Complete Story
 

10/13/2022

Congress Prepping for Busy Lame-duck Session

Among the must-pass bills is a government spending measure

Congressional leaders are preparing for a post-election lame-duck session that includes some politically volatile agenda items that could keep lawmakers in Washington past Christmas.

Among the must-pass bills in the lame duck is a government spending measure that will carry the government through the next fiscal year. With just hours to spare before funding expired on Sept. 30, Congress passed a continuing resolution that maintains current levels of spending and extends funding through Dec. 16, giving lawmakers more time to negotiate a broader budget deal. Negotiations on that broader spending bill could include hurricane relief money, more military aid for Ukraine and tax extenders.

Sens. Rick Scott (R-FL) and Marco Rubio (R-FL) would like to keep aid for areas damaged by Hurricane Ian separate from the massive government spending negotiations.

“Hurricane Ian’s catastrophic damage in Florida requires a national response,” Rubio said, despite voting against aid offered earlier this month. “We have begun building out a disaster supplemental to meet those needs, and I look forward to working with my colleagues to make sure it passes without delay, drama or waste.”

Beyond government funding, Democratic leaders are eager to bring back up legislation this fall to protect same-sex marriage and modernize the Electoral Count Act to ensure that electoral votes tallied by Congress reflect each state’s public vote for president. The House passed a bill last month updating the law that governs Congress’s counting of electoral votes cast by the states and clarifying that the role of the vice president in counting of ballots is strictly ministerial. All but nine House Republications opposed it; however, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has endorsed it as “common sense.”

This article was provided to OSAP by ASAE's Power of Associations and Inroads.

Printer-Friendly Version