So far this year, Congress has done what it does best — spend a lot of money and make a lot of promises.
Now, as lawmakers return from a two-week spring break, comes the hard part, the actual crafting of legislation that will change how banks are regulated, health care is delivered and the nation consumes energy.
Over the next five weeks, leading up to the Memorial Day break, much of the action will come not in the full House or Senate, but in committee rooms.
The Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday holds the first of several public discussions on the issue of overhauling American health care. The House Energy and Commerce Committee is expected to vote soon on climate change legislation that could include a cap-and-trade system for carbon emissions.
The House Financial Services Committee could vote in early May on far-reaching new regulations for the financial sector, according to the chairman, Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass. Over the first months of this session, the first in 14 years with Democrats controlling the White House and both chambers of Congress, Democrats gave President Barack Obama a $787 billion economic stimulus, package and a $410 billion spending bill for this budget year. The House and Senate approved slightly different versions of a $3.6 trillion spending outline for the next budget year, which begins Oct. 1.
In the weeks ahead, lawmakers must reach a compromise on that budget plan and take up a separate big-money item: A White House request for $83 billion to finance military and diplomatic operations in Iraq and Afghanistan through the fall. Congress probably will give Obama the money, but with grumbling from anti-war Democrats seeking a quicker reduction of the U.S. military presence in Iraq.
Military spending will come into the spotlight as summer nears and Congress turns to the Pentagon budget, which includes Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates’ proposals to scale back or eliminate some high-cost weapons programs affecting jobs in hundreds of congressional districts.
The recession will be front and center when the Senate tackles legislation Monday that would strengthen the ability of the Justice Department and FBI to fight those who are taking advantage of the mortgage crisis to defraud homeowners.
The Senate could act soon a bill backed by Obama that would let cash-strapped homeowners seek mortgage relief through bankruptcy. The Senate must first resolve differences with the House, which voted to let bankruptcy judges lower a homeowner’s interest rate and principal. The House and Senate could also take up a plan to limit the ability of credit card companies to raise interest rates on existing balances.
The Senate’s legislative calendar, never predictable because of the minority’s powers to delay bills, could be slowed by GOP opposition to several Obama administration nominees.
Obama’s nominee to be health secretary, Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas, could face a rocky road to confirmation because of her abortion rights views. The Senate Finance Committee scheduled a Tuesday vote on whether to send her nomination to the full Senate. Republicans are also expected to mount resistance to Indiana University law professor Dawn Johnsen, nominated to be assistant attorney general for the office of legal counsel, over her work for a national abortion rights group and her sharp criticisms of the Bush administration.

