With the 110th Congress convening soon, the race for president is
likely to heavily influence activities on Capitol Hill in 2008.
From the president’s annual State of the Union Address and submission
of the federal budget for fiscal year 2009 to formulation of a
congressional budget resolution and allocation of funds to federal
agencies, it will all take place in anticipation of an electoral and
largely partisan storm front.
This year’s session is “do or die” time for major bills introduced last
year. Big-picture policy issues and unfinished business from last year
will likely dominate the political landscape, leaving little room for
innovative or breakthrough domestic and foreign policy.
Storm clouds hovering over this year’s session include, first and
foremost, wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The costs associated with them
and potential courses of action will be major issues in the
presidential race and key influences on funding decisions. A new Joint
Economic Committee report puts the total cost at $3.5 trillion if the
nation stays the course.
The home foreclosure crisis also threatens to keep the economy under a
cloud. According to the latest RealtyTrac data, one foreclosure filing
occurred for every 196 U.S. households in the third quarter of 2007.
The impact of the crisis has spurred both introduction of and action on
many legislative initiatives, including ones involving anti-predatory
lending strategies.
Legislation to address an acute lack of affordable housing for the poor
also faces an uncertain fate this year. The House-passed National
Affordable Housing Trust Fund Act of 2007 would assist in the
construction, rehabilitation and preservation of 1.5 million affordable
housing units over the next decade, but it awaits Senate action.
A big question mark is whether presidential politics will spur national
discussion of how to put the 36 million Americans living in poverty on
the road to financial independence. Nearly one-fourth of blacks and
over one-third of black children live in poverty.
And employment does not guarantee escape. In 2006, 7.5 percent of
working families were living below the poverty threshold. Those with a
minority parent were three to four times as likely to be poor as those
with a white parent. Addressing poverty requires a multifaceted
approach, but raising the minimum wage is a place to start.
Last year saw the first increase in the minimum wage in 10 years, from
$5.15 to $7.25 an hour. It is the National Urban League’s hope that
legislation indexing the minimum wage to the inflation rate will be
introduced so that poor and working families no longer have to depend
on the whims of Congress.
Despite the fact that 47 million Americans lack health insurance,
Congress is unlikely to act on universal health care proposals, but the
presidential race is likely to raise the issue’s visibility, setting
the stage for further debate in 2009.
With 14 vacancies remaining on federal appeals courts nationwide,
little time remains to fill them. The Senate confirmed five appeals
court nominees in 2007, but the judicial nomination process is likely
to grind to a halt until a new president is elected.
On the education front, after a number of congressional committee
hearings, efforts to reauthorize the No Child Left Behind law are
likely to come face-to-face with presidential politics this year. While
the law expired last September, it provided for an automatic one-year
extension. No legislation has been introduced in either chamber, but
negotiations continue. Bills are expected to be introduced in 2008, but
it is unclear if Congress will be able to complete action in an
election year.
Progress was made toward reauthorizing the Higher Education Act, the
law that provides for expanded access of low- and middle-income
students to higher education.
Key issues include: controlling college costs; simplifying the student
aid process; improving teacher training; increasing the Pell grant; and
expanding college preparation programs for low-income students, among
others.
The Workforce Investment Act, the nation’s frontline employment and
training vehicle for youth and dislocated workers, desperately needs
more congressional champions. Without reauthorization, funding for
employment and training services becomes increasingly vulnerable to the
budget axe.
For thousands of low-income Gulf Coast residents who are still — after
more than two years — trying to find their way home after hurricanes
Katrina and Rita, the sun won’t shine until Congress completes work on
hurricane housing recovery legislation, which awaits Senate action.
And finally, supporters of the D.C. House Voting Rights Act in 2008 are
going to try to break a Senate roadblock and get the bill on the
chamber’s floor for a final vote. In 2007, the Senate failed to
overcome a filibuster — the first of a voting rights bill since the end
of segregation — by a mere three votes. The House had already passed
the bill months earlier.
Marc H. Morial is the president and CEO of the National Urban League.