crime & justice

On Capitol Hill

The Week of May 5

Homeowner helper: The House gets serious about housing this week, lining up a bill that would cover up to $300 billion in federally backed mortgages for homes tipping into foreclosure. While they're at it, lawmakers may also okay a years-in-the-making bill to tighten oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two quasi-governmental agencies that are also in the mortgage backing business. The Senate, which already started on a small-fry housing bill, is expected to follow the House's lead in the upcoming weeks.

War spending: With the Iraq and Afghanistan wars due for a cash injection; the House could okay $180 billion this week to pay for the end '08 and start of '09. The president has asked for a "clean" bill without any home-spending add-ons, but passing up the chance to ride on the coattails of a must-pass war bill is too much to ask of lawmakers - so expect measures including: extensions for unemployment insurance, a sexual orientation hate crimes bill, and a hold on tightening Medicaid payments. Lawmakers may also revisit old scrimages over troop withdrawal timelines.

Farm slog: House and Senate leaders are crawling across the finish line to pass "the farm bill," the mammoth act which covers farm subsidies, conservation programs and food stamps. The only thing standing in their way is a potential veto from the president, who prefers fewer wealthy farmers to be eligible for subsidies and wants our international food aid programs to buy more food abroad (closer to the food's recipients).

And more: The Senate hit a few bumps last week in getting an aviation bill off the ground; they'll try again this week. Senators may also vote on a flood insurance bill, while House members take up a bill to fight intellectual property piracy.

Down the Pike in 08?

Congress didn't get to finish a handful of priority crime bills last year, including a hate crime bill already passed by the House, HR 1592 (WP) and a bill that would bar terrorist suspects from buying guns (NYT) - although at the last minute it did tighten mental health background checks for gun buyers (WP).