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Table of Contents
OBAMA: COUNTRY MIRED BY PARTISANSHIP AND GRIDLOCK
SHOWDOWN FOR REP. WEST
CANADA-COLOMBIA FTA GOES INTO EFFECT
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

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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:

 

No meetings scheduled for today.

 

THE HOUSE: 

 

No meeting scheduled for today.

 

HOUSE COMMITTEES:

 

No meetings scheduled for today

Obama: Political system broken

 

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President Barack Obama said Congress needs to do more to address unemployment and the country's economic problems when lawmakers return next month from the annual August recess. 

 

"Many Americans are hurting badly right now. Many have been unemployed for too long," Obama said in his weekly address. "Putting these men and women back to work, and growing wages for everyone, has got to be our top priority."

But, Obama said, Washington has responded to the country's continued problems only with more "partisanship and gridlock."

More than a week after the financial services company Standard & Poor's downgraded the U.S. debt from its long-held AAA rating, Obama said partisanship has "undermined public confidence" and hindered efforts to grow the economy.

Calling on Americans to urge elected officials to put partisanship aside, Obama echoed remarks he delivered Thursday in Michigan in which he said the country's broken political system needs to be fixed for America to move forward.

"So while there's nothing wrong with our country, there is something wrong with our politics, and that's what we've got to fix," Obama said.

"So you've got a right to be frustrated. I am. Because you deserve better," he said. "And I don't think it's too much for you to expect that the people you send to this town start delivering."

On Thursday, Obama traveled to Holland, Mich., where he visited a high-tech battery factory and said for the United States to move beyond the recession, more industries like the Michigan plant will need to lead the way.

"They're not just showing us a path out of the worst recession in generations, they're proving that this is still a country where we make things; where new ideas take root and grow; where the best universities, most creative entrepreneurs, and most dynamic businesses in the world call home," Obama said. "They're proving that even in difficult times, there's not a country on Earth that wouldn't trade places with us."

During the Michigan visit, Obama rejected suggestions that he should ask Congress to return from their August recess to begin addressing plans to reduce joblessness. In his weekly address, the president said he hopes lawmakers will go home to their districts to listen to their constituents, and then return to Washington ready to work.

"Members of Congress are at home in their districts right now. And if you agree with me - whether you're a Democrat or a Republican or not much of a fan of either - let them know," Obama said. "And maybe they'll get back to Washington ready to compromise, ready to create jobs, ready to get our fiscal house in order - ready to do what you sent them to do."

Rep. Allen West to face angry tea partiers 

 

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After saying that the tea party movement has "schizophrenia" in its views on the deficit, Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.) is set to get on earful Monday evening from onetime supporters disappointed by his vote to raise the debt ceiling earlier this month. 

 

All 300 tickets for West's early evening appearance at a meeting of the Palm Beach County Tea Party sold out quickly, with locals eager to give him a piece of their mind.

"Some people are focusing their hostility and their anger on Allen West," the group's co-founder, Pamela Wohlschlegel, told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. But not everyone in the local movement is opposed to him, she said, noting that some supported the debt ceiling deal because it included some spending cuts and is seen as the best agreement fiscal conservatives could get at the time.

But there's still plenty of frustration with the onetime tea party favorite.

"I think he chickened out," Joseph Williams, a Republican and member of the tea party movement, told the Sun-Sentinel. "I'm very disappointed in him."

The co-founder of the Broward Tea Party, Charles Robertson, meanwhile, told the paper that West's supporters are "shocked and disappointed" by his support of the debt ceiling deal.

West has dismissed criticism coming at him from within the movement.

"If the folks who one minute they're saying that I'm their 'tea party hero' and what, three or four days later I'm a 'tea party defector' - that kind of schizophrenia I'm not going to get involved in it," he said in late July, ahead of the vote.

Several tea party groups have threatened to back primary challengers to Republicans who supported the deal. "If they want to bring forth a primary challenge, then so be it," West said.

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Republican lawmakers fumed on Monday over potential lost American exports because of a free trade deal between Canada and Colombia that has taken force before President Barack Obama has even sent a five-year-old U.S-Colombia agreement to Congress for a vote.

 

"Today's entry into force of the trade agreement between Canada and Colombia means that -- for no good reason -- U.S. workers and exporters are now disadvantaged in Colombia, a key export market for American-made goods and services," said House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp.

 

"Our trade agreement with Colombia was signed in 2006, years before Canada and Colombia even began their negotiations ... Once again, I urgently call on the President to send the job-creating trade agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea to Congress without further delay," Camp said in a statement.

 

The administration of former President George W. Bush, a Republican, negotiated all three agreements but was not able to get them through the Democratic-controlled Congress.

The Obama administration, in a move to the center after Republicans won control of the House in the November 2010 elections, renegotiated with each country to address concerns raised by Democrats.

 

But its hope of passing the three trade deals by the end of July fell victim to the battle over raising the U.S. debt ceiling and a separate fight over Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA), a nearly 50-year-old program to help retrain Americans thrown out of work by imports or companies moving overseas.

 

Republicans objected to a White House plan to include a TAA extension in the implementing bill for the South Korea agreement and demanded a separate vote on the program.

That appears now to be the plan for TAA and the pacts when lawmakers return to Washington in September, although some Democrats remain suspicious that Republicans will try to kill the worker retraining program if it is not shielded by the South Korea deal.

 

Meanwhile, a free trade pact between the European Union and South Korea went into force on July 1.

 

That deal was also negotiated after the U.S.-South Korea agreement, which was signed in June 2007.

 

Representative Kevin Brady, a Republican, said the delay in passing the trade deals is costing jobs.

 

"Already, Colombia's largest cookie and cracker company (Nutresa), which accounts for over half of Colombia's wheat imports, has announced it will switch its U.S. wheat orders to Canadian wheat," Brady said.

Until tomorrow,


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