U.S. Congressman Mike Simpson - 2nd District of Idaho
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Recently in Washington      

Last week the House of Representatives began the second session of the 112th Congress and passed H.J.Res. 98, which disapproved of the President’s exercise of authority to increase the debt limit. 

Committee Update

At 10:00 a.m. on Tuesday, the House Budget Committee will begin marking up H.R. 3582, the Pro-Growth Budgeting Act of 2011; H.R. 3578, the Baseline Reform Act of 2011; H.R. 3581, the Budget and Accounting Transparency Act of 2011; H.R. 3575, the Legally Binding Budget Act of 2011.  Mark-up may continue into Wednesday.

Floor Schedule

MONDAY, JANUARY 23RD
On Monday, the House will meet at 12:00 p.m. for morning hour and 2:00 p.m. for legislative business. Votes will be postponed until 6:30 p.m.

Legislation Considered Under Suspension of the Rules:
1) H.R. 1141 - Rota Cultural and Natural Resources Study Act(Sponsored by Del. Gregorio Sablan / Natural Resources Committee)
2) H.R. 3117 - Permanent Electronic Duck Stamp Act of 2011 (Sponsored by Rep. Robert Wittman / Natural Resources Committee)

TUESDAY, JANAURY 24TH
On Tuesday, the House will meet at 10:00 a.m. for morning hour and 12:00 p.m. for legislative business. The House will recess no later than 5:00 p.m. to allow a security sweep of the House Chamber prior to the President's State of the Union address. The House will meet again at approximately 8:35 p.m. for the purpose of receiving in a joint session with the Senate the President of the United States.

Legislation Considered Under Suspension of the Rules:
1) H.Res. 516 - Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the passage of a fiscal year 2013 Federal budget is of national importance (Sponsored by Rep. Richard Nugent / Budget Committee)
2) H.R. __ - To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend the funding and expenditure authority of the Airport and Airway Trust Fund, to amend title 49, United States Code, to extend authorizations for the airport improvement program, and for other purposes (Sponsored by Rep. John Mica / Transportation and Infrastructure Committee / Ways and Means Committee)
3) H.R. 290 - War Memorial Protection Act (Sponsored by Rep. Duncan Hunter / Natural Resources Committee)
4) H.R. 2070 - World War II Memorial Prayer Act of 2011 (Sponsored by Rep. Bill Johnson / Natural Resources Committee)
5) H.R. 1022 - Buffalo Soldiers in the National Parks Study Act (Sponsored by Rep. Jackie Speier / Natural Resources Committee)

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25TH
On Wednesday, the House will meet at 9:00 a.m. for legislative business. Last votes expected no later than 11:00 a.m.

H.Res. __ - Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 1173) the Fiscal Responsibility and Retirement Security Act of 2011 Act of 2011 (Special Rule, One Hour of Debate) (Rules Committee)

THURSDAY, JANAURY 24TH
On Thursday, the House is not in session.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 25TH
On Friday, the House is not in session.

In the Press

House Members Still Trying to ‘Go Big’
New Coalition Will Focus on Bringing a $4 Trillion Deficit Reduction Plan to House, Senate Floors
By Daniel Newhauser and Jessica Brady;
www.rollcall.com; January 19, 2012
Rep. Mike Simpson is a key Republican on the Go Big Coalition, which hopes to craft language in the next few months to reduce the deficit.

A group of more than 150 legislators is taking up Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s challenge to scrap the “happy talk” on deficit reduction and produce a bill this year to cut more than $4 trillion from the deficit.

The Go Big Coalition aims to craft bill language based on the recommendations of the president’s 2010 deficit reduction commission and bring that measure to the floors of the House and Senate by this spring.

Reid said late last year that if the bipartisan “gang of six” Senators working on a deficit reduction plan had a proposal, “put it in bill form, in writing — not all these happy statements on what people think can be done.”

Rep. Mike Simpson, the key House Republican on the Go Big Coalition, said he heard the Nevada Democrat loud and clear.

“Harry Reid was right when he was kind of chewing out the gang of six and saying, ‘You know, give me something to look at. Give me a bill,’” the Idaho Republican said. “That’s the first challenge, is trying to get something that you can actually put in bill form.”

During the Congressional winter recess, staffers were tasked with starting to put into legislative language the ideas contained in the presidential commission’s roughly $4 trillion plan, known as Bowles-Simpson for its co-chairmen, Erskine Bowles, once chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, and former Sen. Alan Simpson (R-Wyo.).

Rep. Heath Shuler (N.C.), Mike Simpson’s Democratic counterpart, said the coalition has agreed on “some of the most important things to overcome,” including the ratio of revenue increases to spending reductions as well as the time frame in which the plan should be carried out.

Shuler declined, however, to reveal the particulars of those decisions until a bill is released. Staff is now hashing out bill specifics, the North Carolinian said, adding, “We’re meeting every day in some capacity with our staff.”

A bipartisan deficit reduction plan is a tall order for a group that knows failure all too well. The coalition was created late last year in an attempt to influence the Joint Committee on Deficit Reduction to embrace a plan including revenue raisers and budget cuts. The super committee failed to produce a bill by its Thanksgiving 2011 deadline.

Mike Simpson acknowledged that the group faces even more of a challenge absent the super committee’s mandate, which included guaranteed floor consideration of whatever plan it produced.

“The biggest advantage that the super committee had was that they were guaranteed to get something on the floor. Somehow we want to maintain that,” he said. “The question is, even if we come up with a codified Simpson-Bowles, can we get it on the floor?”

Adding to the complications is that the group likely has a three- or four-month timeline in which to do so before electioneering begins to suck all of the legislative air out of the room, Simpson said.

House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, who is playing an influential role behind the scenes, said Tuesday that he is “hopeful that the Bowles-Simpson proposal will be given new life,” and he gave a hat tip to “those who are working on substantive legislative proposals to offer to the Congress.”

The Maryland Democrat took to the floor Wednesday to talk up that agenda and the campaign to “go big” on deficit reduction.

Stakeholders in the group underscore that it’s a diverse cross section of the House and includes Members of all political stripes, from the Congressional Black Caucus to the fiscally conservative Democratic Blue Dog Coalition to the conservative Republican Study Committee to the moderate GOP Tuesday Group and beyond.

Buy-in from leadership in both chambers will be crucial to bringing a deal to the floor, however. Rep. Michael Grimm, a member of the GOP whip team, said “there is some talk” with Republican leaders on how to move forward but that right now the coalition is focused on hashing out a $4 trillion deal.

“There is some leadership involved, but overall we really want to make this an effort of the Members and really, truly keep as much politics out of it as we can,” the New Yorker said.

Like other Members interviewed, Grimm conceded that electoral politics are another hurdle to the group’s mission. He pointed to broad bipartisan efforts to reform immigration during President George W. Bush’s administration and the Senate’s failed attempts at an energy overhaul as examples. He also acknowledged that the coalition could fold in a similarly dramatic fashion.

“We’re in Washington; there’s always going to be politics,” he said.

And that goes for both sides. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver (D-Mo.), chairman of the CBC, noted that while Congressional Republicans may want to prevent any bipartisan wins for President Barack Obama to tout, “I admit, if things were reversed, we would not want to give the Republican president any victories either at this point in the game.”

On the Senate side, members of the gang of six held formal meetings right up until the end of 2011, and the group is aiming to introduce legislation this year. Just like House Members, a Senate GOP aide said the group is “looking at taking Bowles-Simpson and seeing what tweaks can be made to impact the score.”

The gang of six, which has now expanded to eight Senators, was criticized by Members of both parties last year for introducing its $3.7 trillion package too late to influence the debt limit debate. Staffers griped at the private nature of the talks, and neither Reid nor Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) fully embraced its efforts. This time around, an aide to Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) said, things will be different.

“With the upcoming deadlines and the urgency of the challenge, Senator Warner intends to continue working with his colleagues in a bipartisan way to move beyond happy talk,” Kevin Hall said in a statement.


MEDIA CENTER


Congressman Simpson speaks at a press conference to introduce a bipartisan letter to the Super Committee


Congressmen Simpson, Labrador and Senator Crapo pictured with the 744 Engineer Company

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