It is very interesting how swiftly Washington can move when taxpayers aren’t “in the know.”
Trade Promotion: When Authority Is Tempered by Accountability
In the semantics of “fast track” legislation related to trade agreements, words matter. Historically referred to as “trade promotion authority” (TPA), the bill currently being considered by the Senate first and then the House establishes the parameters within which a president can negotiate a treaty with other nations. In exchange for this curb on the executive, the legislative branch agrees to limit its own prerogatives, as well. The Congress is bound to either approve or reject any such treaty with an “up or down” vote: it can be neither amended nor filibustered. Thus, it is “fast tracked.”
A Budget Reconciliation Primer: No Peaches & Herb
The term “reconciliation” tends to evoke feelings of rapprochement and reunion. But unlike Peaches & Herb’s 1979 chart-topping hit, “Reunited (and it Feels So Good),” reconciliation has no romantic meaning when it pertains to the Federal budget.
Transportation Boondoggles: Streetcars (and Other Things) Lacking Desire
The road to hell may be paved with good intentions, but in the “DMV” (not the Department of Motor Vehicles, but a local acronym describing the District of Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia), it is lined with ill-conceived transit projects, some of which are being given greater scrutiny by chastened elected leaders.
Home Mortgage Crisis 2.0: FHA Policies Portend Peril for Taxpayers
On February 11, 2015, Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Secretary Julian Castro testified before the House Financial Services Committee at an oversight hearing on the Federal Housing Administration.
McAuliffe’s Shakedown in Charlottesville: Highway Robbery
“Road to Rio” was a popular 1947 installment of the “Road” series of comedies starring Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, and Dorothy Lamour. But in 2015, it is “Rio Road” that is not sitting well with audiences in Charlottesville, Virginia.
114th Congress: The New Sheriff(s) in Town (Senate edition)
In the last 60 years, since Republicans relinquished their Senate majority to the Democrats on January 3, 1955, the Grand Old Party has controlled the United States Senate for only 16 years (plus four months*), and they shared control with the House of Representatives for only 10 of those years, as well as the aforementioned four months. Looking back even further to 1933, the GOP held the Senate for only an additional four years, all shared with the House. This January, as a result of the 2014 “wave” election, the Republicans once again control both chambers.
Sequestration-sensitive Pentagon Misses $145M in Improper Payments
Not all improper payments are fraudulent (inadvertent expenditures are all too common in the federal government, but many are “honest mistakes” without nefarious intent), but all fraud should be considered improper.
114th Congress: The New Sheriff(s) in Town
Unlike the United States Senate, control of the House of Representatives did not change as a result of the November 4, 2014 elections. However, the Republican majority did expand to at least 244 members, its highest level since the 1928 elections. Two seats in Louisiana will be decided by a December 6, 2014 runoff election, while the 2nd Congressional District of Arizona is the subject of a mandatory recount, with Republican Martha McSally slightly ahead of incumbent Democrat Ron Barber.
DOE Doublespeak: The “Profit” in Solar Energy Loan Programs?
George Orwell would feel vindicated. As he wrote in his blistering essay, “Politics and the English Language” (1946), “…[the English language] becomes ugly and inaccurate because our thoughts are foolish, but the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts… In our time, political speech and writing are largely the […]
