June 4, 2012

 
In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:


Recent Congressional Votes -
  • House: FDA User Fee Reauthorization
  • House: Sex-Selective Abortion Ban
  • House: Intelligence Authorization
  • House: Military Construction-Veterans Affairs Appropriations

Upcoming Congressional Bills -
  • Senate: Paycheck Fairness Act
  • House: Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013
  • House: Health Care Cost Reduction Act of 2012
Recent House Votes:


 
FDA User Fee Reauthorization


Vote Passed (387-5, 39 Not Voting)

Fresh on the heels of Senate passage, the House last week passed its version of FDA user fee legislation with a show of overwhelming support. The bill would reauthorize the FDA to impose user fees on drug and device manufacturers for five years. Unlike the Senate bill, there was little controversy surrounding the reauthorization in the House, as evidenced by the final vote tally. The bill was considered under suspension of the rules, an expedited procedure requiring a two-thirds majority for passage. At this point the House and Senate will move to conference to iron out a few minor differences. Both chambers have reportedly set a goal of July 4 for getting a final product to the president's desk.

Rep. David Scott voted YES

YAWN
 
Sex-Selective Abortion Ban


Vote Failed (246-168, 17 Not Voting)

Occasioning considerably more controversy than the FDA bill, the House also considered legislation to criminalize the administering or facilitating of abortions based on the sex of the fetus. The practice, known as sex-selective abortion, has long been associated with countries such as China and India, where social and economic pressures can lead to families to abort females at much higher rates than males. Republicans contend that this practice has reached the United States; Democrats say there is insufficient evidence and that a blanket ban would be unenforceable in any case. Despite garnering majority support, the measure failed because it was considered under suspension of the rules.


Rep. David Scott voted NO

It seems like a lot of struggle that they will try to pass a law that operators will only have to lie about to get around. Being dishonest is no problem for the true believers of abortion rights.  There is plenty of evidence of open advice to be dishonest.  A regulation here would be a waste of time. 
 
 
Intelligence Authorization


Vote Passed (386-28, 17 Not Voting)

The House passed legislation to authorize funding for the 16 intelligence agencies last week. Although total funding levels are classified, the bill would fund agencies such as the CIA and National Security Agency at a level above President Obama's request of $71.8 billion, according to Intelligence committee chairman Mike Rogers, R-Mich. and ranking member C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger, D-Md. A handful of amendments were adopted during debate, including one offered by Michigan Democrat John Conyers, Jr. to require a report from the director of national intelligence on the consequences of a military strike against Iran. The Senate has not yet moved on its authorization bill, but action is expected at the committee level sometime this summer.

Rep. David Scott voted YES

Why are there 16 different intelligence agencies?  I do do beleive that all possible monies should be spent on here but hasn't there been plenty of evidence that redundancy does not lead to equally considered seperate conclusions? 

Military Construction-Veterans Affairs Appropriations
http://capwiz.com/congressorg/issues/votes/?votenum=305&chamber=H&congress=1122
Vote Passed (407-12, 12 Not Voting)

The House passed its second FY13 appropriations bill last week, providing funding for the Department of Veterans Affairs and for military construction and housing. The bill would provide $71.7 billion in discretionary funds, including $60.6 billion for the VA and $10.6 billion for base construction and military family housing. A provision forbidding agencies from using project labor agreements (PLA) for construction projects was removed from the bill by an amendment from Michael G. Grimm, R-N.Y. (Roll Call #302). The PLA language was controversial among most Democrats and a handful of Republicans; its removal sped passage of what is usually a strongly bipartisan bill. President Obama threatened to veto the bill because the House GOP has set total FY13 appropriations levels below what had been agreed to in last year's debt-ceiling standoff. Because the House kept funding levels in this bill constant with last year, deeper cuts will be necessary in other appropriations bills, which the administration views as unacceptable.

Rep. David Scott voted YES

Peculiar position for the White House .

 
Upcoming Votes:

Paycheck Fairness Act - S.3220

On Tuesday, the Senate is scheduled to hold a cloture vote on a motion to proceed to a bill addressing gender-based salary discrepancies.

Let the male bashing begin.

 

 
Energy and Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013 - H.R.5325

The House began debate last week on its bill to fund the Energy Department for FY13. Amendment votes and final passage are expected this week.

 

Health Care Cost Reduction Act of 2012 - H.R.436

Also up for consideration is a bill combining three measures passed last week by the House Ways and Means Committee. The combined measure would repeal the medical device tax included in the Affordable Care Act, as well as another provision in that law prohibiting the purchase of non-prescription drugs using money from HSAs and FSAs. The last section of the bill would allow money left in an FSA at the end of a plan year to be returned to a participant and treated as taxable income.

Wait, I thought that thing was solved.

 

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Copyright (c) 2012.

 

 

 

 

 
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MegaVote

Congress.org (congress.org) presents: M E G A V O T E  May 29, 2012

 
In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:

 
Recent Congressional Votes -
  • Senate: FDA User Fee Reauthorization
  • Senate: Student Loan Interest Rates Republican Substitute
  • Senate: Student Loan Interest Rates Democratic Version

 
Upcoming Congressional Bills -
  • House: Food and Drug Administration Reform Act of 2012
  • House: Prenatal Nondiscrimination Act (PRENDA) of 2012
  • House: National Flood Insurance Program Extension Act
  • House: Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013
  • House: Military Construction and Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013
Editor's Note:  The Senate is in recess this week.
Announcement, announcement, the Senate is closed, results anticipated to be unchanged.

  
Recent Senate Votes:


 
FDA User Fee Reauthorization


Vote Passed (96-1, 3 Not Voting)

After extensive wrangling between the parties about which amendments would be allowed a floor vote, the Senate last week passed a bill to reauthorize Food and Drug Administration user fees for five years. The FDA relies on the fees, levied primarily on the pharmaceutical and medical device industries, to fund reviews of those same industries products. Two new user fee programs, for generic and generic biologic drugs, would be created under the bill. The bill would also permanently reauthorize programs to encourage the development of drugs for pediatric patients. Bernard Sanders, I-Vt., was the lone no vote. He felt the bill did not do enough to lower the cost of prescription drugs (An amendment introduced by John McCain, R-Ariz., to allow importation of prescription drugs from Canada, failed 43-54, Senate Roll Call #108). The House will debate its version of the reauthorization this week. President Obama has endorsed the Senate bill. The current authorization expires September 30, and leaders of both parties have prioritized getting this item to the president well ahead of time.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES

Sen. Johnny Isakson voted  YES

YAWN

 
Student Loan Interest Rates Republican Substitute


Vote Rejected (34-62, 1 Present, 3 Not Voting)

Part of the deal for bringing the FDA user fee bill to the floor was allowing a vote on the GOP version of legislation to prevent student loan interest rates from doubling. Republicans offered a substitute amendment to a bill that Majority Leader Harry Reid had brought to the floor earlier this month. Closely mirroring bills already passed in the House and introduced previously by the Senate GOP (H.R.4628, S.2366), the substitute would pay for maintaining current interest rates by eliminating a preventive health fund created by the 2010 health care overhaul. An agreement between Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell required 60 votes for passage.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES



Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES

YAWNING still, old guys arguing over how to give away money when none shold be given.



 

Student Loan Interest Rates Democratic Version

Vote Rejected (51-43, 1 Present, 5 Not Voting)

Immediately after rejecting the Republican substitute, the Senate moved on to rejecting the Democrats version. The Democrats would pay for their bill by eliminating a tax preference for certain shareholders of S Corporations. This is the second time S.2343 was voted on but the first time the bill itself was considered; on May 8 the Republicans successfully filibustered a motion to proceed (Senate Roll Call Number 89). With the House having passed its version, it is up to the Senate to pass a bill that could at least be the basis of some sort of compromise. Rates are set to go up on July 1.

Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted NO

Sen. Johnny Isakson voted NO

The Harry Reid is a bang up leader of men.  In the end I am glad these turkeys can't agree on anything.  

 

Upcoming Votes:


Food and Drug Administration Reform Act of 2012 - H.R.5651

As noted above, the House will take up its version of the FDA user fee reauthorization this week. It will be considered under suspension of the rules, indicating it is expected to pass easily.

 
Prenatal Nondiscrimination Act (PRENDA) of 2012 - H.R.3541

This bill would prohibit performing abortions based on the sex of the child. It sparked fireworks every step of the way as it wound through the Judiciary Committee, and the floor debate on Wednesday should prove equally lively.

I am not a big on either side of this issue, but has anybody noticed that the center of this argument has shifted very far to the left? 

 

National Flood Insurance Program Extension Act - H.R.5740

Before breaking last week, the Senate passed by unanimous consent an amended version of this bill to extend the National Flood Insurance Program. The amendment would extend the program's coverage through July and exclude second and vacation homes from receiving subsidized rates. Both chambers continue to search for a path forward on a long-term reauthorization.

 

Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013 - H.R.5743

This bill would reauthorize the programs of U.S. spy agencies.

A bill that the President will surely endorse, since the results of the intelligence community seems to be the only positive things that he can take credit for these days. 
Ironical. :) 

 

Military Construction and Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2013 - H.R.5854

This would be the second appropriations bill considered by the House this year. Usually one of the least controversial appropriations measures, "MilCon-VA" funds veterans health programs and construction of military facilities in the U.S. and abroad. One interesting note: unlike the Commerce-Justice-Science measure that passed May 10, this bill will not be given an open rule, meaning the opportunity to offer amendments on the floor will be limited.

 
 

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