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Table of Contents
SEN. LEVIN: US CAN TARGET PAKISTAN
DEMS PUSHING FOR 'REBUILD AMERICA' JOBS
LAWMAKERS MAY INCREASE COSTS OF MILITARY BENEFITS
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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Tripoli prepares for 'liberation'
Tripoli prepares for 'liberation'

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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:

 

The Senate will meet at 3:45 p.m. for a pro forma session.
 
SENATE COMMITTEES:
 
No meetings scheduled for today.

 

THE HOUSE: 

 

The House will meet at 2:00 p.m. 

 

HOUSE COMMITTEES:

 

House Armed Services (3:00 p.m.): Hearing to examine business challenges within the Defense Industry Panel. 2212 RHOB.
 
House Rules (5:00 p.m.): Hearing to examine H.R. 1904 - Southeast Arizona Land Exchange And Conservation Act. H-313 Capitol.
Carl Levin: U.S. can hit targets in Pakistan

 

10-24levin

Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.) signaled to Pakistani leaders Friday that the United States has a right to attack insurgents operating from that country if they pose a threat to American forces.

 

"If Pakistan will not take on the threat posed by the Haqqanis and other extremist groups based in Pakistan who attack our forces in Afghanistan, then we should be prepared to take steps to defend our troops," the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee said in remarks before the Council on Foreign Relations.

 

Levin said that based on international law, the U.S. has a right to defend its troops by responding to attacks that originate from groups hiding in safe havens in Pakistan.

 

"We have the right to target not only forces and artillery attacking our forces in Afghanistan from across the border in Pakistan, but to target the people controlling those forces as well," he said, according to the text of his prepared remarks.

 

Quoting Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Levin added: "The message [the Pakistanis] need to know is: We're going to do everything we can to defend our forces."

 

Levin's remarks coincide with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's visit to Afghanistan and Pakistan this week. During her unannounced visit to those countries, Clinton turned up the heat on the Pakistani government, urging it to play a bigger role in cracking down on terrorism in the region.

 

While in Islamabad, Clinton also confirmed that U.S. officials reached out to the Haqqani network earlier this year to gauge whether the militant group will engage in peace talks, The Associated Press reported.

 

Earlier in his speech on Friday, the senator called the safe havens in Pakistan that harbor insurgents "the greatest threat to security in Afghanistan," and accused the Pakistani government of offering "the same excuses" on why its military hasn't taken more initiative to eliminate such safe havens.

 

"At the least, Pakistan needs to condemn the attacks of the Haqqanis in Afghanistan, and Pakistani officials need to end their denials of plain truth," the senator added.

'Rebuild America Jobs' to be pushed by Democrats 

 

10-24lahood

Next up on President Barack Obama's jobs agenda: Fixing the nation's crumbling infrastructure.  

 
A day after a piece of Obama's $447 billion jobs package went down in defeat in the Senate, Democrats said Friday they'll turn to a separate $60 billion jobs bill that will provide an infusion of funding to rebuild roads, bridges, airports and rail, and create a national infrastructure bank that would leverage private and public capital to finance projects.
 
"America is ready to go to work," Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said on a conference call with reporters to unveil the "Rebuild America Jobs Act." "I think we've had enough speeches. What we need is some action."
 
The bill, which LaHood said would put thousands of people back to work by next year, would allocate $50 billion for infrastructure projects and another $10 billion in seed money for the infrastructure bank. The Democratic-controlled Senate, however, won't take up the bill until the first week in November after the chamber returns from a scheduled week-long recess.
 
Like other Democratic jobs bills, the infrastructure legislation will be paid for by taxing the wealthy - in this case, a 0.7 percent surtax on modified adjusted gross income in excess of $1 million a year. But the bill, which includes portions of the jobs plan Obama has been promoting around the country, is almost certainly doomed given that Republicans are unified against any tax hikes.
 
"The Republicans in the Senate are the only group of people who feel this way. ...We're gonna give Senate Republicans another chance to do what's right for the country," Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) said on the call.
 
Later, he added: "The Senate GOP has had a love affair with [anti-tax crusader] Grover Norquist. They will not touch anything with new taxes."
 
Last week, Obama's sweeping jobs package fell nine votes shy of the 60 needed to overcome a filibuster by all 47 Republicans and two Democrats. Democratic leaders didn't fare much better this week by breaking the jobs plan into individual pieces.
 
On Thursday night, the Senate 
defeated a piece of the jobs package that would provide $35 billion to save or create about 400,000 jobs for teachers, cops and firefighters. Three members of the Democratic caucus - Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), Mark Pryor (D-Ark.) and Ben Nelson (D-Neb.) - joined the entire GOP conference in voting to block the bill.
 
The chamber also rejected a separate portion of the president's jobs bill, backed by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), that would repeal an unpopular law requiring government agencies to withhold 3 percent of payments to contractors.
 
Top Democrats believe that by forcing Republicans to repeatedly vote against jobs bills, public opinion will turn in the Democrats' favor. But Republicans say raising taxes in the current economic climate is a nonstarter, and point out that opposition to the president's jobs agenda is bipartisan. They also argue that Obama's previous stimulus efforts have done little to jump-start the flagging U.S. economy where unemployment remains at 9.1 percent.
 
"Two years after spending tens of billions of dollars on 'shovel ready' projects in his first stimulus bill, President Obama famously admitted that those projects weren't as shovel-ready as he thought they were," said McConnell spokesman John Ashbrook. "It would be the height of irresponsibility to make the same mistake twice."
 
LaHood hit back with facts and figures, saying that the $48 billion infrastructure portion of the administration's 2009 economic stimulus created 65,000 jobs and 15,000 projects.
 
"There were no bad stories written about any of those projects - no boondoggles, no earmarks, no sweetheart deals," LaHood said.
10-24military

The government's promise of lifetimehealth care for the military's men and women is suddenly a little less sacrosanct as Congress looks to slash trillion-dollar-plus deficits.

 

Republicans and Democrats alike are signaling a willingness - unheard of at the height of two post-Sept. 11 wars in Iraq and Afghanistan - to make military retirees pay more for coverage. It's a reflection of Washington's newfound embrace of fiscal austerity and the Pentagon's push to cut health care costs that have skyrocketed from $19 billion in 2001 to $53 billion.

 

The numbers are daunting for a military focused on building and arming an all-volunteer force for war. The Pentagon is providing health care coverage for 3.3 million active duty personnel and their dependents and 5.5 million retirees, eligible dependents and surviving spouses. Retirees outnumber the active duty, 2.3 million to 1.4 million.

 

Combined with the billions in retirement pay, it's no surprise that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta recently said personnel costs have put the Pentagon "on an unsustainable course."

Yet the resistance to health care changes is fierce.

 

Powerful veterans groups and retired generals are mobilizing to fight any changes, arguing that Americans who were willing to die for their country should be treated differently than the average worker. The American Legion has sent a letter to every member of the House and Senate pleading with them to spare health care benefits. The Veterans of Foreign Wars has urged its 2 million members, their families and friends to contact lawmakers and deliver the same message.

 

The two groups were unnerved when both parties' leaders on the Senate Armed Services Committee - Carl Levin, D-Mich., and John McCain, R-Ariz. - recommended that the special deficit-cutting supercommittee look at raising enrollment fees and imposing restrictions on the military's health care program, known asTRICARE. Current military members would be grandfathered in.

 

McCain and Levin also favored creating a commission to look at military retirement benefits and make recommendations for changes.

 

"Any changes to TRICARE that put the burden back on the beneficiaries is not supported by the American Legion," said Peter Gaytan, the group's executive director. He wondered about future benefits for his 19-year-old nephew who heads to Afghanistan in December.

 

The willingness in Congress to consider cost-cutting changes to the military's entitlement programs is shared by other senators, from members of the Armed Services panel to budget-conscious lawmakers in both the Republican and Democratic ranks such as Sens. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., and Mark Warner, D-Va.

 

"I think we have to look at whether savings can be achieved, but we have to keep our promise to people who were recruited based on those benefits, and we also ought to look at whether there's ways to improve the benefit structure," Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said in an interview last week.

That prospect has Joe Davis, a spokesman for the Veterans of Foreign Wars, fearful of the next step.

 

"All our worries are starting to come to fruition," Davis said.

The debt accord reached this past summer between President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans set in motion some $450 billion worth of cuts in projected defense spending over 10 years. It's a reality check for the Defense Department, whose budget has nearly doubled to some $700 billion in the 10 years since the Sept. 11 terror attack.

 

That amount doesn't include the trillion-plus spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The 12-member, bipartisan supercommittee has a mandate to come up with at least $1.2 trillion in cuts by Nov. 23. If it fails to produce a plan or Congress rejects its proposal, automatic, across-the-board cuts of $1.2 trillion kick in, half of it from defense spending.

 

Panetta said $600 billion more in cuts over the next decade atop the $450 billion in cuts passed this summer would represent a "doomsday" for the nation's military. Republicans and Democrats have echoed his apocalyptic warning. In their separate letters to the supercommittee, Levin and McCain said they reject any deeper cuts in overall defense spending beyond the 10-year, $450 billion cuts.

 

Determined to avoid spending reductions that would hit troop numbers, aircraft, ships and weapons, Levin, McCain and other lawmakers are urging budget-cutters to scrutinize the military entitlement programs.

 

"I think they may be facing reality and want to soften the blow some," said former Rep. Ike Skelton, D-Mo., who served as House Armed Services chairman. "They're both very responsible when it comes to the troops."

 

Levin and McCain support establishing an annual enrollment fee for TRICARE for Life, the health care program that now has no fee for participation. Obama had proposed an initial annual fee of $200.

 

Levin said future increases in fees should be tied to the same index used to determine hikes in the TRICARE Prime program, which has the lowest out-of-pocked expenses.

 

McCain also urged the supercommittee to consider restricting working-age military retirees and their dependents from enrolling in TRICARE Prime. 

 

The retirees could still enroll in other TRICARE programs. McCain pointed out that the Congressional Budget Office has estimated that such a move would save $111 billion over 10 years.

 

Active-duty personnel still would be enrolled in the program automatically.

 

In the House, lawmakers are less inclined to make any changes in health care benefits. Rep. Howard "Buck" McKeon, R-Calif., chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, agreed to a slight increase in TRICARE Prime fees for working-age military retirees. The fees had been unchanged for 11 years at $230 a year for an individual and $460 for a family.

 

Asked about the recommendations from Levin and McCain to the supercommittee, McKeon's office said the House has already made changes and suggested additional savings come from civilian rather military health care and retirement programs. The House vote to raise the annual TRICARE Prime fees by $2.50 for individuals and $5 for families.

Until tomorrow,


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