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Spending Bills, VA Health Care on This Week's Congressional Agenda

Oversight committee will also hold a hearing on border problems.

The House and Senate this week will take up several long-awaited legislative items, though they will do so amid the circus atmosphere surrounding the House GOP's buildup to a vote later this month on suing President Obama over his executive actions.

The public launch of the unusual effort begins Wednesday as the House Rules Committee hears testimony from legal experts about the merits of such litigation. Speaker John Boehner has signaled the House will be suing Obama specifically for delaying enforcement of the Affordable Care Act's employer mandate last year, on the grounds that doing so without congressional approval violated the Constitution.

Democrats are likening the hearing to a show trial, though both parties have chosen two legal witnesses to appear. Testifying for Republicans are attorneys Jonathan Turley and Elizabeth Price Foley, while Democrats have enlisted Walter Dellinger and Simon Lazarus.

Republicans say they ultimately plan to bring their resolution authorizing a lawsuit to the floor in the last week of July—right before members go on the August break.

Meanwhile, House Majority Leader-elect Kevin McCarthy says the chamber's appropriators will be scrutinizing Obama's request for $3.7 billion to deal with the humanitarian crisis on the U.S-Mexico border with the influx of illegal crossings—but he also said that any bill will not be brought to the floor for a vote this week.

On Wednesday, the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee is holding a hearing aimed at addressing the "root causes" of the rise in apprehensions at the border. But it also is not clear when a vote will come in the Senate on Obama's supplemental funding request. Republicans in both chambers have largely panned the request as tantamount to a "blank check."

House Republican leaders do expect a vote this week on the chamber's $10.8 billion version of a bill to keep the Highway Trust Fund solvent before it runs out of money at the end of summer, potentially halting road, bridge, and mass-transit projects.

The Senate has not yet decided when it will take up its bipartisan version of such a bill, which was approved last week by the Finance Committee. Like the House bill, it would extend the fund through May and into a new Congress. It brings about the same amount of money to the fund as the House bill through some similar funding mechanisms, including budgeting maneuvers tied to pensions. But there are differences that would have to be resolved.

The Senate is expected this week to take up its Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act, as the current act is set to expire Dec. 31. The bill extends the program, which partly covers the cost of damages from terrorism, until 2021. Senators have already drawn up a list of amendments, a sign that the bill is likely to pass, though even bipartisan issues have fallen apart on the floor.

McCarthy on Friday advised members that the House may also consider the chamber's version of the insurance program reauthorization, which has some differences from the Senate bill.

Also, the Supreme Court's decision in the Hobby Lobby case will continue to take much of the spotlight this week, with legislation to reverse the ruling expected to come up in both chambers. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the Senate will take up the bill this week. The legislation would be likely to pass in the upper chamber, but not in the House, where a companion bill was introduced.

Here's some of what else Congress is doing this week:

Approps Slog Continues

The House plans to take up its version of a fiscal 2015 Financial Services and General Government spending bill. That would be the seventh of 12 annual spending bills passed in the House.

But in a discussion on the House floor Friday, McCarthy would not tell Minority Whip Steny Hoyer whether he expects all 12 bills to be completed by the Oct. 1 start of the new fiscal year, saying only that "I will keep you informed."

Over in the Senate, appropriators will mark up the Defense spending bill on Tuesday, with a full committee markup on Thursday.

So far, however, the Senate has not passed any of the 12 spending bills. The process has succumbed to partisan wrangling over Senate procedure, specifically whether amendments should be subject to 60-vote or majority thresholds on the floor.

There is widening acceptance of the notion that the budget process will not be completed on time. Many lawmakers believe a number of the appropriations bills—if not all—will have to be wrapped up in some omnibus or continuing-resolution package that will provide ongoing funding for government agencies and programs into the new fiscal year—and until lawmakers return from the Nov. 4 elections.

Beyond appropriations bills, the House this week is to consider a package of five tax bills from the Ways and Means Committee that are depicted as measures to foster charitable giving.

The five bills that will be included are the Conservation Easement Incentive Act of 2013; a bill making a rule allowing certain tax-free distributions from individual retirement accounts for charitable purposes permanent; a bill to permanently extend and expand the charitable deduction for contributions of food inventory; the Charitable Giving Extension Act; and a bill modifying the tax rate for excise tax on investment income of private foundations.

Eye on Iraq, VA

Monitoring the situation in Iraq also remains a high priority. The House Foreign Affairs Committee holds a hearing on the U.S. response to the terrorist advancement in Iraq on Tuesday, followed by an afternoon joint subcommittee hearing on the rise of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in Iraq and beyond.

Meanwhile, the House and Senate are still trying to hash out a compromise on legislation to reform the Veterans Affairs Department and stanch a streak of reported—and largely preventable—veteran deaths.

Lawmakers have been struggling to rein in costs associated with the legislation. But conference committee members got a boost from a revised Congressional Budget Office score that brought down the estimate of the House VA bill to $35 billion over 10 years, from at least $44 billion over five years.

The House and Senate are under pressure to reach a deal and complete the legislation before Congress adjourns for the August recess at the end of the month.

The state of VA health care comes under the spotlight with a hearing in the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee on Wednesday.

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(Image via Liz Van Steenburgh/Shutterstock.com)