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Harry Reid Outlines the Democratic Agenda... [View All]

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Teaser Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-24-05 03:28 PM
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Harry Reid Outlines the Democratic Agenda...
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Edited on Mon Jan-24-05 03:50 PM by Teaser
and it ain't bad. What's more important, though, is that they've decided to go on the offensive. A new tactic for Democrats.

http://www.theleftcoaster.com/archives/003746.html

Senate Bill 13 addresses Bush’s abandonment of our veterans by ensuring all veterans get the health care they deserve by 2006; expand mental health services to all VA hospitals by 2006; make prescription drugs readily available to veterans; and enact a new GI Bill for the 21st century.

Senate Bill 14 lays out an ambitious list of measures to deal with economic opportunity, ranging from the restoration of overtime pay for 6 million wage earners who have lost it under Bush; increases the Federal minimum wage over the next two years; supports relief for multi-employer pension plans, which are used predominantly by small businesses to provide pension benefits to an estimated 9.7 million American workers. It would also end tax breaks for companies exporting jobs; and would call for a recommitment to funding infrastructure improvements here at home.

Senate Bill 15 deals with education by strengthening Head Start and child care programs; it would create a federal program for rural school districts to purchase new buses so that they can retire substandard buses; fixes some of the problems caused for local districts by the No Child Left Behind law; creates a tuition-free program for future teachers in math, science, and special education teachers; restores the formula for Pell Grants, saving 1.3 million students from receiving decreased funding. Democrats will also increase the maximum Pell Grant award to $5,100 starting in FY2006, and take other measures to make college more affordable.

Senate Bill 16 deals with health care, by legalizing the safe importation of FDA-approved prescription drugs from other industrialized countries where they are more affordable. The bill also addresses the safety of prescription drugs and provides for better monitoring of drugs after they are approved for use. S 16 will provide small businesses relief by offering tax credits to help small employers provide coverage for their employees. The bill would create 25 pilot programs to build on the innovation of several programs across the country that help small employers cover their employees. This legislation would provide coverage to all children and would increase coverage for pregnant women. It also affirms Democrats’ commitment to protect the Medicaid program that provides coverage to more than 40 million Americans.

Senate 17 deals with voting reform, through a broad range of measures including among other things: requiring that all voting systems used in Federal elections provide a voter verified ballot that is fully accessible to the disabled and ensures privacy and independence; requiring each state to adopt Election Day registration procedures for Federal elections; creates a National Federal Write-in Absentee Ballot (NFWAB) for Federal offices that every and any eligible voter is entitled to cast from anywhere inside or outside the United States and requires the NFWAB be counted without regard to which polling place, precinct, local unit of government, state, or country the NFWAB is cast in; requires states to provide public notice of all proposed purged names from voting rolls 60 days in advance of a Federal election. It also prohibits states from purging names of voters from the list without specific notice provided in accordance with National Voting Rights Act (NVRA); requires states to establish early voting periods for a minimum of fifteen calendar days prior to a Federal election, with uniform mandatory Saturday hours, and a minimum of four hours per day, including Saturdays; requires punch card voting systems to provide in-person notice of over-votes; and prohibits central count optical scan systems from meeting the voter verification requirements without the public's knowledge or accountability; and requires notice provisions, public statements, and other transparency/accountability measures with regard to election administrators.

Senate Bill 18 deals with Medicare by addressing the corporate welfare that Bush larded onto the HMOs and drug companies with the Medicare drug benefit, by removing the prohibition against the federal government negotiating for best price; it also addresses the current gaps in coverage that exist in the law; and protects retirees from losing drug coverage, among other changes.

Senate Bill 19 is the Fiscal Responsibility for a Sound Future Act, which would among other things restore the Senate pay-as-you-go rule to require that mandatory spending and tax legislation be fully paid for, or be subject to a 60-vote point of order; would also reinstate sequestration (across-the-board spending cuts) to enforce pay-go and discretionary spending limits; prevents procedural gimmicks from being used to increase the deficit. The bill allows the Senate’s fast-track “reconciliation” procedures, which cut off debate after only 20 hours, to be used only for deficit reduction. Legislation that would increase the deficit could still be considered in the Senate, but could not be expedited. This would restore reconciliation to its original purpose of deficit reduction, and ensure that any legislation increasing deficits is subject to full scrutiny, debate, and consideration in the Senate. In addition, the legislation would prohibit the fast-tracking of Congressional budget resolutions that contain a reconciliation instruction that would worsen the deficit.

Senate Bill 20 deals with reducing unintended pregnancies and reduces abortions through increasing access to family planning services. It will also provide relief to Medicaid by decreasing the financial burden of pregnancy-related and newborn care.

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