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Table of Contents
REP. WEINER RESIGNS
AGRICULTURE BILL PASSES IN HOUSE
SUPERPACS CAN NOW DONATE DIRECTLY TO CANDIDATES
Congressional 
Climate Bill Tracking 
Keyhole Image H.R.658 - FAA Reauthorization and Reform Act of 2011
Keyhole Image H.R.164 - Damaged Vehicle Information Act
Keyhole Image H.R.514 - FISA Sunsets Extension Act of 2011
Keyhole Image H.R.1 - Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2011
Keyhole ImageH.R.4 - Small Business Paperwork Mandate Elimination Act of 2011
Keyhole Image H.R.96 - Internet Freedom Act
Keyhole Image H.R.605 - Patients' Freedom to Choose Act
Keyhole Image S.244 - State Health Care Choice Act

Video Of The Day


Rep. Weiner resigns

Rep. Weiner resigns

 
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Greetings!  
Please enjoy today's issue of the Congressional Climate newsletter, brought to you by Lobbyit.com!
 Today's Hill Action: 

 

THE SENATE:

 

No meeting scheduled for today. 

SENATE COMMITTEES:

 

Senate Armed Services (9:30 a.m.): Closed business meeting to continue markup of the proposed National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2012. SR-232A.
 
THE HOUSE: 

 

No meeting scheduled for today.
  
HOUSE COMMITTEES:

No meetings scheduled for today.

Rep. Anthony Weiner resigns in third week of 'sexting' scandal

 

6-17weiner

Buckling under pressure from his Democratic colleagues following revelations that he'd sent lewd photos to women over the Internet, Rep. Anthony Weiner said Thursday he'll step down amid his seventh term on Capitol Hill.

 

"Today I am announcing my resignation from Congress," the New York Democrat said during a chaotic press conference at the senior center in Brooklyn where he announced the bid for New York City Council that launched his political career.


Weiner said he'd hoped to keep his seat on Capitol Hill so he could "fight for the middle class and those struggling to make it."

"Unfortunately the distraction that I have created has made that impossible," he said.

 

"I am here today to again apologize for the personal mistakes I have made, and the embarrassment I have caused," he added. "I make this apology to my neighbors and constituents, but I make them particularly to my wife Huma."

 

Weiner's wife, Huma Abedin, was not at the news conference, but he thanked her and his family for enduring the scandal.

 

A heckler in the crowd - reported to represent "The Howard Stern Show" - didn't let Weiner go quietly, yelling, "Yeah! Bye-bye, pervert!"

 

Weiner's announcement comes less than three weeks after the scandal first broke, and five days after a number of Democratic leaders joined Republicans in calling for his resignation. President Obama had also suggested Weiner should step down.

 

Democratic leaders had been silent on the scandal Thursday leading up to Weiner's announcement. Following the brief resignation speech, however, those leaders began to find their voice.

 

"Congressman Weiner exercised poor judgment in his actions and poor judgment in his reaction to the revelations," House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said in a statement. "Today, he made the right judgment in resigning."

 

Rep. John Larson (Conn.), head of the Democratic Caucus, bemoaned Weiner's "self destruction," but also suggested resignation was the best option.

"He made the decision with the best interest in mind of not just himself, but his family, his constituents, and the nation," Larson said.

 

Weiner, 46, has been embroiled in controversy since a photo of an underwear-clad man was sent from his Twitter account to a 21-year-old Seattle college student. Weiner initially denied sending the photo, saying his account was hacked.

 

Hounded by the press, he ultimately came clean at a tearful New York news conference in which he also admitted to having had "inappropriate" correspondence with "about six" women over the Internet over the past three years.

 

Since that public confession, more embarrassing photos of Weiner have surfaced on the Web.

 

Early this week, Weiner was granted a two-week leave of absence from Congress, which he reportedly planned to use in order to seek treatment.

His wife, a long-time adviser to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, had been traveling out of the country with Clinton until Wednesday. The couple was married last year, and is reportedly expecting their first child.

 

A recent poll taken in Weiner's district after the scandal broke showed that New Yorkers did not want him to resign.

 

Several of Weiner's New York colleagues struck a melancholy pose on Thursday, praising Weiner's friendship and political savvy but also supporting his decision to step down.

 

"I wish him well, he's a friend of mine," said Rep. Eliot Engel (D-N.Y.). "We ought to let him resign and move on with his life."

 

Engel said Weiner is canny enough to find success outside the Beltway, but doubted his chances to become the next mayor of New York - a position Weiner has eyed for years.

"He'll land on his feet because he's smart, and he's resourceful and he'll put this episode behind him," Engel said. "[But] it would be hard for him to run for mayor."

 

"No one's indispensable," Engel added. "This is a living body - that's the way the founding fathers made it - and we move on."

 

Rep. Edolphus Towns (D-N.Y.) said Weiner has been an effective lawmaker and "a great political voice" for Democrats. But he was quick to note that Weiner's resignation also eliminates a significant distraction as party leaders move to tackle more pressing issues.

"There's no doubt about it, this helps us get back to the message," he said.

 

Still, Towns characterized Weiner as a fighter who will likely rebound quickly from the scandal - and might even return to the public sphere.

 

"He's been very effective and it's unfortunate this occurred," Towns said. "But there's no doubt in my mind, this is not the end of Mr. Weiner."

 

Meanwhile, Weiner's office in the Rayburn House Office Building has become something of a destination in the past few weeks, with news cameras trained constantly on the closed doors and giggly tourists posing for photos beside the plaque bearing his name.

 

On Thursday afternoon, in the hours after the resignation announcement, three cameras and half a dozen reporters awaited any movement through the still-closed doors. A group of young interns walked by. One knew exactly where he was.

"You know whose office this is, don't you?" could be heard as they passed.

Agriculture bill narrowly clears House  

 

6-17agriculture

A $17.25 billion agriculture and nutrition bill narrowly cleared the House Thursday after deep cuts from food aid triggered a backlash against commodity programs - spelling more trouble for the farm lobby at a time of high deficits.

 

Reversing the House stand of just months ago, members opted to block future U.S. payments to Brazil cotton interests, a patchwork trade arrangement that now costs taxpayers $147 million annually and is designed to buy peace for the continued subsidies paid to American growers.

 

Ninety-five Republicans joined 128 Democrats on the 223-197 roll call which caught the GOP off guard and led to a scramble on the floor as the leadership debated over whether to try to reverse the outcome.

 

"They just don't want to have any cracks in that veneer," Rep. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), a farm-subsidy critic told POLITICO.

 

Ultimately, no such attempt was made, and the focus shifted to beating back a proposal to exclude wealthier farmers - with an average adjusted gross income in excess of $250,000 - from receiving crop subsidies.

 

But the 228-186 vote still reflected growing support for this reform, which is strongly opposed by Southern land interests but has had the support of President Barack Obama and many Midwest farm-state lawmakers.

 

Indeed, with deficit reduction talks underway across the Capitol, the farm lobby concedes that Thursday's votes are only the opening shot in a bigger fight over a new farm bill next year. Annual direct payments are almost certain to be reduced under the recommendations coming from the House-Senate negotiations being led by Vice President Joe Biden. And meeting Thursday, the Biden group again discussed farm subsidy savings as it tries to find the right level of reduction.

 

Anticipating this, House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas (R-Okla.) has accelerated his plans for drafting new farm legislation. "It's a good lesson for all of us on the Ag committee," Lucas told reporters after the appropriations fight. "A good may folks walked on the floor and did a gut-jerk vote," he said, explaining his defeat on cotton. But going forward, he warned: "Members of the Agriculture Committee are going to have to work harder than we have ever worked before in relationship with our colleagues in the House." 

 

Adopted 217-203, the underlying spending bill Wednesday reflects the second round of appropriations cuts in a matter of months - a total 25% reduction from funding levels only a year ago in fiscal 2010. And as food aid programs - at home and abroad - are targeted for major reductions, this has strained old alliances for the farm lobby even as Republicans have felt less committed to agriculture - and traditional farm powerhouses like the ethanol lobby. 

 

Both changes were at play in the House debate, which continued even as the Senate was struggling this week with its conflicts over ethanol supports. 

 

Cotton made for an easy target, given its historically costly subsidies, compounded by the more recent payments to Brazil. A similar challenge had failed 246-183 in February, but this time the cotton lobby ran into Democrats angered by cuts in the interim from the WIC nutrition program for women, infants and children. 

 

Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.) voted with cotton in February, for example, as a loyal member of the House Agriculture Committee. But having witnessed the reductions this week in food aid, he voted to end the payments as a protest Thursday. 

 

Washington Rep. Norm Dicks, the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations Committee, also reversed himself after watching his panel torn apart by the deep cuts from food aid. 

 

"We're giving money to Brazil so we can continue to subsidize our cotton farmers," Dicks told POLITICO. "That's pretty powerful."

6-17citizensunited

Super PACs may have an added special power following a federal court ruling this week.

 

Super PACs can already collect unlimited funds to spend on campaign ads in support of a candidate. A preliminary injunction issued Tuesday lets them also act like conventional political action committees and donate up to $5,000 to the same candidate's campaign, so long as the funds are kept separate.

 

Under U.S. District Judge Rosemary Collyer's decision in the case Carey v. Federal Election Commission, a PAC may use soft money for independent expenditures and donate hard money to federal candidates as long as the funds are kept in different accounts.

 

The expanded ability does not apply to candidate committees, leadership PACs or party committees, according to Jan Baran, co-chairman of the Election Law Group of the law firm Wiley Rein.

 

Collyer's decision essentially greenlights a new hybrid of conventional PAC and super PAC, and it reflects recent court rulings against the FEC in cases won by SpeechNow.org and Citizens United.

 

Baran said there has been an "incremental" transition in power from national parties and candidates to PACs, beginning in 2002 with the enactment of the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law.

 

"That's one of the ironies," he said. "The current law is that the people who need the money the most, like parties and candidates, cannot raise soft money, but those PACs that don't need it that much can raise as much as they want."

 

Carey v. FEC stemmed from a request from retired Rear Adm. James Carey and the National Defense PAC to solicit and spend both soft money and hard money in electioneering activities. Collyer sits on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.

Until tomorrow,


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