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Washington Week in Preview

Congress returns (the Senate on Monday and the House on Tuesday) from a two-week recess with nervous Republicans hoping to pass something they can run on in the off-year elections (no one likes to be called “do nothing”) . Most of the action will likely center on immigration and a variety of fiscal matters.

FISCAL MATTERS

Katrina, War Supplemental

First up in the Senate will be a bill that would provide $91.9 billion in supplemental fiscal 2006 appropriations, including $67.6 billion for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, $19.2 billion for hurricane relief and $4.3 billion for foreign assistance. Opening statements are expected Monday, with a vote on Tuesday.

Budget Resolution

Meanwhile in the House, GOP leaders will try to agree on a budget resolution by settling differences in the ranks over earmark rules, emergency spending restrictions and domestic spending levels. It won’t be easy and it could be a test of new majority leader John Boehner’s effectiveness. House Appropriations Chairman Jerry Lewis, R-Calif., scuttled a budget deal Boehner, R-Ohio, had negotiated with conservatives earlier this month.

Lobby Reform

Passing the lobbying bill—which has earmark reforms—would ease some of the battle over the budget resolution. The House takes up the matter Wednesday.
Pension Reform Some observers expect it to be taken up this week.

IMMIGRATION

The Senate Judiciary Committee holds a hearing Tuesday largely focused on guest-worker proposals. The committee takes up the immigration reform compromise bill on Thursday.

OTHER ISSUES

Bush

The major highlight of week could be any additional spring cleaning that goes on around the White House. McClellan on Friday denied reports that Harriet Miers stint as White House counsel could be coming to an end. Not under consideration, says McClellan.

The president is out West through Monday, when he will conclude the trip with an immigration speech is in Irvine, California as Congress prepares to return to Washington to continue work on that contentions issue. Keefe may cover.

On Tuesday, faced with another round of rising gas prices, Bush will make an energy speech in Washington. That same day, the Navy football team is due at White House as winner of Commander=in-Chief’s Trophy as top military academy team. It’s the kind of event at which Bush always reminds athletes to be role models. Could be interesting this time as Navy is led by quarterback Lamar Owens, who has been charged with raping a classmate in January.

The Wednesday highlight is remarks to teachers of the year at the White House. It’s back on the road on Thursday as Bush goes to Louisiana and Mississippi to participate in programs honoring volunteers.

Foreign affairs tops the Friday agenda with Bush hosting the president of Azarbaijan. The weekend features Bush remarks at the White House Correspondents Association dinner.

Politics

The Log Cabin Republicans hold their convention in Washington, beginning Thursday. Another presidential hopeful brings his act South this week when Iowa Gov. Tom Vilsack speaks at the J-J dinner in South Carolina on Saturday. Other events of interest on the hustings:

— Apr. 29, 2006: John Kerry addresses the Florida Victory ‘06 Reception in Tallahassee, FL — Apr. 29, 2006: Newt Gingrich and talk show host Sean Hannity headline the annual Iowa Republican Party Lincoln Dinner, Des Moines, IA — Apr. 29, 2006: Sen. John Kerry attends the Florida Democratic Party “Florida Victory ‘06 Reception” in Miami Beach, FL*— Apr. 29, 2006: Gov. Tom Vilsack (D-IA) keynotes the SC Democratic Party’s Jefferson Jackson dinner in Colombia, SC

Government Secrecy . The Information Security Oversight Office, an arm of the National Archive, is expected to release a much anticipated audit Wednesday (April 26) of the federal government’s secret reclassification program. The report will look at what the intelligence agencies have removed from the open shelves of the archive as part of the program and ways to make the system more transparent.

Homeland Security

A chemical safety watchdog group issues a report Tuesday saying that chemical facilities in 47 states have exchanged extremely hazardous materials with safer alternatives. The Center for American Progress, a liberal policy group, said 14,000 other plants still use highly toxic chemicals that could endanger nearby residents.

Supreme Court Oral Arguments

Monday, April 24

Beginning at 10 a.m., the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in the following case: Brigham City, Utah v. Stuart Does the “emergency aid exceptionâ€? to the warrant requirement — recognized in Mincey v. Arizona — hinge on a police officer’s subjective motivation for entering the home? Under the 4th Amendment, was the gravity of the “emergencyâ€? or “exigencyâ€? sufficient to justify the police officer’s entry into the home to stop the flight? Kircher et al. v. Putnam Funds Trust et al. May a party appeal a district judge’s decision to remand a case to state court pursuant to the Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act of 1998 (SLUSA)?

Tuesday, April 25

Beginning at 10 a.m., the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in the following case: Dixon v. U.S. Where a criminal defendant raises a duress defense, should the burden of persuasion be on the government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not under duress — or upon the defendant to prove duress by a preponderance of the evidence? Empire Healthchoice Assurance v. McVeigh What is the federal jurisdiction in a suit by a federal government contractor to enforce a provision in a health benefits plan for federal employees, that is part of a government contract under the Federal Employees Health Benefits Act of 1959?

Wednesday, April 26

Beginning at 10 a.m., the Supreme Court hears oral arguments in the following case: Hill v. McDonough et al. Is a complaint brought by a death-sentenced state prisoner — who seeks to stay his execution in order to pursue a challenge to the chemicals utilized for carrying out the execution — properly re-characterized as a habeas corpus petition? Does a challenge to a particular protocol the state plans to use during the execution constitute a cognizable claim under the Supreme Court’s decision in Nelson v. Campbell and under 42 U.S.C. sec. 1983? Mohawk Industries, Inc. v. Williams et al. Can a defendant corporation and its agents constitute an “enterpriseâ€? under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, in light of the settled rule that a RICO defendant must “conductâ€? or “participate inâ€? the affairs of some larger enterprise and not just its own affairs?

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