Political Hotsheet
By

Michelle Levi /

CBS News/ February 2, 2009, 1:45 PM

Stimulus Bill Sparks Partisan Parsing

The Senate will start deliberations on the Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Plan at 2pm ET this afternoon, but do not expect a vote anytime soon. All weekend, senators and administration officials had plenty to say about the bill's future, but no one seemed to agree on their predictions.

Which raises the question: Is this weekend's war of words a harbinger for a long, partisan Senate debate?

(AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
In an interview Sunday, President Obama said, "I am confident that by the time we have the final package on the floor that we are going to see substantial support, and people are going to see this is a serious effort. It has no earmarks. We are going to be trimming out things that are not relevant to putting people back to work right now."

Of note is the fact that the administration has almost completely stopped offering number estimates on what Republican support they can count on. Gone from their nomenclature is the confident estimation that the bill will pass with the support of eighty senators.

Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY) seemed confident on 'Face the Nation' Sunday that the stimulus bill will be met with Republican support this week. "Republicans won't have the luxury they did in the House of voting no and still letting it pass," he said.

"This will pass with Republican votes because it is a good package and we will make some changes around the edges," Schumer said. He added that he "would rather have a really good bill that helps our economy get out of this mess with sixty five votes than dilute the bill and get eighty votes."

On NBC's 'Meet the Press,' Senator John Kerry (D-MA), a member of the finance committee, said the "bipartisan effort here" is "unprecedented." He cited examples of Republican input in the bill, lauding "Republican Representative Eric Cantor's suggestion that the entire bill be put on the Internet."

"Everybody can go look at every provision in it," Kerry continued. "We've accepted Republican proposals. Arlen Specter's going to put in $12 billion for NIH. One of the largest increases in the bill is the Alternative Minimum Tax fix. That came with the advocacy of Chuck Grassley, Republican Finance ranking member."

Ranking Republican in the Senate Banking Committee Richard Shelby seems to disagree. He told Bob Schieffer on CBSNews.com's 'Washington Unplugged' Friday that he hopes "Republicans can stay together."

He said he has not done a vote count but "we could keep talking about it. If the Republicans band together, there are forty one of us this bill won't pass."

Shelby dampened expectations, however, saying he is "doubtful" there will be full Republican unity. "I think there will be some Republicans that will jump on the bandwagon and jump ship," said Shelby, adding, "but I think it's a bad piece of legislation."

What would it take to get Republicans on board? "A one hundred and eighty degree turn," Shelby said.

Another Republican, Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, also knocked the bill.

"Oh, I would fight this bill as it is, absolutely, because I think it is the wrong emphasis," the banking committee member said Sunday. "When we talk about bipartisanship, it means that some of the ideas that would be incorporated would be the Republican ideas. Just talking a good game and then not having any real input or change is not going to make a difference."

(CBS)
Senator John McCain, meanwhile, said he "appreciates" the president's outreach to Republicans but "we're a long way away" from agreement on the stimulus package.

"There's too much spending, too much unnecessary spending, not the right kind of tax cuts and no end game," McCain said. "There's a lot of other proposals we have. We think we need to eliminate a lot of the wasteful pork barrel spending that's been put in and have a real, meaningful stimulus package. We realize they need the package. We need the package, America needs the package, but we're not there yet."

Adding his hat to the ranks of Republicans speaking out against the stimulus bill, Senator Mitch McConnell told Bob Schieffer Sunday he "doubt[s]" the economic stimulus package passed by the House has a chance of passing as is in the Senate.

"I think we need to exercise some discipline here and I think it may be time for the President to get a hold of these Democrats in the Senate and House who have rather significant majorities and shake them a little bit and say look, let's do this the right way," McConnell added.

Asked by Schieffer if Republicans plan to filibuster the vote, the senator said that a "super majority" is certainly needed for passage but that Senate Republicans will not purposely hold up the process.

The stimulus package -- known formally as the Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Package -- was passed by the House of Representatives last Wednesday, but not a single Republican voted for its passage. How it will be received in the Senate will be revealed this week as the bill hits the floor. Based on this weekend's conflicting predictions, it could be a contentious week.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
125 Comments Add a Comment
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candygirl206 says:
Rep or Dem it does not matter, the US Gov has grown by 4X in the last 20 years...like private companies they need to lay off and trim 20% of the personal not spend 880 billion and lay a huge burden on the back of the US taxpayers and future generations. It does not matter what party you are a member 500 back and in a year or so your taxes will go up 3000.00 More reading more action.. I personally use congress.org or rollcall to contact my reps and my stance on this issue is NO!!!!! This country has to really do some soul searching and dig in....I mean seriously where do we all think this money is coming from...oh yea I forgot there is a whole bunch of people who live just like this current gov...buy today on credit worry tomorrow...sad but true.

I love how these 2 new appointees by Obama have not paid their taxes or "forgot to Pay 120,000 in taxes" ....this is really going well
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sedean1 says:
This is too good to be real, the same bunch of Republicans who helped the Bush administration drive our economy into the ground now have a solution to fixing it!!
If you buy that line, then hey guys I have a bridge I want to sell ya!!
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ctla567 says:
The last thing America needs is more tax cuts. We have tax cuts after tax cuts since Pres. Reagan took office in the 80''s. The only place all the tax cuts lead us to is deeper and deeper in debt. And our wealth disparity is wider than ever. Only Pres. Clinton since the 80''s who was able to balance the budget, pay off some of our national debt created by Pres. Reagan and Pres. Bush Sr. Pres. Clinton also was able to accumulate a huge budget surplus by raising tax of the rich. Then came Pres. Bush''s tax cuts and back again we went deeper into debt almost to a point of no return. Why do Republican in congress want more tax cuts is beyond me. Tax cuts are proven again and again to be disastrous for America.
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spaspy says:
Oops! Typo, I mean politics!
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spaspy says:
Hey HETUP, not only are you harsh and arrogant, buy you are ignorant as well. Ever heard of having balance? Without it you have chaos!
Wether or not you agree with the polotics and ideas of anyone other than yourself, you have to have people keeping people in check. Get over yourself already!!!
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sfbanak says:
Re: comment about spelling not being important-----Well, so many people believe this that many people get to college not knowing how to read beyond 4th or 5th grade level. AND this apathy about "little things" leads to ignorance about bigger things as problems snowball....Spelling incorrectly instantly diminishes one''s credibilty because spelling is a GRADE SCHOOL SUBJECT!!!!!!!! If you do not care enough to spell and use the English language correctly, then, what are the many other things you could care less about?????I teach nursing and it amazes me how many people at college level do not know their English & Spelling. Oh--might as well add math WITHOUT a calculator. SIMPLE MATH--adding, subtracting, dividing. Very scary. Very.
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sfbanak says:
There are some problems with this bill &, frankly, it''s good that 2 sides can work to get a more reasonable outcome. Our government needs to be a better role model to the people of the USA. Still haven''t seen exactly where all of this $$$ is cming from... There needs to be reporting of exactly who gets how much and then, an itemized accountability of where the $$$ goes & consequences if it is not used for what it is intended. There is no bottomless loan pit. Much change in many lifestyles is needed. Huge decorating bills are not wise spending, including at the White House. Demand accountability for where the money goes and heavy consequences for those who misuse the funds!!!!!
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whitemale08 says:
Unless Obama can get us off this Keynsian band-wagon of ''floating-exchange-rates'',

any stimulas would simply fall flat and just add inflation.

1. Fix the exchange-rates to stabilize world currencies.

2. Put the banks that make-up the Federal Reserve System through bankruptcy re-organization

3. Set up a new National Bank of the United States that only issues credit and currency ''uttered'' by Congress with a 2 tier Sovereign National Credit System.

4. Ignore Wall Street Republicans who profess to be Christians but practice idolatry, breaking the 2nd Commandment, by worshiping ''free markets''.
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pmts2 says:
Mr. President,
I believe I can speak for every unemployed person in the country when I ask you to please include the suspension of Federal Income Tax on unemployment benefits for 2008 and 2009 to your stimulus plan. We promise not to spend the money in foreign lands on expensive vacations,or for extravegant remodeling of our homes which in many cases we are in danger of no longer owning. Thank you, and all our best hopes to you and your administration.
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pmts2 says:
Mr. President,
I believe I can speak for every unemployed person in the country when I ask you to please include the suspension of Federal Income Tax on unemployment benefits for 2008 and 2009 to your stimulus plan. We promise not to spend the money in foreign lands on expensive vacations,or for extravegant remodeling of our homes which in many cases we are in danger of no longer owning. Thank you, and all our best hopes to you and your administration.
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