They are Devo.
Like the song from the late seventies, "are we not men, we are devo".
Like the song from the late seventies, "are we not men, we are devo".
As in devolution.
Congress.org presents: M E G A V O T E May 20, 2013
In this MegaVote for Georgia's 13th Congressional District:
Recent Congressional Votes
- Senate: Water Resources Development Act Passage
- Senate: CMS Nominee Confirmation
- Senate: Energy Department Nominee Confirmation
- House: Obamacare Repeal Passage
- House: SEC Cost-Benefit Analysis Passage
Upcoming Congressional Bills
- Senate: Agriculture Reform, Food, and Jobs Act of 2013
- House: Smarter Solutions for Students Act
- House: Northern Route Approval Act
Recent Senate Votes:
Water Resources Development Act Passage
Vote Passed (83-14, 3 Not Voting)
The Senate laid down its marker last week for a full
reauthorization of Army Corps of Engineers water projects with a broad,
bipartisan majority. S. 601, shepherded to passage by liberal Environment and Public
Works chairman Barbara Boxer of California and conservative ranking Republican
David Vitter of Louisiana, reauthorizes port and harbor dredging, levees, dams,
and storm repair for periods ranging from five to ten years. It also makes
numerous reforms to current permitting procedures in an attempt to reduce the
amount of time needed to get projects approved and under way. Several of the
latter provisions are controversial, particularly language that would impose
financial penalties on laggard agency heads. For that reason a compromise was
negotiated to sunset the streamlining reforms after 10 years. Another major
change concerns the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund (HMTF), the primary funding
vehicle for dredging coastal and Great Lakes ports. Though conceived as a
dedicated fund for harbor maintenance, in practice congressional appropriators
in recent years have diverted HMTF dollars to unrelated projects. S. 601 would
slowly end that practice, increasing the amount of funding dedicated to harbor
maintenance by $100 million annually for six years, after which time all HMTF
revenue would be so directed. Action now moves to the House side, where
Transportation and Infrastructure committee chairman Bill Shuster, R-Pa. has
begun having hearings but appears in no rush.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES
CMS Nominee
Confirmation
Vote Confirmed (91-7, 2 Not Voting)
The Senate confirmed Marilyn Tavenner to be the next
administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. Tavenner will
play a prominent role in overseeing implementation of President Barack Obamas
health care overhaul. She is the first Senate-confirmed CMS administrator since
2004.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES
Energy Department Nominee
Confirmation
Vote Confirmed (97-0, 3 Not Voting)
In its last action of the week, the Senate unanimously
confirmed MIT physicist Ernest J. Moniz to be the next Energy secretary,
replacing another physicist, Steven Chu.
Sen. Saxby Chambliss voted YES
Sen. Johnny Isakson voted YES
Some of those MIT guys don't agree with Global Warming programme, but I'm betting this one does.
Recent House Votes:
Obamacare Repeal
Passage
Vote Passed (229-195, 9 Not Voting)
The House took its three dozenth or so vote last week on
repealing the 2010 health care overhaul. We noted in this space last week that,
as introduced, the bill appeared not to repeal the Independent Payment Advisory
Board (IPAB), a body created by the law to reduce supply-side Medicare
expenditures. It is not clear whether this was a clerical error, or perhaps
whether House Republicans had a separate bill dealing with IPAB - Phil Roe of
Tennessee has introduced such a bill, and IPAB repeal did pass the House last
Congress - but the version of H.R. 45 that passed leaves no such ambiguity.
Democrats Mike McIntyre of North Carolina and Jim Matheson of Utah both very conservative by their caucuss
standards and in very competitive districts
joined all Republicans in voting yes. As with each previous attempt at
wholesale repeal, this bill will go nowhere in the Senate. The president issued
a perfunctory veto threat.
Rep. David Scott voted NO
Tilting against windmills.
SEC Cost-Benefit Analysis
Passage
Vote Passed (235-161, 37 Not Voting)
In its final action of the week, the House took aim at one
of Wall Streets main regulators, the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Republicans have long complained that federal regulations are impeding economic
recovery. In that spirit, H.R. 1062 would require the SEC to change its
rulemaking procedures by conducting cost-benefit analyses before issuing new
rules and two years after a rule takes effect. The bill would also require the
agency to review existing rules and alter or repeal them if they are not
working. Democrats largely opposed the bill, though 17 did cross over to
support the bill. Opponents largely framed the measure as a Trojan horse for
dismantling the 2010 overhaul of financial regulations. The administration is
opposed to the bill, and it is unlikely to be taken up in the Senate.
Rep. David Scott voted NO
Upcoming Votes:
Agriculture Reform, Food, and Jobs Act of 2013 - S.954
After congressional agriculture leaders were forced to
swallow an extension last year, the Senate is taking another go at passing a
five-year farm bill. One major difference between this years measure and the
bill that passed the Senate last year is the reappearance of target prices, a
win for producers of such crops as peanuts and cotton. The change is largely
attributable to the ascension of Mississippi's Thad Cochran to the ranking
Republican slot on the Agriculture committee. The administration has issued a
policy statement in support of S. 954.
Smarter Solutions for Students Act - H.R.1911
The House is scheduled to vote on this bill, which would
change the way student loan interest rates are calculated.
Northern Route Approval Act - H.R.3
The House is also scheduled to vote on this bill to
circumvent the presidential permitting process and approve the Keystone XL
pipeline.
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