Democrats complained the bill is too stingy, but most endorsed it anyway.
Democrats complained the bill is too stingy, but most endorsed it anyway.
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Republicans whisked a $388 billion spending bill through the House on Saturday, a mammoth measure that underscores the dominance of deficit politics by curbing dollars for everything from education to environmental cleanups.
Lawmakers approved the measure by a bipartisan 344-51 margin on what might be the last day of their postelection session.
Though not in doubt, passage was taking longer in the Senate. Abortion-rights supporters there were opposing a provision in the bill making it easier for health-care providers to decline to provide abortions or offer counseling and referrals.
From its tight domestic spending to the Democratic-backed provisions on overtime and other issues that were dropped, the bill is a monument to the GOP's raw power in controlling the White House and Congress. An imposing monument, too: The bill and explanatory report, completed near midnight Friday, were about 14 inches tall, leaving many lawmakers baffled about its precise contents.
"I'm very proud of the fact that we held the line and made Congress make choices and set priorities, because it follows our philosophy," Majority Leader Tom DeLay, R-Texas, said in House debate.
Rejected or cut back
Even President Bush's initiatives were not immune to cuts as the bill's GOP chief authors heeded his demands to control spending. His request for development of new nuclear weapons was rejected; his budget for the AmeriCorps volunteer program was sliced by 12 percent; and the $2.5 billion he wanted to aid countries adopting democratic practices was slashed by $1 billion.
Passage would crown the lame-duck session of Congress, which began Tuesday. Lawmakers hoped to leave town for the year Saturday night, but Senate delays on the spending bill and the collapse of bargaining over a measure reorganizing U.S. intelligence agencies left timing in doubt.
Also enacted during the postelection session was an $800 billion increase in the government's borrowing limit. The measure was yet another testament to record annual deficits, which reached $413 billion last year and are expected to climb indefinitely.
Home district projects
While the spending bill was one of the most austere in years, it had something for everybody, including thousands of home-district projects worth several billion dollars:
*$335,000 to protect sunflowers in North Dakota from blackbird damage.
*$60 million for a new courthouse in Las Cruces, N.M.
*$225,000 to study catfish genomes at Alabama's Auburn University.
*A potential boon for Bush himself, $2 million for the government to try buying back the presidential yacht Sequoia. The boat was sold three decades ago, though its current owners say the yacht is not for sale.
Despite complaints the bill was too stingy, most Democrats supported it. They helped write it and included many projects for themselves. They knew that the alternative -- holding spending to last year's levels -- would be $4 billion tighter.
"It is totally inadequate to meet the nation's needs in education, health care and the environment," said Rep. David Obey, D-Wis. "It falls so far from meeting our investment obligations for the future that it could only be brought to the floor by the majority party after the election."
The measure was a compendium of nine bills that Republicans found too contentious to complete before the Nov. 2 elections. The legislation covers almost every domestic agency and department, plus foreign aid.
The FBI, the Securities and Exchange Commission and NASA got healthy increases. But education grew by less than 2 percent. The Environmental Protection Agency grew by 3.5 percent.
Slight increase
Overall, the nine bills the measure combined were just 2 percent larger than last year's versions. When foreign aid and defense spending are omitted, the remaining domestic programs grew by around 1 percent.
To stay within the spending constraints Bush demanded, all programs in the bill eventually will be cut by at least 0.8 percent.
One of the last measures to pass Congress this year, the spending bill bore fruit for many industries while leaving other interests short.
There will be visas for 20,000 more skilled foreign workers for high technology businesses. Satellite television companies will be able to feed digital network programming to rural viewers.
Two labor-led efforts failed to make the cut. One would have blocked Bush administration rules on overtime pay. The second would have prevented the Internal Revenue Service from using private debt collectors to collect overdue taxes.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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