Senate 'Bailout' Bill a Bizarre Blend Indeed
By Marc Sheppard

Call it what you will, but the $700,000,000,000 credit rescue Bill that passed 
the Senate last night is one strange piece of lawmaking.  Take one part 
Monday's failed H.R. 3997 and soften it to liberal pleasure. Now add it to a 
mental health parity measure that's languished on Capitol Hill so long it's got 
Paul Wellstone's name in its main title.  Add a one-year patch to the 
alternative minimum tax, a dash of disaster relief for Hurricane Ike victims, 
and a green energy Bill that might well have otherwise been adorned with veto 
ink - now stir well, and Voilà!


The "bailout plan" itself, H.R. 5685 (the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act 
of 2008) , is being bundled as an amendment to H.R.1424, a Patrick Kennedy 
(D-RI) Bill that modifies sections of the Employee Retirement Income Security 
Act of 1974 "to require equity in the provision of mental health and 
substance-related disorder benefits under group health plans." The pure 
perfection of their fit is surely undeniable to all but the most cynical. 


According to the Library of Congress, the Kennedy Bill passed the House and was 
received in the Senate in March of this year.  Oddly enough, Wednesday was the 
first time it was ever brought to the Senate floor for consideration.  


The new Bill also snuck in Charlie Rangel's (D-NY) H.R. 6049 (the Energy 
Improvement and Extension Act of 2008) which had already added the ‘Tax 
Extenders and Alternative Minimum Tax Relief Act of 2008'' in addition to 
"Heartland and Hurricane Ike Disaster Relief" to its broadly green legislation. 
 Simpatico measures, to be sure. 


Rangel's Bill had passed both houses -- the Senate just last month -- but had 
been awaiting President Bush's signature, which, according to a Statement of 
Administration Policy, was far from a slam dunk.  The Bill includes a 
hodgepodge of green initiatives, including a "Carbon Audit of the Tax Code" 
which states that:


  "The Secretary of the Treasury shall enter into an agreement with the 
National Academy of Sciences to undertake a comprehensive review of the 
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to identify the types of and specific tax 
provisions that have the largest effects on carbon and other greenhouse gas 
emissions and to estimate the magnitude of those effects."


Apropos indeed.  


As to the "bailout" provisions themselves, in addition to establishing the 
"Troubled Asset Relief Program (‘TARP') to purchase troubled assets from 
financial institutions," the Senate version "raises the debt ceiling from $10 
trillion to $11.3 trillion" and adds a number of sections the left had been 
insisting on.  These include foreclosure mitigation efforts, executive 
compensation and corporate governance, and recoupment from the financial 
industry of losses to the taxpayer. Additionally, the FDIC insurance limit 
would be temporarily increased to $250,000. 


This strange amalgam was passed by the Senate last night 74-25.  It now moves 
back to the House, for consideration today, where opportunists get another shot 
at marking it up further with extraneous pet-projects at the bargaining table.  
 


There was genuine concern voiced that provisions added to appease the left 
might send congressmen on the right who voted "Aye" on Monday running for the 
hills on Friday.  


There were similar concerns expressed about the reverse dilemma arising. 


But if there was any real give on the part of Senate Democrats in modifying 
this "emergency" Bill, it sure as hell escapes me.


What a mess.


Marc Sheppard is a frequent contributor to American Thinker and welcomes your 
comments.

Page Printed from: 
http://www.americanthinker.com/2008/10/senate_bailout_bill_a_bizarre.html
 at October 02, 2008 - 09:41:02 AM EDT 
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