United States Senator Tom Coburn
Home
|
Graphics Version
|
Site Map
Search:
About Senator Coburn
Biography
Welcome Message
Accomplishments
Coffee with Coburn
Constituent Services
Casework
Grants Research
Visiting Washington
Tour Requests
Academy Nominations
Internships
Passports
Flag Requests
Special Greetings
Financial Aid for Students
Government Publications
Federal Resources
Job Assistance
Pork Busters
Legislation & Issues
Sponsored Legislation
Issue Statements
Voting Record
Floor Calendar
Committee Assignments
Subcommittees
Earmarks
Press Room
Press Releases
Columns
Watch Speeches
Floor Statements
News Stories
Editorials & Opinions
Photo Gallery
TV Clips
Radio Clips
Press Kit
Podcast
Oklahoma Links
Youth & Student Corner
Internships and Job Opportunities
Academy Nominations
Contact Senator Coburn
Contact Form
Office Locations
Newsletter
Signup
Unsubscribe
Right Now
Visit Dr Coburn's Subcommittee on Federal Financial Government
Pork Busters
Submit a tip about government waste
Join Dr. Coburn for coffee
Earmark Toolkit
Earmark News
Print this page
March 22, 2007
Senate Appropriations Approves Iraq Supplemental With a Few Extra Earmarks
By John Stanton
Roll Call
Senate appropriators approved a multibillion dollar Iraq War supplemental package today that includes provisions setting up a tentative timetable for withdrawal of U.S. forces in Iraq, but not before lawmakers inserted a number of high-priced domestic earmarks into the measure.
The panel approved the supplemental by a voice vote.
Although Republicans on the committee offered several amendments to strip the withdrawal language during the Appropriations Committee markup Thursday afternoon, none were voted on as a courtesy to Sen. Tim Johnson (D-S.D.), who remains in a rehabilitation facility and missed the meeting.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) scored a major victory Wednesday when Sen. Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) agreed to back the Iraq language.
Nelson, who voted against Reid’s original proposal last week, signed off on the provision after Chairman Robert Byrd (D-W.Va.) inserted language backed by Nelson that would create a series of benchmarks for the Iraqi government to meet in order for U.S. forces to remain involved in the country as well as a provision requiring periodic reports to Congress by military officials.
Nelson also dropped his objections after it was made clear that the language’s pull-out timetable is not a hard deadline but rather a flexible goal for the military to meet. Those alterations “change the actual complexion” of the language, Nelson noted during the markup.
The panel approved a number of new domestic earmarks, including a provision proposed by Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) which would increase the Medicaid prescription drug rebate drug manufacturers pay to the federal government, as well as a one-month increase in a dairy subsidy proposed by Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) which Sen. Larry Craig (R-Idaho) warned would cost more than $1.2 billion.
“We keep adding money to this very cumbersome bill and it may fall under its own weight,” Craig warned.
Meanwhile, Reid said Thursday he had decided to make a run at immigration reform legislation this spring, marking off the last two weeks before the Memorial Day recess. Reid said that lawmakers and the White House have been holding constructive talks in recent weeks and that the chances of passing some reform appeared good.
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) — an outspoken critic of last year’s proposals because they included provisions allowing illegal immigrants to remain in the country — agreed that talks have been constructive. And while he expressed reservations about current proposals in the House, he expressed confidence that an accord could be reached.
“I don’t want to overstate it but I do think there’s a more realistic discussion going on,” Sessions said.
Permalink
View archive:
-- Month --
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
-- Year --
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
About RSS and Podcasting
|
Best Viewed
|
Plug-ins
|
Privacy Policy
|
Site Map
Home
|
Graphics Version
|
RSS Feed
|
Podcast