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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Security push ends session

Andrew Taylor Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Congress wrapped up work Friday on legislation focused on national defense, Iraq, terrorism and illegal immigration as Republicans pinned their hopes for keeping control of the House and Senate on making national security the theme of the Nov. 7 election.

The House and Senate both worked late-night sessions to finish up bills to set defense policy and improve port security. The Pentagon budget – including $70 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan – cleared the Senate, as did legislation to build a 700-mile fence along the U.S.-Mexico border and a $34.8 billion homeland security budget.

Legislation to convene military trials to prosecute terror suspects cleared its final hurdle in the House.

Plenty of work was left undone: expiring tax cuts, ethics measures and spending bills to fund the domestic side of the budget ledger.

Legislation validating President Bush’s warrantless wiretapping program will have to wait for a post-election lame-duck session colored by election results. So will a bill to open the Outer Continental Shelf to oil and gas rigs.

In the defense budget was stopgap spending to keep agencies open through Nov. 17 if their funding bills haven’t passed. Those include measures funding veterans health care, education, health research and anti-crime programs, among many others.

Friday opened with the Senate sending Bush the Pentagon budget by a 100-0 vote. The president signed the legislation the same day.

The bill provides $378 billion for core Pentagon programs, about a 5 percent increase, though slightly less than Bush sought. The $70 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan brings to $507 billion the total spent for Iraq, Afghanistan and other anti-terrorism efforts since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Thursday night, House-Senate negotiators reached agreement on a companion defense policy bill including a 2.2 percent military pay raise and setting policy on weapons spending and research programs considered vital to national security. The House passed the bill Friday by a bipartisan 398-23 vote.

The defense authorization bill’s fate in the Senate was uncertain and could fall prey to GOP infighting. Republican leaders in both chambers had sought to attach unrelated measures to improve court security and crack down on illegal and criminal immigrants. But Armed Services Committee Chairman John Warner, R-Va., refused. Efforts to break the logjam continued late Friday.

The House on Friday evening overwhelmingly passed, 412-6, a homeland security spending bill containing $1.2 billion to begin construction of fences and other barriers along the U.S.-Mexican border, plus money for jails to detain illegal immigrants and hire 1,500 more border agents. The Senate cleared the bill late Friday by voice vote.

“The war against terror has been given incalculable support thanks to … legislation to clarify America’s authority to hold and try enemy terrorists,” said House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill. “We have begun the process of securing our national borders and bringing our immigration system back under control.”

Democrats such as David Obey of Wisconsin countered that Republicans have routinely shot down Democratic efforts to boost funding for homeland security.

“On seven different occasions (Democrats) have tried to add funding to the president’s budget for homeland security,” Obey said, only to hit resistance from the White House and congressional Republicans.

Late Friday the Senate cleared by a 80-19 vote a bill authorizing but not paying for fences along one-third of the nearly 2,000-mile border with Mexico. The House passed it two weeks ago and the measure has been on the Senate floor off and on for more than a week as the chamber marked time toward adjournment.

The border fence is the single significant accomplishment of what had been an ambitious GOP agenda on immigration. Differences between Senate Republicans favoring a comprehensive bill including a plan to give illegal immigrants already in the United States an eventual chance at citizenship and House conservatives favoring an enforcement-only bill bogged down the bigger effort.

Meanwhile, negotiators finalized a port security bill outlining steps to protect the nation’s 361 ports from what could be catastrophic attacks from chemical, biological or nuclear devices. The bill served as a vehicle to carry legislation to limit Internet gambling. It was sure to clear the House and Senate as one of the last items of business.