``It is landmark in its scope and it ends a session which has seen two years
worth of legislative work which has been very productive for the American
people,'' Bush told Senate Republican leaders from Air Force One as he flew to
NATO meetings in Europe.
The new Cabinet-level department will merge 22 agencies with combined budgets
of about $40 billion and employ 170,000 workers -- the most grandiose federal
reorganization since the Defense Department's birth in 1947.
Even so, it will take months for the new agency to get fully off the ground.
And a budget stalemate continues to block most of the extra money for domestic
security enhancements both sides want for the federal fiscal year that began
Oct. 1.
The House overwhelmingly approved the bill on Nov. 13, so the Senate vote was
the crucial, final test. Because of technical changes the Senate made, however,
the House is expected to provide final congressional approval Friday with an
anticlimactic voice vote.
Senators cleared the way for the final vote by rejecting, 52-47, a Democratic
bid to block provisions that will aid vaccine producers and other industries.
That vote came after Republican leaders made last-minute concessions that
ensured support from four moderate senators.
``This bill still needs work,'' said Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D.,
voicing the misgivings of Democrats who opposed the pro-industry provisions. But
he said he supported the legislation because of ``the tremendous challenge
facing the country'' to combat terror.
The Senate plans to meet for a last time this year on Wednesday but will not
consider legislation.
In their final cluster of roll calls Tuesday night, senators sent Bush a bill
making the government the insurer of last resort for terrorist attacks, with a
maximum annual tab to taxpayers of $90 billion. The vote was 86-11.
Senators voted 55-44 to approve U.S. District Court Judge Dennis Shedd to be
an appeals court judge, confirming a Bush nominee who sparked a fight with
Democrats over civil rights. By 92-2, they also sent Bush a measure keeping
federal agencies open through Jan. 11, needed due to unfinished spending bills.
Early Wednesday, the Senate used voice votes to approve about 130 land and
water bills. They included a bill sent to the House extending for three years
the CalFed project, aimed at restoring the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, which
provides water for drinking and irrigation for much of the state.
The work came in the final hours of the 107th Congress, which has seen the
world change around it during a tumultuous two-year run.
Bush won a $1.35 trillion, 10-year tax cut but saw a vibrant economy stall
and federal surpluses become deficits. Terrorists killed nearly 3,000 in last
year's attacks on Washington and New York. And a 50-50 Senate tilted Democratic
after Jeffords left the GOP, only to see Republicans grab it back last Election
Day.
Completion of the homeland security bill ends a topsy-turvy odyssey for
legislation that started inching through Congress nearly a year ago against
Bush's will, only to see him offer his own version after momentum became
unstoppable.
Democrats resisted Bush's bill because it restricted labor rights of the new
agency's workers. But many reversed course after their Election Day loss of
Senate control was attributed partly to the homeland security fight.
``This is a substantial accomplishment, an historic day in the age of
insecurity we've entered,'' said Sen. Joseph Lieberman, D-Conn., one of many
authors of homeland security legislation.
The road to passing the homeland security bill was cleared only as the clock
ticked down during the Democratic amendment vote.
Minority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss., phoned House Speaker Dennis Hastert,
R-Ill., in Turkey and won his pledge that next year Congress would reconsider
the three provisions the moderates opposed, senators said. The agreement secured
support by Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe, both R-Maine, Lincoln Chafee,
R-R.I., and Ben Nelson, D-Neb.
One provision would legally shield drug companies already sued over
ingredients used in vaccines, which Democrats said included claims that
mercury-based preservatives have caused autism in children.
Also reworked will be a section helping Texas A&M University win homeland
security research funds and one permitting federal business with U.S. companies
that have moved broad to sidestep taxes.
Senators said consent also came from No. 3 House GOP leader Tom DeLay, whose
district is near Texas A&M. DeLay spokesman Jonathan Grella said DeLay had
agreed only to discuss the issues next year, but said he expected agreement.
Remaining in the bill are legal protections for airport security firms and
companies that make airport screening devices, exempting some homeland security
meetings from open-meeting laws and making it harder to issue new federal
transportation security requirements.
``That is not good government,'' Daschle said of the provisions. ``That is
shabby government.''
Lott said passage of the Democratic amendment would have meant prolonged
House-Senate talks on the bill's final details.
``The terrorists are not going to wait for a process that goes on days, weeks
or months,'' he said. ``I don't want to be singing 'Jingle Bells' here Dec. 21''
still working on the bill.
Democratic defectors on their party's amendment were Nelson and Sens. Zell
Miller of Georgia and Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, who faces a tight runoff
election Dec. 7.
Independent Sen. Dean Barkley of Minnesota voted ``no'' while Jeffords voted
``yes.''
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"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"