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House Democratic leaders are looking to add $3 billion to $4 billion in domestic spending to the emergency war supplemental beyond economic stimulus and troop-related funds, according to leadership sources.

Although still a moving target, that spending would come in addition to the likely $12 billion for both 13 extra weeks of unemployment benefits for those whose eligibility has expired and a boost in GI education spending that has broad, bipartisan support.

With final decisions on the package still to be made, a senior aide in the Democratic leadership said discussions now have moved to including money to cover shortfalls in the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children as well as for census programs.


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The administration is said to be looking to move existing funds from other programs around to cover WIC shortfalls.

Sources said leaders negotiating the measure are also looking to add one-time payments to Filipino World War II veterans, who have never received veterans' benefits. The Senate approved a bill Thursday that would expand benefits to those men, a move sources said was supported by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

As many as 6,000 of those veterans in the United States live in California, with 12,000 in the Philippines. Those veterans fought alongside U.S. forces against the Japanese early in the war. Senate Veterans Affairs Committee Chairman Daniel Akaka, D-Hawaii, sponsored the measure, which would create around $250 million in new benefits over 10 years, but it is unclear just how much of the Senate bill would be adopted in the stimulus package.

Aides said Democratic leaders are also considering putting in language to block new Bush administration regulations decreasing Medicaid payments to states by around $13 billion over the next five years. Such legislation was overwhelmingly approved by the House Wednesday but faces a veto threat from President Bush, who has also said he would not accept a package that exceeds his $108 billion request for war funding.

Because of that threat, Democrats are expected to combine the administration's $108 billion initial funding request for Iraq and Afghanistan operations for the rest of fiscal 2008 with $70 billion in "bridge" funding for the first several months of fiscal 2009.

Sources said Appropriations Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., has hundreds of items that could potentially be added to the package, but has argued against a massive amount for domestic funding. A decision was made to limit domestic funding to stave off opposition from the White House and congressional Republicans. The measure also is likely to bypass the regular committee process and go straight to the floor in separate war policy, war funding and domestic funding votes. The tactic would be an effort by Democratic leaders to overcome potential hurdles from anti-war stalwarts in their own Caucus and Republicans intent on adding their own wish list items to the bill in committee.

"This is where things could get added to placate them (antiwar Democratic liberals)," said one Democratic leadership aide. "But many of those people can't be bought."

COMMENTS

  • To me, the entire unemployment benefit system is a failure and a tremendous waste of resources. It is ridiculous to pay able bodied people to do nothing. Instead of just handing out the money, the government needs to be giving people work to do. If the government gives an unemployed person forty percent of their original paycheck, that person should be giving the government forty percent of a workweek doing something for which they are qualified. Our country has a disparate need for people to repair our infrastructure, rebuild deteriorating schools, provide social services and so on. But, the government just pays people to do nothing. Building infrastructure, schools, and such creates a foundation on which to build an economy. It leads to full time, lasting jobs and can even generate a return for the government's investment. Nobody wins when people are paid to look for jobs that don't exist or to just do nothing at all. It leads to frustration and despair. The Congress needs to get a reality check.
  • Why Filipino vets?? The country scams $250M a year Medicare and Tricare. Ahhh the census what do you bet every ex there will qualify for a bonus this year