For super committee, is compromise possible?

Sandy Johnson, the executive editor of the Center for Public Integrity, joined the Federal Drive to discuss how the various reputations and relationships among ...

We know who they are. Now, we’re learning a little more about why they’re serving on the so-called “super committee” — the bipartisan panel established by the debt-ceiling deal.

The 12 lawmakers must identify more than a $1 trillion in spending cuts by Thanksgiving, and Congress has to sign off on the cuts by Christmas.

The Center for Public Integrity has taken a much closer look at those serving on the committee, providing an in-depth look in an article last week, “Who bankrolls the Super Congress?

Sandy Johnson, the executive editor of CPI, joined the Federal Drive to discuss how the lawmakers, each with own “history of political patrons and connections with special interests” — as CPI described in its report — will ever reach a compromise.

As it turns out the across-the-board agency spending cuts that hang over the super committee member’s heads could provide a powerful impetus for consensus.

RELATED STORIES

Final names added to debt ‘super committee’

Analysis: No ‘firebrands’ on super committee

Copyright © 2024 Federal News Network. All rights reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    NLRB, Jennifer Abruzzo

    NLRB ‘doing more with less’ between growing caseload, stagnating staffing

    Read more
    House, FAA reauthorizationCongress, House Speaker

    The House is ‘it’ this week, when it comes to agency authorizations

    Read more
    Graphic By: Derace Lauderdaleearly career, skills-based hiring,workforce, diversity

    Still ‘long way to go’ after 13% bump in federal early-career employees

    Read more