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  Congress dispatches Stimulus Package to Obama

>> Saturday, February 14, 2009

An economic stimulus package worth $787 billion is headed to President Barack Obama’s desk after Congress passed the plan that Democrats say is critical to helping pull the U.S. economy out of recession. The Senate late yesterday voted 60 to 38 to approve the package of tax cuts and more than a half-trillion dollar in new federal spending. The votes give Obama the first major legislative victory of his presidency.


Democrats predict the plan will save or create 3.5 million jobs. Its costliest item is a $400 payroll tax cut for individuals and $800 for couples. Retirees, disabled veterans and others who don’t pay payroll taxes will get a $250 payment. Democrats released the text of the plan late the night before the vote, prompting complaints from Republicans they didn’t have enough time to review the legislation before voting on it. “It is over a thousand pages- it’s physically impossible for any member to have read this bill.” said a representative from Georgia Republican. Republicans argued that the bill contains too much government spending and, because of that, won’t do enough to boost the economy. The New Hampshire Republican senator Judd Gregg, who withdrew this week as Obama’s commerce secretary nominee, voted against the plan saying the “so-called stimulus plan has become sidetracked by misplaced spending and a lack of attention to the true problems facing the nation.”


The stimulus plan provides a half-trillion dollars for jobless benefits, renewable energy projects, highway construction, food stamps, broadband, Pell college tuition grants, high-speed rail projects and scores of other programs. It raises the nation’s debt limit to about $12 trillion.


The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said the stimulus package will cost $787 billion, rather than $789 billion lawmakers estimated earlier this week. The plan will pump $185 billion into the economy this year and $399 billion next year, the agency said. A Wisconsin Democrat said as he urged passage of the bill, “The other tool normally available to us is monetary policy in the form of low interest rates through actions of the Federal Reserve. We’ve already fired that bullet - - the only bullet left is fiscal policy.”

Read more from Reuters…

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