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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (51671)7/22/2004 1:47:55 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Of course....Bush JUST APPOINTS PEOPLE AS HE WAS APPOINTED PRESIDENT....WHO NEEDS THE OTHER BRANCHES OF GOVERNMENT>>>>
EVEN WHEN YOU CONTROL THEM!!!!!?
UPDATE - Bush may bypass Congress to name FTC boss-sources
Wednesday July 21, 5:30 pm ET
By Peter Kaplan

(Adds White House comment)

WASHINGTON, July 21 (Reuters) - The Bush administration may install a new chief to run the U.S. Federal Trade Commission after Congress recesses for summer break to sidestep opposition from some Senate Democrats, sources familiar with the situation said on Wednesday.

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The White House is weighing whether to forge ahead with the stalled FTC nomination of antitrust lawyer Deborah Majoras using a "recess appointment" sometime after Congress leaves at the end of this week.

"They want to put somebody into the job," said one source on Capitol Hill. "They need to take care of it, and they're not going to wait."

Such a maneuver would break a deadlock over Majoras' nomination, which has been dogged by Senate Democrats upset about rising gasoline prices. The FTC is charged with enforcing U.S. consumer protection and antitrust laws.

White House spokeswoman Erin Healy said, "We do not speculate on personnel announcements."

Majoras' nomination was expected to receive a favorable recommendation from the Senate Commerce Committee on Thursday. But opponents are expected to block it from getting to a vote in the full Senate.

Bush named Majoras to succeed FTC Chairman Timothy Muris, who is scheduled to leave the position later this summer.

Majoras, a former deputy chief of the Justice Department's antitrust division, has pledged to impose tough scrutiny on the oil industry and investigate the shortfall in U.S. oil refining capacity.

But opponents of the nomination, Democratic Sens. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Barbara Boxer of California, have demanded she come up with specific plans to curb high gasoline prices.

The two lawmakers have also demanded Majoras scrutinize Royal Dutch/Shell Group's (Amsterdam:RD.AS - News; London:SHEL.L - News) decision to shut down an oil refinery in California.

The two senators have expressed concern that the closing the Bakersfield, California, refinery would hurt competition and further boost West Coast gasoline prices.

Recess appointments are only effective for one year, but the White House has used it to install several federal judges over Democratic opposition.



To: Jim Willie CB who wrote (51671)7/22/2004 9:57:04 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
War Costs Exceed Budget, Watchdog Panel Says
________________________

By EDMUND L. ANDREWS
The New York Times
nytimes.com

WASHINGTON, July 22 - Military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan are running $12.3 billion over budget this year, and Pentagon officials are trying to make up for the shortfall by transferring money from other accounts and delaying refurbishment of worn-out equipment in Iraq, the General Accountability Office said Wednesday.

The office, a nonpartisan Congressional agency, estimated that the Army was running about $9.4 billion short of what had been budgeted. By putting off other kinds of spending until next year, the military is likely to run up higher costs in future, said the agency, which was formerly the General Accounting Office.

Administration officials have acknowledged that costs in Iraq are running higher than the $65 billion that Congress approved for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the administration's urging, Congress is expected to pass an appropriations bill this week that contains $25 billion in funds for Iraq that can be used immediately.

But the new report suggests that the military could use up nearly half of that money by Sept. 30, the end of the current fiscal year.

Democrats seized on the report, attacking the administration for consistently underestimating war costs.

"The administration underestimated troop levels, underestimated the tempo and cost of operations, and underestimated the cost of logistics, maintenance, spare parts and services by contractors,'' said Representative John M. Spratt Jr., Democrat of South Carolina and chairman of the House Budget Committee.

In March, the administration estimating the cost of keeping soldiers in Iraq at $4 billion a month. But the costs have risen to about $5.5 billion a month, according to Congressional budget analysts, largely because attacks against American forces and the new Iraqi government show no sign yet of abating.

The G.A.O. estimate on military spending in Iraq is almost the exact opposite of the budget outlook for reconstruction. Congress approved $18.7 billion for reconstruction in Iraq and Afghanistan, most of that for Iraq, but only a few billion have actually been spent.

Much of the delay stems from the insecurity confronting foreign contractors in Iraq, the same factor that has caused American commanders to keep troop levels at much higher levels than expected.

Pentagon officials refused to comment on the accuracy of the General Accounting Office's estimate, but they acknowledged that costs were running well above the original budget and that they needed to divert money from other parts of the military budget.

If Congress passes a Pentagon authorization bill this week, as House and Senate leaders hope, Pentagon officials would be able to dip into the $25 billion in emergency financing immediately. But Pentagon officials said they did not want to use that money until the beginning of the new fiscal year on Oct. 1.