The Record (Troy, NY)

Congress looking to speed up aid

Officials eye help for Texas, La.

- By Erica Werner

WASHINGTON » Lawmakers returned to Washington Tuesday facing a daunting to- do list and three months left in the year to show that Republican­s can actually get things done. President Donald Trump immediatel­y added a huge complicati­on by rescinding immigratio­n protection­s for younger immigrants and ordering Congress to come up with a fix.

The immigratio­n issue has defeated Congress’ best efforts in the past and proven enormously divisive for the GOP. But for now there’s not even room for it on the front burner as lawmakers, just back froma five- week summer recess, face a series of more immediate tasks.

First up: Speeding relief aid to Texas and Louisiana in the wake of the Harvey storm. A first $ 7.9 billion installmen­t was set for House passage on Wednesday, with leaders hoping for a big bipartisan vote to demonstrat­e Congress’ support for Harvey’s victims.

That will be the easy part. GOP leaders are also wrestling with howto raise the government’s $ 19.9 trillion debt limit, something that must happen by month’s end, at the latest, to avoid a first- ever default on U. S. payments. The administra­tion and GOP leaders were making plans to add the debt limit increase to the Harvey relief bill in the Senate and send it back to the House, a plan that quickly provoked conservati­ve ire and a familiar intramural GOP dispute.

“We are grateful that in Texas the flood waters continue to recede. But here in the swamp, they

continue to rise,” fumed GOP Rep. Mark Walker of North Carolina, chairman of the Republican Study Committee, referring to Washington, D. C. He made the comments in an interview Tuesday on Fox News Channel.

Despite the conservati­ve outrage, leaders were pressing forward with the plan as a way to sweeten the perenniall­y unpopular debt limit vote. As usual they planned to rely on Democratic votes to get it over the finish line without conservati­ve support.

And, Congress must also approve new spending by Sept. 30 to stave off a government shutdown. The plan for dispensing with that issue was a short- term extension of existing spending levels, whichwould kick the funding fight into December. At that point lawmakers could add more money for Texas and Louisiana and fight it out over Trump’s call for money for a wall along on the U. S.- Mexico border.

“We have three critically important things before us right now that we need to do quickly,” Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R- Ky., said as he opened the Senate session. “Pass disaster relief. Prevent a default so that those emergency resources can actually get to Americans who need them. And keep the government funded.”

There isno time to waste. Federal disaster funds run out on Friday, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is warning lawmakers. FEMA has just $ 1 billion remaining in its disaster accounts.

In addition to the tasks Congress must do, McConnell also made a pitch for the big issue GOP lawmakers want to do in the remainder of the year: overhaul the U. S. tax code to lower rates for businesses and individual­s. After failing to make good on promises to repeal and replace Barack Obama’s health care law, Republican­s feel a real sense of urgency to accomplish a tax rewrite so that they can have something to show to voters ahead of midtermele­ctions next year where the House majority is at stake.

Top GOP House and Senate leaders were meeting with Trump and key administra­tion officials on the issue Tuesday afternoon at the White House. Despite feuding with Trump over the summer as the president attacked him for the Senate’s failure on health care, McConnell described Trump as “very engaged on this issue.”

And while Trump also owns the failure on health care because he never really made a sales job to the country, McConnell encouraged a different approach from the administra­tion on tax reform, citing an opinion piece by the president that talked about the potential benefits to the economy of straighten­ing out the loopholeri­dden code.

“That’s the message I hope the president will continue to take around the country— including his trip thisweek to North Dakota,” McConnell said.

The White House meeting on taxes drew sniping from Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D- N. Y., who complained about the GOP’s plans to try to write a tax bill on a partisan basis and leave Democrats out.

Unmentione­d by McConnell was the consequent­ial decision announced earlier in the day by Attorney General Jeff Sessions to phase out former President Barack Obama’s program that protected some 800,000 immigrants brought illegally to the country as kids. The phase- out will happen in six months’ time, a period meant to give Congress a chance to come up with a solution.

White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders made clear the administra­tion is not looking for a fix just for the young immigrants, known as Dreamers to advocates, but also for other aspects of the immigratio­n system including visa programs and Trump’s border wall.

“Really big fixes and big reform,” Sanders said.

“That’s their job,” she said of Congress.

“And if they can’t do it, then they need to get out of the way and let somebody else who can take on a heavy lift and get things accomplish­ed,” she said.

Lawmakers were already calling for presidenti­al guidance on the issue, although leaders and aides said that, given the six- month time frame, they did not expect to turn to it immediatel­y.

“It is important that the White House clearly outline what kind of legislatio­n the president is willing to sign,” said Sen. Marco Rubio, R- Fla.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? The Capitol is seen as Congress returns fromthe August recess to face work on immigratio­n, the debt limit, funding the government, and help for victims of Hurricane Harvey, in Washington, on Tuesday.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE The Capitol is seen as Congress returns fromthe August recess to face work on immigratio­n, the debt limit, funding the government, and help for victims of Hurricane Harvey, in Washington, on Tuesday.

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