House Democrats Discuss Upcoming Trade Agreements – Video
House Democrats Discuss Upcoming Trade Agreements
By: HouseDems
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House Democrats Discuss Upcoming Trade Agreements - Video
House Democrats Discuss Upcoming Trade Agreements
By: HouseDems
See original here:
House Democrats Discuss Upcoming Trade Agreements - Video
LARSON, MAJORITY OF WAYS MEANS DEMOCRATS TO INTRODUCE SOCIAL SECURITY 2100 ACT
LARSON, MAJORITY OF WAYS MEANS DEMOCRATS TO INTRODUCE SOCIAL SECURITY 2100 ACT Cuts Taxes for Seniors, Increases Social Security Benefits, Keeps Program Strong Through ...
By: HouseDems
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LARSON, MAJORITY OF WAYS & MEANS DEMOCRATS TO INTRODUCE SOCIAL SECURITY 2100 ACT - Video
TIME Politics Congress Molly RileyAP Senate Minority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill., speaks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington on March 17, 2015. From left are, Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. Durbin, and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nev.
Senate Democrats again blocked a bill Wednesday that would create a fund to help victims of human trafficking over concerns about an abortion provision.
Even Democratic co-sponsors of the bill have backed off of it in the past week, claiming that they did not notice a provision that would bar the fees raised from perpetrators to build the fund to pay for abortions. After failing to nab the necessary 60 votes on Tuesday, Republicans failed to clear a procedural hurdle again Wednesday. Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, a member of the Democratic leadership, says theres only one way to now break the impasse.
Theyve got to take the offensive language out or take the bill off the floor, he told TIME.
Republicans have blasted Democrats for blocking a bipartisan bill once expected to pass easily. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said before the vote Wednesday that Democrats had made a historic mistake.
Democrats actually filibustered a bill to help victims of modern slavery, apparently because left-wing lobbyists told them to, he said.
The bills delay has pushed back the confirmation vote of President Obamas Attorney General nominee, Loretta Lynch, who has had to wait around 130 days, longer than the past five nominees combined. McConnell has said that her vote will occur once the sex-trafficking bill is passed.
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Senate Democrats Block Anti-Trafficking Bill, Again
Senate Democrats blocked getting to a vote on an anti-human trafficking bill Tuesday after objecting to restrictions on funding for abortions. Democrats said Republicans put it in the bill without their knowledge.
The vote was 55 to 43, but needed 60 votes to pass. Four Democrats crossed party lines and voted with Republicans.
Partisan tensions rose in the days after Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell told CNN he would not schedule a vote for Lynch until an otherwise bipartisan human trafficking bill -- stalled over an abortion provision opposed by most Democrats -- passes the chamber. The delay may mean the Senate runs out of time to consider Lynch's nomination ahead of the two-week Easter recess, so she may not get a vote before mid-April.
The 159-day delay for a vote since Obama nominated her is the longest since 1985 when the Senate took more than a year to confirm President Ronald Reagan's nominee Edwin Meese, according to Adam Jentleson, a spokesman for Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid.
McConnell is expected to keep the bill on the floor for at least the rest of this week and try to build public and political pressure on Democrats to drop their objections to the abortion language.
READ: McConnell says no Lynch vote unless Democrats relent
The impasse comes at a time when Republicans in Congress are trying to show it can govern effectively after struggling last month to pass a bill to fund the Department of Homeland Security.
In unusually harsh terms, White House spokesman Josh Earnest blasted McConnell's treatment of Lynch on Monday, calling the delayed vote "unconscionable" and saying his handling of the human trafficking legislation was a sign of "inept leadership."
"There's not a single legitimate question that has been raised about her aptitude for this job," Earnest said at the White House briefing Monday. "Instead, all we've seen is a bunch of political obstruction from Republicans that, again, does not -- does not speak well of Republicans' efforts to run the Senate in an effective fashion."
Even likely Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton weighed in, saying in a pair of tweets: "Congressional trifecta against women today: 1) Blocking great nominee, 1st African American woman AG, for longer than any AG in 30 years......2) Playing politics with trafficking victims... 3) Threatening women's health & rights."
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Lynch standoff continues
Democrats on the Judiciary Committee joined Republicans in voting to pass the bill, which would create a fund to help victims of human trafficking, out of committee. But when Democrats realized this week that the bill included a provision barring money from the fund from being used to fund most abortions, they reversed their position and repeatedly filibustered the bill.
READ: House GOP members threatening to take budget down
Now both parties are pointing fingers, with Democrats saying they were unaware of the addition of the abortion provision, and Republicans insisting they knew ahead of time.
An exasperated Sen. Dick Durbin put it succinctly in an interview with Politico this week.
"What do you want me to tell you? We missed it!" he said, asked why Democrats didn't catch the language. "It was an obscure reference. Clearly if it had been front and center, we would have caught it."
The snafu isn't all that unusual, however it highlights the age-old bipartisan practice of having the nerds do the legwork for the jocks, or the staffers parse bills for members of Congress.
Former Rep. Jim Moran, a Democrat from Virginia, said typically lawmakers either trusted their staff or each other to keep them informed on the specifics of legislation. But he noted that lawmakers don't intend to punt the hard stuff; rather, it's a necessary tactic to make a busy job more manageable.
"The reality is that members don't have the time to read all the bills that come to the floor," he said. "It really wouldn't be a particularly good use of their time, because they're busy in committee meetings and dealing with their staff and their constituents."
Jim Manley, a former communications adviser for Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, said it was typical protocol for lawmakers of all stripes.
"The fact of the matter is, I'm not so sure how many members read bills. And I'm also not sure whether members should be spending that much time reading bills in the first place that's why God created staff," he said.
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Congress fails to do its homework (again)