House approves economic stimulus

WASHINGTON — The House voted 385-35 last week for a $146 billion economic stimulus bill that would give checks of $600 to most taxpayers.
The bill still has a way to go because the Senate is working on its own version, which has drawn objections from President Bush, who helped craft the House bill.
Under the House bill, taxpayers earning more than $75,000 per year and couples earning $150,000 or more annually would not be eligible for rebate checks. Couples with children would not receive a check if their income is more than $174,000 per year.
House leaders, including Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., urged the Senate to pass the House bill without any changes.
But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Sen. Max Baucus, D-Mont., who is chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, insisted the Senate must have a role in shaping the economic stimulus bill.
The Senate bill would provide rebates to more people and expand unemployment benefits and business tax breaks.
Reps. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., and Dean Heller and Jon Porter, both R-Nev., voted for the House economic stimulus bill.
SECURITY BILL STALLED
The Senate split on a White House-backed rewrite of electronic surveillance guidelines to monitor terrorism suspects.
Senators voted 48-45 for the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act, but 60 votes were required to cut off debate and move to a final vote.
The act would allow federal agents to monitor phone calls and e-mails of foreign suspects even if they are communicating with someone in the United States.
The agents would be required to seek court approval on how surveillance would be conducted.
The bill also would immunize from prosecution telecommunications companies which have assisted the government wiretapping.
Bush said the rewrite would ensure the uninterrupted flow of vital intelligence to protect the United States.
Opponents, primarily Democrats, said the bill went too far. They objected primarily to allowing retroactive immunity for companies that took part in wiretapping.
Reid voted against the Bush-backed FISA bill.
Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., did not vote.
With the current law set to expire Feb. 1, Democrats proposed a 30-day extension to allow negotiations to continue.
But that proposal also was blocked by a 48-45 vote.
Reid voted for the 30-day extension. Ensign did not vote.
Congress eventually passed a 15-day extension.