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Click here to visit the new home of Politics Daily!Rep. David Obey, a 20-term Democrat from Wisconsin, announced Wednesday that he will retire at the end of his current term rather than seek reelection in November. At a Capitol Hill press conference, Obey explained, "There's a time to stay and a time to go, and this is my time to go." Obey, 71, has represented Wisconsin's 7th District since 1969, when he became that Congress' youngest-serving member. Although he faced a tough reelection challenge this year, his decision to walk away came as a shock to top Democrats in Washington. With his retirement, Obey leaves one of the most powerful ...
House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey has already highlighted the cost of President Obama's planned buildup of U.S. troops in Afghanistan by proposing a "war surtax" to pay for it, and when administration officials go to Capitol Hill to testify on Obama's strategy, they will likely face some uncomfortable questions, the New York Times reports today. "I came here in '69, and I determined that I would give Nixon a year to see what he could do [about the war in Vietnam], because he had inherited the war, so I bit my tongue for a year," Mr. Obey told the Times, saying he had reminded ...
(Nov. 24) -- With President Barack Obama expected to announce his plan for Afghanistan on Dec. 1, the debate about how to pay for the war is heating up. The U.S. commander in Afghanistan, Gen. Stanley McChrystal, wants 40,000 more troops. Obama's plan would send 34,000 during the next year, U.S. officials told McClatchy Newspapers. House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey opposes any increase in the 68,000-member U.S. force in Afghanistan. But now that a surge appears inevitable, he and some other top Democrats are demanding a new tax to cover the expense of the war. Various ...
The chairman of the House Appropriations Committee slammed the Obama administration Tuesday for "outrageous" errors in data that led to inflated job-creation numbers on recovery.org, the Web site that reports on the president's stimulus program. The Hill reports that, due to "unrealistic" reports from about a dozen federal agencies, the site incorrectly reported more than 600,000 jobs had been saved or created by the stimulus. An ABC News report outlined some of the site's inaccuracies on Monday. "The inaccuracies on recovery.gov that have come to light are outrageous and the Administration ...
Nervous Democrats on Capitol Hill are reportedly considering another huge government spending bill to try and wrest the economy out of the doldrums. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said yesterday that Congress would, "keep the door open," to a second stimulus bill in two months. The Obama Administration has not called for a second stimulus package, yet. But when asked about the possibility yesterday, White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said, "I wouldn't foreclose on it." Perhaps an unfortunate choice of words given the state of the U.S. economy.House Approriations Committee Chairman ...
So where were you this past Friday night? If your answer is anywhere other than the karaoke stage at the Kingsmill Resort & Spa in Williamsburg, VA, then you're either a) the biggest loser in the world or b) not a House Democrat.Well the event was rocking, according to a reliable source from Williamsburg. And no, we're not talking about Rep. Earl Blumenauer's Twitter feed. We're talking about the Washington Post's Mary Ann Akers, who provides this report on the revelry...* Speaker Nancy Pelosi (CA) and Majority Whip Jim Clyburn (SC) were seen boogieing to a blues number performed by Reps. ...
The Democratic Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, Rep. David Obey (D-WI), announced last night that a spending compromise offered by House Democrats had failed and that the bill would be pulled from consideration. The plan was to pass a $520 billion spending bill, containing $11 billion in domestic spending over and above the budget request made by the White House. That represented a compromise of sorts on domestic spending, as Democrats had originally been seeking $22 billion in additional funds. Rep. Obey accused Congressional Republicans and the White House of bargaining in bad ...
The House of Representatives failed to override President Bush's veto of the Labor, Health, and Education appropriations bill yesterday. The vote was a close one, the measure coming just two votes shy of the 2/3 needed to override. The final tally was 277-141.In his veto message accompanying the rejected bill, the president cited spending on ineffective and duplicative programs and earmarks contained in the bill as top reasons for the veto. The bill had a total price tag of $151 billion, some $12 billion more than the budget request made by the White House. That $12 billion includes over 2,200 ...
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