From the Left Coaster blog:
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid will do something this morning that an opposition party is supposed to do: Senate Democrats stopped playing defense and will begin playing offense by setting forward an ambitious agenda of their own. In a conference call earlier this morning, Reid’s staff announced their top ten priority bills for the 109th Congress, and they address many of the needs accumulated by this country but ignored by the White House the GOP Congress under Bill Frist and Denny Hastert.
Complete details on each of the pending bills are
here.
A very quick summary:
Senate Bill 11 will address our troop strength problems brought about by George W. Bush’s foreign policy and backdoor draft.
Senate Bill 12 establishes four interlocking pillars necessary to wage an effective war on terrorism.
Senate Bill 13 addresses Bush’s abandonment of our veterans by ensuring all veterans get the health care they deserve by 2006; expand mental health services to all VA hospitals by 2006; make prescription drugs readily available to veterans; and enact a new GI Bill for the 21st century.
Senate Bill 14 lays out an ambitious list of measures to deal with economic opportunity...
Senate Bill 15 deals with education.
Senate Bill 16 deals with health care.
Senate Bill 17 deals with voting reform, through a broad range of measures.
Senate Bill 18 deals with Medicare by addressing the corporate welfare that Bush larded onto the HMOs and drug companies with the Medicare drug benefit...
Senate Bill 19 is the Fiscal Responsibility for a Sound Future Act, which would among other things restore the Senate pay-as-you-go rule to require that mandatory spending and tax legislation be fully paid for, or be subject to a 60-vote point of order...
Senate Bill 20 deals with reducing unintended pregnancies and reduces abortions through increasing access to family planning services. It will also provide relief to Medicaid by decreasing the financial burden of pregnancy-related and newborn care.
This is all being packaged as the Promise to America.
A big problem, as was pointed out in a comment and in many of the replies to the original blog entry, was the lack of environmental bills. This is a pretty huge hole, and I am not sure why it was left entirely out of the agenda. But nonetheless, I still like it as a starting point. It sure as hell is better then what they were offering before, which was nothing but prevent defense, duck, and cover.
-- ArchTeryx