The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 9, 1995 - 9A Despite veto threats, GOP readies limits on spending Committee derails abortion bill Proposal bans 'partial-birth abortions,' fines doctors WASHINGTON (AP)-Scoffing at veto threats, Republicans pushed a bill through the House yesterday that would avert a government shutdown and la- bored to craft another measure intended to forestall a first-ever federal default. The government's ability to spend and borrow money expires next week, and the two measures would continue each activity into next month, though with restrictions. But with the long- running fight over GOP plans to bal- ance the budget by 2002 as a backdrop, administration officials and congres- sional Democrats warned that Presi- dent Clinton would kill both bills. "It's like high noon," said House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich (R-Ohio). "At some point, we're walking out of that saloon and if we have to have a battle, we have to have a battle." On a near party-line 230-197 roll call, the House voted to finance federal operations through Dec. 1, though at much lower levels than this year. The chamber planned to turn today to legis- lation extending federal borrowing au- thority. The Senate planned to consider both today. Democrats said both measures are overloaded with misguided Republi- can priorities, such as a ban against lobbying by many private groups and companies that was inserted into the spending bill. An effort by Democrats and moderate Republicans to remove the lobbying restrictions from the bill failed on a 216-210 procedural vote, but the language was not, expected to survive in the Senate. Democrats also said the borrowing measure contained restrictions on the use of federal funds that would actually boost the prospects of a first-ever de- fault, not forestall it. "There is no back-door way for them to write a budget that's unacceptable for the president," said White House spokesman Mike McCurry. "And they just need to recognize that. ... Other- wise we face default, shutdown of gov- ernment, or some combination of both." Added Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-S.D.): "The President will veto anything that looks like what the Republicans are attempting to push through. He'll veto it. It's over." Complicating the GOP's task were divisions between the moderate Senate and the more confrontational House. Provisions planned for the House bills to ensure conservative support, such as the lobbying limits and elimination of the Commerce Department, are less popular in the Senate. Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole The Washington Post WASHINGTON-As House and Senate Republicans battle President Clinton overthe budget,they are find- ing they often must settle disputes among themselves first. This week, House Republican lead- ers, as they have so often this year, scrambled to balance the demands of House Republican freshmen, intent on changing the way Washington works, against the wishes of GOP moderates in the leaders' quest for the votes to pass bills needed to keep the government operating past next week. To complicate the mission, moder- ate Senate Republicans declared they cannot accept some of the provisions intended to attract the votes of the conservatives Republicans who hold sway in the House. The delicate balancing act that House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R- Ga.), and his leadership team has had to carry out time and again underscores the challenges of run- ning a legislative body with a slim majority in which the largest fac- tion has an almost religious sense of mission. Team Gingrich has rarely failed to find a way to vic- tory. But as Republicans head to- ward the endgame of their legisla- tive revolution -and the final deals are cut - some of the measures (R-Kan.) said flatly that the provision eliminating Commerce would not be in the Senate's debt-limit bill. It seemed likelythatthe Senate would deletemany of the controversial provisions laterthis week before the bills could be sent to the President. The maneuvering on the two short- term bills obscured the more difficult problems facing GOP leaders over their budget-balancing legislation. Under similar House and Senate plans, Re- publicans would carve savings out of hundreds of programs and overhaul Medicare, Medicaid and welfare, while dispensing tax breaks to millions of families and businesses. Gingrich and Dole spent much of the day behind closed doors, meeting with various lawmakers in an attempt to sculpt compromise between the two chambers. Medicare bargainers agreed to require automatic cuts should say- House Republicans want most are in jeopardy. Late yesterday, 17 Republicans joined Democrats to come within a handful of votes to defeat a provision limiting the political activity of fed- eral grants recipients, which was added to the interim spending bill to attract conservatives. In addition, divisions among Re- publicans continue to keep Congress from doing its most basic job- pass- ing 13 spending bills that fund the government. Nearly six weeks into the spending year, only two have been signed into law. Many of the others are bogged down over intraparty disputes over such issues as abortion and environmental pro- tection. And what wins a majority in the House does not always win a major- ity in the Senate. "We're not at the point where we're worried about what will fly in the Senate," a House GOP leadership aide said yesterday. "We're worried about it flying in the House. They've got to get their votes, we've got to get ours." In the House, the driving force has been the 73 GOP freshmen, whose election gavetheirparty its first House majority in 40 years. First among their priorities is eliminating the bud- get deficit. ings fall short of targets, and to drop Senate-approved increases in the $100 annual deductible for doctors' services, said House Ways and Means Commit- tee Chairman Bill Archer (R-Texas).' GOP leaders want to complete the bicameral negotiations by this week- end and to muscle the compromise measure through Congress and to Clinton next week. One compromise already forged drew sharp criticism yesterday from Demo- crats: a steep curtailment of a Clinton- initiated student loan program called direct lending. The House had wanted to kill the 2-year-old program and the Senate to cap it at 20 percent of all student loans. The compromise is 10 percent. The stopgap spending bill would al- low most federal agencies to keep oper- ating through Dec. 1, though at levels as low as 60 percent oflastyear's spending. Republicans battle among themselves over proposals Court says immigrants have same rights as citizens The appellate judges also upheld Wilson's preliminary injunction against the selective enforcement of immigra- tion laws against six of the aliens. They reversed Wilson on one ruling - his determination that he did not have jurisdiction to issue an injunction halting the deportation proceedings against the other two, Khader Musa Hamide and Michael Ibrahaim Shehade, who have permanent resident alien sta- tus. xove fiber 6-11 k ' I S When A Man Loves A Woman Friday, November 10, 9 pm OIL &..Am - -.- . a ao - L