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Congressional Dish

CD071: Our New Laws

Congressional Dish

Jennifer Briney

News, Congress, Government, Politics, Corporations

4.8 • 1.1K Ratings

🗓️ 17 May 2014

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we look at all the important bills that become laws since the start of 2014, including a law that might cost you thousands of dollars per year, a law that ends public financing of political party nominating conventions, and a law that President Obama openly intends to ignore. We also discuss the resignation of Rep. Rob Andrews of New Jersey from the House of Representatives. Laws Discussed in This Episode Introduced by This law has nothing to do with the South Utah Valley Electric Service District. S.25 changes the cost of living adjustment included in the budget agreement that was created after the shutdown ended which cut cost of living adjustments to pensions paid to veterans by 1%, which would short them each tens of thousands of dollars over the course of their lives. Now, we’re going to short change military members who enroll on or after January 1, 2014. Makes changes to which fund we use to pay Medicare doctors. Pays for all of this by extending the sequester for another year. It’ll now go through 2024. Introduced by In 1997, Congress invented the “Sustainable Growth Rate” (SGR) system for paying Medicare doctors. It tied the amount of money doctors get for Medicare doctors to projected growth of the economy. Since health care costs have skyrocketed at the same time that the economy has gone sour, doctors would see a huge pay cut of 24% if the SGR system of payment were used. H.R. 4302 . Section 213 employer-sponsored health plans for companies with 100 employees or fewer. It is retroactive to March 2010. Introduced by Eliminates all public funding of “any major or minor” political party nominating convention. Authorizes - but does not appropriate - the money to go towards a ten year pediatric research fund Introduced by and Denies visas to United Nations representatives who have been “found to have been engaged in espionage activities or a terrorist activity.” . . President Obama , basically saying he has the right to waive it using his power to receive or reject ambassadors. President Obama claims that Bush set the precedent for waiving laws in this manner. Introduced by Green mountain lookout can’t be moved except for safety reasons Introduced by and will provide “news and information” to Ukraine & Ukraine’s neighboring countries We will conduct a “programming surge” broadcasting 24-7 to “target populations" We will “highlight inconsistencies and misinformation provided by Russian or pro-Russian media outlets” We will focus on areas dominated by Russian media We will put more reporters and “organizational presence” in eastern Ukraine We will “partner with private sector broadcasters” to create content and spread the word. We can use “jamming and circumvention technology to overcome any disruptions to service.” Congress is allowed to use $10 million of our money for this, if they appropriate the funds. Emergency Declarations President Obama continued national emergency declarations for "the situations" in: President Obama declared new national emergencies for situations in: Rob Andrews Resigns from Congress On February 18, resigned from Congress, citing has the reason when the real reason was because he was under investigation by the House Ethics Committee. Rob Andrews under investigation for, among other things: Spending over $16,000 of campaign funds to fly his family to a wedding in Scotland. Using campaign funds to fly himself and his daughter to Los Angeles six times in 2011 so that she could pursue an acting career in Hollywood. Using campaign funds to donate thousands of dollars to theaters that hired his daughter to appear in their productions. Earmarking over $1.5 million to the Rutgers University School of Law, where his wife is an Associate Dean. By resigning, Andrews made all these investigations go away because the . On May 5, based out of a Philadelphia law firm where his wife used to work. He will be lobbying on behalf of ., which provides IT and security for private and public institutions including the EPA, National Park Services, U.S. Corps of Engineers, US Navy, US Army, the FAA, the Dept. of Justice, and the Dept. of Veterans Affairs. He will also be lobbying on behalf of the National Coordinating Committee for Multi-employer Plans, which proudly proclaims on that “NCCMP influences virtually every piece of employee benefit legislation for the benefit of multi-employer plans.” Representatives Quoted in This Episode Music Presented in this Episode by (found on ) by ) Intro and Exit Music: by (found on )

Transcript

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0:00.0

I am so damn tired of being like too. I don't think I can't deny it anymore. more.

0:24.0

You can stick to your story if you think it flies.

0:28.0

But I'm not going to buy it.

0:31.0

But I'm not going to buy it anymore.

0:38.0

Hey there guys, welcome to the 71st episode of Congressional Dish.

0:41.0

I'm your host Jennifer Briny. For those of you

0:43.8

have never heard this show before I'm basically reading all the bills that passed

0:46.8

the House of Representatives and letting you know what's in them. Or at least I'm

0:50.0

trying to read all of the bills but right now we are playing a little bit of

0:53.9

catch-up because I had to move across the country unexpectedly so I got a little

0:58.1

bit behind. So for the next few weeks what we're going to do is we're going to

1:01.5

basically skim.

1:03.8

I'm reading as many of the bills as possible,

1:06.0

but I'm not doing it in as much detail.

1:07.9

But we're going to try and get caught up as fast as we can.

1:10.3

And so what we're doing today is I'm going to tell you about the bills that

1:13.8

passed both houses of Congress and actually became law. So this stuff is pretty

1:17.8

important and these are all the ones that became law that really you know

1:21.2

mattered. There were plenty that became law where you know mattered there were plenty that became law where they you

1:24.0

know renamed a post office and stupid nonsense like that but these are the bills that

1:28.8

I saw that became law that mattered and so I'm going to give you the details on those today.

1:33.5

We also had a resignation from Congress, which really irritated me, so I'm going to tell you all

...

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