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<br />SA <br />FEDERAL UPDATE from page 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 'p'age 13 <br /> <br />Both Sens. Levin and McCain advocate for <br />increasing the size of the Army and Marine Corps <br />to reduce the need for repeated deployments, <br />increasing funding to replace and improve equip- <br />ment used in Iraq and Afghanistan, and protecting <br />taxpayers form contracting schemes that result in <br />unnecessary spending on weapons programs. <br /> <br />Both parties lost a member on the committee <br />in the elections, with Minnesota Democrat Mark <br />Dayton retiring and Missouri Republican failing to <br />gain reelection. Newly elected Sens. Claire <br />McCaskill (D-Mo.) and James Webb (D-Va.) will <br />also join the panel. <br /> <br />Budget. Current Ranking Member Kent <br />Conrad (D-N.D.) and Chairman Judd Gregg (R- <br />N.H.) will change position titles when Congress <br />reconvenes for a new session in January. During <br />his tenure as ranking member, Sen. Conrad has <br />repeatedly called for tight discretionary spending <br />and the need for Congress to re-subscribe to pay- <br />as-you-go budget rules. <br /> <br />Such rules require new tax cuts and entitle- <br />ment spending, such as Social Security and <br />Medicare, to be offset by cuts in other programs. <br />Republicans let those rules expire, making it <br />easier f{)r them to advance their tax cuts, and <br />have blocked Democratic efforts to restore them. <br />Sen. Conrad, like his House counterpart, John <br />Spratt (N.C.-5), is likely to face pressure from his <br />Democratic colleagues to allocate more money to <br />domestic programs, even if that requires finding <br />more revenue. <br /> <br />Democrats will add newly elected Sens. <br />Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Bernie Sanders <br />(I-Vt.) to the committee, and Republicans may be <br />forced to remove Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) <br />to agree with new party ratios. <br /> <br />Commerce, Science and Transportation. <br />Current Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) and <br />ranking minority member Oaniellnouye (D- <br />Hawaii) will swap titles in the 110th Congress. <br />Sens. Stevens and Inouye have similar priorities <br />and have worked together closely for decades on <br /> <br />this committee as well as the Appropriations <br />Committee. With action on telecommunication <br />legislation unlikely during the lame-duck session, <br />the panel is expected to try again next year, with a <br />focus on stabilizing the Universal Service Fund <br />(USF). <br /> <br />Sen. Inouye has also been supportive of build- <br />out requirements and is likely to be more receptive <br />to incorporating them in any federal telecommuni- <br />. cations law rewrite that the panel may consider in <br />the coming session. The panel may also try again <br />to strengthen rail and mass transit security as well <br />as reauthorize the Federal Aviation Administration. <br /> <br />Committee members Conrad Burns (R-Mont.) <br />and George Allen (R-Va.) were both defeated In <br />their races, ,leaving Republicans with their current <br />committee roster to hold their remaining 10 seats <br />on the panel. Democrats will add newly elected <br />Sens. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) and Amy <br />Klobuchar (D-Minn.) to the committee, <br /> <br />Energy and Natura~R.esources. New <br />Mexico Sens. Jeff Bingaman (0) and Pete <br />Domenici (R) will switch titles in the 110th Con- <br />gress, with Sen. Bingaman becoming chairman of <br />the Energy and Natural Resources Committee. <br />Both senators have worked together to develop <br />bipartisan energy legislation in the past including <br />the comprehensive policy overhaul enacted in <br />2005 (PL 109-58). On many issues, changes are <br />likely to be a matter of degree. <br /> <br />For example, while Sen. Bingaman agrees that <br />the nation needs to boost domestic oil and gas <br />production, he is a stronger advocate than Sen. <br />Domenici of improving energy efficiency and <br />increaSing the use of power sources like wind and <br />solar energy. Both senators also recognize the <br />need for the federal government to address global <br />warming through some kind of mandatory controls <br />on greenhouse gas emissions. <br /> <br />Republicans lost three senators on the com- <br />mittee - Jim Talent (R-Mo.) and George Allen (R- <br />Va.) and Conrad Burns (R-Mont.)-butwilllikely be <br /> <br />Continued on Page 14 <br /> <br />Visit the League's OffIcial Website-.www.cacltles.org <br /> <br />PRIORITY FOCUS. PAGE 13 <br />December 1, 2006 . Issue #46 <br />