The House approved the first spending bill for 2013, setting operating budgets for the Commerce and Justice Departments and for science-related agencies, such as...
The House approved the first spending bill for 2013, setting operating budgets for the Commerce and Justice Departments and for science-related agencies, such as NASA.
However, the White House has threatened to veto the legislation because it proposes deeper cuts than spending caps agreed to in last summer’s Budget Control Act. A statement of administration policy said the House bill also “undermines” key investments in export promotion, community safety and space flight.
The House approved the $51.1 billion appropriations bill in a 247-162 vote. The funding level is $1.6 billion below last year’s level and $731 million below the administration’s official request.
Commerce Department
The spending bill includes a total of $7.7 billion for the Commerce Department, which represents an increase of $96 million above current levels but is $280 million below the administration’s official budget request.
Justice Department
The bill provides $27.1 billion in total discretionary spending for the Justice Department, which is $11 million above FY 2012 levels but $44 million below the White House request.
Science agencies
The bill provides $24.9 billion for a number of science-related agencies, including the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, NASA and the National Science Foundation.
Cybersecurity provisions
The spending bill also contains new directives relating to agency cybersecurity practices. The bill directs the agencies funded by the appropriations bill to submit to the committee an annual report describing cyber attacks — both actual and attempted — against the agency, as well as the steps the agency took to respond to them.
The report also must include the agencies’ policies for “ensuring safe use of computer and mobile devices by individual employees.”
Amendments approved along partisan divide
The appropriations bill also included a number of amendments, approved in rapid succession in mostly party-line votes.
One would prevent the Justice Department from taking legal action against state laws requiring voter identification and another would stop the Census Bureau from conducting detailed, long-form surveys that many lawmakers find to be unnecessarily intrusive.
Republicans were successful earlier this week in blocking the Justice Department from participating in lawsuits challenging the constitutionality of new tough state immigration laws, including those of Arizona and Alabama.
The measure is the first of 12 annual appropriations bills to hit the House floor as GOP leaders have front-loaded the process with measures that have won bipartisan backing in the Appropriations panel. It’s unclear how much support the measures will get from the broader Democratic membership.
(The Associated Press contributed to this report)
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