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CONGRESS TURNS TO STOPGAP FUNDS MEASURE -- VA budget
still major stumbling block between Congress and
the president.

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Story here...
http://ap.google.com/article/A
LeqM5h6dZR6Ran4SvzDtMx_YPyrtO3qkQD8TGM5400
Story below:
-------------------------
Congress Turns to Stopgap Funds Measure
By ANDREW TAYLOR
WASHINGTON (AP) — Congressional Democrats turned to a stopgap government
funding measure Thursday, buying time to fashion an omnibus spending bill.
The stopgap funding bill would fund through Dec. 21 the 14 Cabinet
departments whose budgets have yet to pass. It's expected the omnibus
measure will pass by then.
Democrats announced Wednesday they would all but surrender to President
Bush's demand that lawmakers appropriate no more than $933 billion for
annual operating expenses for Cabinet departments whose budgets are set
each year by Congress.
Democrats made an exception for a $3.7 billion increase for veterans
health care, calculating that Bush and his GOP allies on Capitol Hill
would relent in the case of the politically sacrosanct program.
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The White House was quick to say it had not
signed on to the Democrats' omnibus bill, awaiting details of the funding
mix within the bill and the resolution of its request for additional Iraq
and Afghanistan war funds.
"We're hopeful and encouraged by the movement that we're seeing on the
Hill right now," said White House budget office spokesman Sean Kevelighan.
The White House does not believe the additional veterans money is needed
and previously has issued veto threats if the money for veterans is not
accompanied by cuts elsewhere in the budget. That approach has been widely
seen as unrealistic, even by top Republicans like House Minority Leader
John Boehner of Ohio and former Appropriations Committee Chairman Jerry
Lewis, R-Calif.
But with the White House playing such a strong hand in the negotiations,
Boehner now insists Democrats stick within the president's $933 billion
figure, with exceptions for border security and a few other "emergencies."
The issue of Iraq has yet to be resolved, though expectations were growing
that Senate Democrats would relent and allow Republicans to add up to $70
billion in new war funds to the measure, without restrictions that have
provoked Bush veto threats, such as a December 2008 target date for
withdrawing combat troops.
The bill will not carry Iraq aid when passing the House next week, though
Democrats have said they will attach about $30 billion for U.S. operations
in Afghanistan and some domestic Pentagon needs.
Democrats' decision to largely hew to Bush's budget demand caps months of
wrangling. Democrats initially crafted bills adding $23 billion above
Bush's budget, devoting the funding to increases for domestic programs
such as health research, education, grants to state and local governments
and energy research.
More recently, Democrats worked with pragmatic appropriations panel
Republicans such as Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi and Rep. James Walsh
of New York to craft a split-the-differences bill cutting $11 billion from
the earlier Democratic measures. That effort collapsed after a White House
issued a veto threat Saturday.
Now, lawmakers led by House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey,
D-Wis., and his Senate counterpart Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., are squeezing the
remaining funding bills by another 1.6 percent, said a Byrd spokesman.
The measure would fund every Cabinet department except the Pentagon. Under
Bush's budget, domestic Cabinet departments other than Homeland Security
and Veterans Affairs would see their budgets frozen. Considering inflation
and population gains, that means most programs wouldn't be able to deliver
a comparable level of services next year as they do now.
Still, there are steps Democrats are taking to ease the pain. Democrats
have shifted at least $5 billion from defense and foreign aid accounts to
domestic programs. And they're added $2 billion in future-year
appropriations for education that, for practical purposes, adds to Bush's
budget for next year.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --
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