EARMARK PROCESS NOT POPULAR WITH THE PRESIDENT
6 April 2007
Veto threat on stalled war funding bill
The increasingly bitter argument over adding Iraq troop
withdrawal timetables to urgent war funding bills
presently at an impasse in the US Congress has some
familiar echoes with the passage of the US Unlawful
Internet Gambling Enforcement Act last year - and there
was further evidence of ambivalent values in Republican
thinking on 'earmarks' this weekend.
The passage of the UIGEA at a late night session of
Congress right before a recess for electioneering was
made possible by the use of the 'earmark' or 'Christmas
tree' political manouevre, whereby U.S. politicians can
jumpstart stalled bills by adding them - even though
totally unrelated - to more urgent bills in order to get
same through Congress. In the case of the UIGEA the
important Safe Ports Act was the vehicle chosen for the
coat-tail ride.
Players were hopeful that the questionable manner of the
UIGEA's passage would be addressed by the President
declining to sign the bill off, but President Bush
apparently was happy with the process and its
consequences and signed the Safe Ports Act into law -
with its attachments - last October.
In media appearances applauding the enactment of the
Safe Ports Act, the President did not even mention the
attachment of the Unlawful Internet Gambling Enforcement
Act, which has subsequently caused massive inconvenience
to US players and commercial damage to companies and
investors around the world. It has also weakened the US
position in its World Trade Organisation dispute with
Antigua and Barbuda.
With the earmark technique now a problem for the
President, who wants the war funding bill passed but
without the withdrawal timetable Democrats have attached
to it, the view on earmarks seems to have undergone a
dramatic change.
Last week, online gambling's arch enemy Senator Jon Kyl
attacked the earmark process (see previous InfoPowa
report) and in his regular radio fireside chat with the
nation President Bush was also critical of its effects
on his bill requesting more war funding.
According to the Congressional Record on the debate on
the US Troop Readiness, Veteran's Health and Iraq
Accountability Act 2007, Senator Kyl was critical of the
earmark process, describing it as "larding it up" and
saying: "....here we have a security supplemental,
emergency funding to support the troops, and we decide
to lard it up with all manner of items that are not
emergencies, have nothing to do with supporting the
troops, but because everybody knows this is a must-pass
bill, they figure this is a real good opportunity for
them to get things in the bill that might otherwise be
very difficult to pass in the Congress."
That sounds very much like the UIGEA add-on last year,
which had equally little urgency or relevance to the
Safe Ports Act.
For the record, the sort of thing other politicians are
trying to attach to the military bill are to do with
appropriations for guided tours of the US Capitol; for
mine safety research; sugar beet and sugar cane funding
and a $100 million request for domestic security related
to the Republican and Democratic Presidential nominating
conventions....and a $74 million provision for peanut
storage!
Kyl made the point again at the close of his address to
Congress when he said: "Do my colleagues hear what I am
saying? Politicians have decided this is a good train to
get on board because it has to move, we have to fund the
troops. Since it is hard for us to get the Senate and
the House to act on these items otherwise, we will just
try to attach them to this bill."
President Bush has the power of veto and was more direct
in his promise to nix the bills if the add-ons and
timelines stay in. Negotiations will be under pressure
of time and budget over-runs as Congress tries to
develop a combined version of the House and Senate
Bills, both of which contain the timetable provisions
with which the President is unhappy. After that, the
negotiations start before the President needs to take
the drastic step of an outright veto.
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
More news here.
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