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SENATE DEFEATS GOP ATTEMPT TO INCREASE
MONEY FOR ANTI-UNION BUSH LABOR DEPT. AGENCY
By a 47-46 vote, the Senate on Oct.
22 defeated a GOP attempt to increase money for a Bush
Labor Department agency whose mission is to pursue
alleged union financial wrongdoing.
The vote came on an amendment by Radical Right Wing
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) to the money bill for the
departments of Labor, Education and Health and Human
Services for the year that started Oct. 1. Senators
later passed the bill.
The Democratic-run Senate Appropriations Committee,
like its House counterpart, cut the funds that
anti-worker GOP President George W. Bush requested for
the so-called Office of Labor-Management Standards,
from $47 million last fiscal year to $45 million this
year. That would still leave OLMS with a one-third
increase, or more, since Bush took office, even as
other DOL investigation and enforcement funds have
been slashed across the board.
Sessions not only wanted to restore the $2 million,
but wanted to add $3 million more for OLMS, bringing
the total to $50.737 million. He lost.
The story is not over yet. Bush has threatened to
veto the entire money bill because congressional
Democrats have added funds for other programs,
including education aid, Labor Department enforcement
in other areas, and health programs.
Overall, the bill contains about $10 billion more
than the money Bush sought for the current fiscal
year. And the House and Senate have to agree on one
version, eliminating their differences, before it goes
to the president.
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