Posted by on 11/04/2008 at 09:53AM
Yesterday morning, the Senate passed the Ensign-Cantwell clean energy
package
(S.Amdt 4419)
by a vote of
88-8.
The package is attached to Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) Foreclosure
Prevention Act (S. Amdt 4387 to H.R. 3221), which was approved
84-12.
The future of the energy package now depends on whether the House is
willing to consider it a “stimulus” that merits deficit spending.
The eight senators in opposition were Sens. Alexander (R-Tenn.), Bunning
(R-Ky.), Byrd (D-W.Va.), Carper (D-Del.), Dodd (D-Conn.), Kyl (R-Ariz.),
Sessions (R-Ala.), and Voinovich (R-Ohio). Alexander and Kyl’s alternate
version of the package (S. Amdt
4429), which
would have extended credits by another year and lowered the wind
production credit, died by a 15-79 vote. Dodd had vigorously argued that
the renewable tax package was not germane to his housing bill.
Not voting were the three presidential candidates and Sen. Liddy Dole
(R-S.C.).
Posted by Brad Johnson on 07/04/2008 at 01:22PM
The Senate is meeting this afternoon to resume consideration of Sen.
Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) Foreclosure Prevention Act (S. Amdt
4387 to H.R.
3221).
On the docket for consideration today is the Ensign-Cantwell amendment
(S.Amdt 4419),
the latest attempt by Congress to continue renewable and energy
efficiency tax incentives due to expire this year. The details of the
package offered by Sen. John Ensign (R-Nev.) and Maria Cantwell
(D-Wash.) were first reported by Hill
Heat
last week.
Also up for consideration is Sen. Lamar Alexander’s (R-Tenn.) and Jon
Kyl’s (R-Ariz.) second-degree amendment (S. Amdt
4429), which
would extend the tax credits from 2009 to 2011 and tweak the marine
energy and trash combustion credits.
CQ reported that Sen. Dodd exploded on the floor last week in opposition
to efforts to include extensions of the clean energy tax credits, saying
“This is a housing bill! This isn’t a Christmas tree! It’s a housing
bill! I’m going to oppose every one of these [unrelated amendments]
from here on out.”
Dodd did not note the irony that the housing package is being considered
as a completely unrelated replacement substitute to the House’s
Renewable Energy and Energy Conservation Tax Act (H.R. 3221), which
would have rolled back tax breaks for oil companies in order to pay for
the renewable tax incentives (and has been blocked repeatedly in the
Senate, most recently in
February).
The Ensign-Cantwell amendment does not provide any funding mechanism for
the tax credit continuation, and would violate pay-go rules. The
Alexander-Kyl amendment would exacerbate the funding problem.