What’s ahead for Washington this week: Re-energized legislative agenda
By Jon H. Harsch
© Copyright Agri-Pulse Communications, Inc.
Washington, March 22 – Sunday, March 21 could go down as a watershed moment, the moment when defiant Republican opposition bolstered by 34 Democrats failed to prevent House passage of the major healthcare bill passed by the Senate last Christmas eve. Work will continue on healthcare this week to add the House’s “reconciliation” fixes to the Senate bill. But Senate passage of the reconciliation bill is virtually certain since only a simple 51-vote majority is needed under Senate rules.
Republicans and many states promise constitutional challenges to the new healthcare system designed to make health insurance universal by eliminating “pre-existing condition” exclusions, ending caps on total insurance payments, opening insurance exchanges to make competitively priced insurance available to all, and subsidizing insurance coverage for low-income individuals.
But two fundamentals have changed as of March 21. First, a new health insurance system will become the law of the land, once the legislation is printed and signed. Second, Democrats who seemed demoralized just days ago, are re-energized.
Just after midnight Monday morning, House Rules Committee Chair Louise Slaughter (D-NY) who played a key role in the series of Sunday night votes, summed up the new mood: “There’s nothing now that we can’t tackle!” So even as the loose ends of healthcare are tidied up this week, all the Democrats’ energy which had focused on healthcare now shifts to other top priorities, starting with financial reform legislation, a combined energy/climate bill, and immigration reform.
Expect a different mood when Senate Banking Committee Chair Chris Dodd (D-CT) launches work late Monday afternoon on his financial regulatory reform bill. Another event worth watching Monday in Washington will be the U.S. District Court of Appeals oral arguments on the carbofuran case weighing the Corn Growers and other ag groups versus the EPA’s decision to revoke tolerance levels of carbofuran without a judicial hearing on the revocation decision.
Congressional hearings this week include:
Monday, March 22
Tuesday, March 23
Wednesday, March 24
Thursday, March 25
USDA’s reports:
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