News Clips
March 20th, 2007 H/t: GOPCharlie
GOP pledges to block tax rise
http://www.washtimes.com/metro/20070319-103739-8073r.htm
Senate Republicans say they will attempt to block tax increases during budget debates tomorrow, as tension increases over
"We're planning on something to attempt to give people a choice and obviate any necessity for tax increases," said Senate Minority Leader David R. Brinkley, Frederick Republican.
Democrats, who control the House, Senate and governor's office, agreed that some form of tax increase is needed to close a $1.5 billion budget gap in 2009.
Deficit debate on hold
Sales tax protest previews future budget battles
http://www.hometownannapolis.com/cgi-bin/read/2007/03_19-32/GOV
The budget passed the House of Delegates last week, but some lawmakers are worried about the financial battles - and sweeping tax increases - that could still lie ahead.
"It's not just storm clouds," said
The revised version of Gov. Martin O'Malley's $30 billion operating budget passed Friday by a vote of 134-5. The House Appropriations Committee made cuts of more than $192 million in the budget, which will go into effect in July.
Senate panel approves state smoking ban
Committee gives OK to bill on a 6-5 vote; measure is expected to pass full Senate
A state Senate panel approved yesterday a statewide ban on smoking in bars and restaurants, a vote that marks the first time such a measure has won approval from a General Assembly committee.
The Senate panel also decided to exempt tobacco shops and fraternal organizations, such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and American Legion. Sen. George C. Edwards, a Garrett County Republican, described people gathering after military funerals at the local American Legion where they might share a meal and drinks and perhaps a cigarette or cigar.
"These people put their life on the line for this country," Edwards said, saying it would be wrong to ban smoking in the clubs.
Sen. E.J. Pipkin, an Eastern Shore Republican, said enforcing a ban on smoking in those kinds of clubs amounted to telling smokers to stay home from events. "And we already have a problem with isolation in rural parts of the state," he said. "This is the only game in town for them."
While they pushed for the club exemption, neither Pipkin nor Edwards voted for the final bill.
Smoking ban gets panel nod
http://www.herald-mail.com/?module=displaystory&story_id=161280&format=html
A panel of
The 6-5 vote by the Senate Finance Committee means the full Senate will vote in coming days on whether to approve the ban, long advocated by health activists but opposed by some restaurant owners. A House committee is considering a similar smoking ban, with a vote expected in that committee by midweek.
Editorial: Shine a light on government spending
http://www.examiner.com/a-628428~Editorial__Shine_a_light_on_government_spending.html
If members of Congress can agree transparency is the best policy for government, so can
Thats why its encouraging news that
Panel votes down bill on coastal-area insurance
A Maryland Senate committee voted down a bill yesterday that would have required Allstate Corp. and other insurers to write homeowner policies in coastal areas that some companies have deemed too risky.
Several legislators expressed dismay after Allstate announced last year that it would stop writing new homeowner policies in all or part of 11 counties, noting warnings by scientists that a warmer
Finally,
O'Malley, new facility enable state to close Victorian-era building
One visit to the Maryland House of Correction in Jessup in February and new Corrections Secretary Gary D. Maynard knew it shouldn't remain a maximum-security prison. But when a correctional officer was stabbed on March 2, Maynard concluded that the facility built in 1878 needed to be shut down immediately - and Gov. Martin O'Malley quickly agreed.
State prison officials have been complaining about the poor conditions, unsafe design and deteriorating structure of the House of Correction for at least 50 years. But through it all, the
National News
The Wall Street Journal Says Senate Democrats' Proposed Budget Could "Slap The Economy In 2011 With The Largest Tax Increase In
House Republicans Regaining Their Footing
http://public.cq.com/docs/cqt/news110-000002473295.html
After reeling from a Democratic knock-out punch in November, House Republicans seem to be regrouping, achieving some wins they believe will force the majority to negotiate with them.
Ultimately, they have an eye toward such victories enabling them to win back the House in 2008.
Having surprised even themselves with the unity they displayed against a resolution denouncing the troop surge in Iraq (H Con Res 63), invigorated Republicans say theyll stay nearly in lock step this week against supplemental spending legislation for the war that includes a timetable for withdrawal, among other conditions.
Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, D-Md., has met twice with Boehner to try to find a way to garner some GOP support for the supplemental, although no agreement was reached.
Global warming panel makeup questioned
http://www.delmarvanow.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070320/NEWS01/703200302/1002
House Republican Leader John Boehner would have appointed Rep. Wayne Gilchrest to the bipartisan Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming -- but only if the Maryland Republican would say humans are not causing climate change, Gilchrest said.
"I said, 'John, I can't do that,' " Gilchrest, R-1st-Md., said in an interview. "He said, 'Come on. Do me a favor. I want to help you here.' "
Gilchrest didn't make the committee. Neither did other Republican moderates or science-minded members, whose guidance centrist GOP members usually seek on the issue. Republican moderates, called the Tuesday Group, invited Boehner to this week's meeting to push for different representation.
Rep. Roscoe Bartlett, a research scientist from Maryland, and Michigan's Rep. Vern Ehlers, the first research physicist to serve in Congress, also made cases for a seat, but weren't appointed, he said.
Patience for
http://www.examiner.com/a-628513~Patience_for_Iraq_war_waning__say_leaders.html
Four years into the
BRAC move seen at risk
Walter Reed controversy might threaten shift of jobs to
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/bal-md.brac20mar20,0,7545749.story?coll=bal-local-headlines
Plans to expand the
The House of Representatives is expected to consider a measure this week that would keep
Rep. Chris Van Hollen, the Montgomery County Democrat whose district includes
"I think this requires an overall assessment of what is best for our wounded soldiers at Walter Reed and an assessment of what makes sense in the future," Van Hollen said.
"Obviously, the BRAC commission believed that it was in the interests of the military health care system to consolidate their operations at
President Bush Says Premature Withdrawal From
White House Denounces Democrats' War Spending Bill For "Excessive And Extraneous Non-Emergency Spending." "House Democratic leaders are offering billions in federal funds for lawmakers' pet projects large and small to secure enough votes this week to pass an Iraq funding bill that would end the war next year. ... But in a formal veto statement last night, the White House denounced what it called 'excessive and extraneous non-emergency spending.' With unusually caustic and combative language, the statement dismissed provisions of the bill as 'unconscionable,' an d said it 'would place freedom and democracy in
National Security Council
Retired U.S. Army Officer Gordon Cucullu Says "We Need To Give [Gen. Petraeus] The Time And Space Needed To Win This War." "'Sure we see improvements - major improvements,' [Gen. Petraeus] said in our interview, 'but we still have a long way to go.' What tactics are working? 'We got down at the people level and are staying,' he said flatly. 'Once the people know we are going to be around, then all kinds of things start to happen.' Where once tactical units were 'scraping' for intelligence information, they now have 'information overload,' the general said. And the t ribal leaders in Sunni al Anbar Province, the general reports, 'have had enough.' Not only are the al Qaeda fighters causing civil disruption by fomenting sectarian violence and killing civilians, but on a more prosaic but practical side, al Qaeda is bad for business. As Petraeus cautiously concluded, 'We'll be able to evaluate the situation for sure by late summer.' That's his job. Our job? We need to give him the time and space needed to win this war." (Gordon Cucullu, Op-Ed, "The
Al Qaeda Operative In