I love that all the people who shat on this bill from the very beginning are whining and complaining that all these good aspects of it are being removed.
I love that all the people who shat on this bill from the very beginning are whining and complaining that all these good aspects of it are being removed.
Hey, embrace the buffoonery, I say.
PROVISION: Sale of Public Lands
The provisions for sale of public lands was introduced into the Senate version of the BBB by Mike Lee (Utah). The provision would have required the Department of the Interior to sell 0.25%–0.5% of Bureau of Land Management (BLM) lands across 11 Western states. The goal was to increase housing supply by opening federal lands near urban areas to private development. The provision faced bipartisan backlash, including from Republicans like Rep. Ryan Zinke (R-MT), who called it a “red line”.
The Senate parliamentarian stripped the original version for a violation of what’s known as the Byrd rule, a Senate rule that budget bills stick to issues that impact the budget. But Lee submitted two new versions, the latest of which his office confirmed had passed the Byrd rule.
Late on 28JUN, Mike Lee pulled the public lands sale provisions from the BBB, citing that because of the strict constraints of the budget reconciliation process, he was unable to “secure clear, enforceable safeguards to guarantee that these lands would be sold only to American families.”
I love that all the people who shat on this bill from the very beginning are whining and complaining that all these good aspects of it are being removed.
Well who gets it and will they buy it and just sit on it or charge people money to sit on it and not develop it like some sort of protection racket.Yeah, Mike has been listening a lot to concerns about how the public lands would be sold, and to whom.
Probably best to pull it from this pork filled farce.
There’s a surprising winner in the latest draft of Senate Republicans’ domestic policy megabill: whaling boat captains.
Buried in the 940-page bill is a provision upping a deduction some can take for whale-hunting-related expenses to $50,000 from the current $10,000.
It’s one of the more unusual breaks in the tax code, and often mocked because it allows people to deduct the cost of maintaining boats and weapons as a charitable contribution.
But it’s long been important to Alaskan lawmakers. Spokespersons for Sens. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Dan Sullivan (R-Alaska) did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
The provision comes as lawmakers released last night the latest draft of the tax, energy, defense and immigration bill they hope to push onto President Donald Trump’s desk by early next month.
The deduction was added to the code in 2004. In order to claim the benefit, the IRS says someone has to be recognized as a whaling captain by the Alaska Eskimo Whaling Commission and must be engaged in the sanctioned, subsistence hunting of bowhead whales.
The plan explicitly allows states to choose between using data from fiscal years 2025 or 2026 to calculate the states’ match for fiscal 2028. In fiscal 2029 and beyond, the match will be calculated based on the error rate from three fiscal years before.
However, the new bill also includes a “waiver authority” section that could allow for noncontiguous states, or Alaska and Hawaii, to see the requirements waived if they’re found to be “actively implementing a corrective action plan” and carrying out other activities to reduce their error rate.
It's being read now.Schumer is a raving hypocrite, and fuck him, and all that - but I am approve these shenanigans.
The “Republicans” in the Senate just removed The SHORT Act which would remove Short Barreled Rifles, and other such guns from the NFA.
You are at war with the people you elected. It’s always the Republicans like @JohnCornyn who are coming for your gun rights.
These are the same serpents that want you to remove Thomas Massie from office.