The House Rules Committee will
meet later today on HR 3354, the vehicle for a combined FY 2018 spending
bill. There have been a couple of changes to the proposed spending bill since I
originally
wrote about it last month; HR 3219 (the previously House passed
DOD/VA/Energy/Legislative spending bill) has been added into the bill making
this a true omnibus bill; and the recision of $875 million unspent Disaster
Relief Funds has been removed for fairly obvious reasons.
As I suggested in that earlier post, a large number of
amendments have been proposed for this bill;
• 174 for the Interior/EPA Division;
• 50 for the Agriculture/FDA
Division;
• 145 for the
Commerce/Science/Justice Division;
• 150 for the Financial Services
Division;
• 119 for the Homeland Security
Division;
• 184 for the Labor/HHS Division;
• 89 for the State/Foreign Operations
Division; and
• 89 for the Transportation/Housing and Urban
Development Division
There is no way that even I am going to try to review all of
those proposed amendments (unfortunately the staff of the Rules Committee does
not have that option), but a quick review of the 119 DHS amendments shows that
many are duplicative (or contradictory) politically motivated amendments and
surprisingly there are no cybersecurity amendments included in the list.
I do expect that the meeting tonight will formulate a rule
with a limited (but relatively large) number of amendments that will be
authorized to be submitted from the floor later this week. The amendments will
not make or break this bill, however. It will be the number of conservative
talking point provisions in the bill. If the number is not high enough, the
Leadership will lose enough Republican votes that they may not be able to pass
the bill. Conversely, if the number is too high there will not be enough
support from Democrats to counter the defecting Republicans. The Republican
leadership has an interesting tightrope to walk with this bill. The problem is
further magnified in the Senate because the Republican ‘control’ of that body
is illusory at best. And, of course, a Presidential signature is still not a
foregone conclusion this year.
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