The House and Senate will end this month on a high note, as they are expected to send trade promotion authority legislation to the President this week for signature.  The trade legislation is a top priority for President Obama and his Administration.  Both chambers have a busy week scheduled before they adjourn for the Independence Day recess next week.

The Senate returns Monday with votes expected on the nominations of Peter Neffenger to be Administrator of the Transportation Security Administration at the Department of Homeland Security and Daniel Elliott III to be a Member of the Surface Transportation Board.  Following these votes, the Senate will resume consideration of trade-related legislation, as passed by the House of Representatives last week.  The Senate had previously voted to approve jointly Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), which grants expedited congressional consideration of trade agreements, and Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA), a program to assist domestic workers whose employment is affected by trade, in May.  The rule governing consideration of the bill in the House of Representatives allowed for separate votes on each portion of the bill, and the TAA provision was defeated.  As a result, the House last week passed the legislation as individual measures, sending the bills back to the Senate for further consideration.  Last week, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell filed cloture on H. R. 2146, a bipartisan public-safety retirement bill with the House-passed TPA legislation attached.  A cloture vote on the TPA bill is expected as early as Tuesday morning.  If 60 votes are achieved on the cloture motion, up to 30 hours of post-cloture debate time would precede a simple majority vote on the “fast-track” trade legislation.  Following that vote, the Senate will proceed to a cloture vote on H. R. 1295, the Trade Preferences Extension Act with an amendment adding TAA and the Leveling the Playing Field Act.  A third bill, dealing with customs requirements, is also part of the trade package and will be considered by a Senate-House conference committee in order to resolve differences between the two versions of that bill.

Once the Senate has dispensed with the trade legislation, it is unclear what will be next on the agenda.  Democrats and Republicans are still locked in a stalemate over the Fiscal Year (FY) 2016 budget framework.  Last week, Senate Democrats successfully filibustered consideration of the FY 2016 Defense Appropriations bill and have pledged to block any other appropriations bills from floor consideration until the spending limits established by the 2011 sequester are raised.  With the support of President Obama, Democrats are hoping that their obstruction of the entire appropriations process and threat of a government shutdown will bring Republican leaders to the negotiating table.  So far, Republican leadership has not indicated a willingness to agree to a budget summit.

The authority for the Export-Import Bank, the federal export credit agency, will expire on June 30 with no prospect for consideration by the Senate of legislation to extend it before the chamber adjourns for the Independence Day holiday.  Although the votes exist in the Senate to renew the Bank’s authority, as demonstrated by a test vote during the Senate debate on the defense authorization bill, the Bank’s authority to issue new loans will expire.  The plan now among Bank supporters is to aim to include the renewal of the Bank’s charter in the must-pass highway funding bill both chambers will consider in July.  Because congressional Republicans have still not found a funding mechanism for a long-term highway bill, including the Bank’s renewal in that vehicle could garner Democratic support for the highway bill, which Democrats have otherwise said they would not support absent a long-term funding mechanism for transportation projects.

The House returns on Tuesday and tackles 14 suspensions.  The bulk of the bills to be considered under suspension of the rules come from the Homeland Security Committee and touch on a variety of issues at the Department of Homeland Security.  In addition, to the Homeland Security bills, the House will tackle a handful of other bills.  Most prominent among these is the bipartisan revision to the Toxic Substances Control Act.

Following consideration of the suspension bill, the House will take up H.R. 1190, sponsored by Rep. Phil Roe (R-TN) to repeal the controversial provision of the Affordable Care Act establishing the Independent Payment Advisory Board, a panel which makes recommendations on Medicare cuts.  The legislation had been scheduled for last week but was displaced by reconsideration of the trade bills.  The vote to repeal the IPAB comes as the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to issue a ruling in the next two weeks in the King v. Burwell case, regarding subsidies for health insurance under the Affordable Care Act.  If the Court strikes down the legality of subsidies for health insurance purchased through federal exchanges, Congress will have to deal with another highly contentious healthcare debate during July, when highway funding and the Export-Import Bank will also have to be addressed.

The House will then tackle H.R. 2042, the Ratepayer Protection Act, introduced by Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-KY).  This bill would allow for judicial review of any final ruling by the Environmental Protection Agency on carbon dioxide regulations for existing power plants, a highly contentious issue focused on the Administration’s effort to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions.

The House will complete the week and head into the Independence Day recess by considering the FY 2016 Interior and Environment appropriations bill, a $30 billion funding measure that would cut funding for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by nine percent and include a number of policy riders aimed at preventing many of the agency’s policies from going into effect.  Passed in the House Appropriations Committee on June 16 on a party-line vote, the Interior and Environment bill has become one of the most controversial of the 12 annual appropriations bills because of the policy riders.  Among other things, this bill includes provisions that would bar EPA’s efforts to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from new and existing power plants, amend the designation for automatic Clean Water Act protection, prevent the listing of certain animals under the Endangered Species Act, and block funding for rule regulating hydraulic fracturing on federal lands.  These riders are all opposed by congressional Democrats and the Administration.

The House schedule also allows for consideration of trade-related legislation that it might need to consider to accompany TPA to the President’s desk for signature.

House and Senate Appropriations Committees continue their work on reporting out FY 2016 spending bills.  This week the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development and Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education will markup their respective bills. The House Appropriations Committee will markup its FY 2016 Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education bill on Wednesday.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee will hold a hearing on evaluating the key components of an international nuclear agreement with Iran on Thursday.  President Obama signed into law the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act of 2015, which provides Congress the authority to review of any international agreement on Iran’s nuclear program.  The deadline for the international negotiations is the end of the month and Committee Chairman Bob Corker (R-TN) last week wrote a letter to President Obama expressing concerns over reports of concessions that the United States and its allies are making in those negotiations.

The recent data breach at the Office of Personnel and Management that exposed the personal information of millions of active and retired federal employees remains the subject of congressional scrutiny this week.  The Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government will hold a hearing on OPM data security on Tuesday.  The House Oversight and Government Reform Committee will hold its second hearing on the data breach on Wednesday.

Also on the hearing agenda this week will be proposals for federal transportation spending.  The current short-term surface transportation authorization expires in July, and lawmakers continue to struggle with finding bipartisan agreement on a long-term solution for funding shortfalls for the Highway Trust Fund.  Democrats are insisting on a long-term fix (though inclusion of the Export-Import Bank reauthorization may, as noted above, secure Democratic support for another short-term fix).  Last week, House Ways and Means Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) publicly ruled out any increase in the gas tax as a solution for HTF insolvency.  The Senate Finance Committee meets on Thursday to discuss state innovations in funding transportation infrastructure, while the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Select Revenue Measures will hold a Wednesday hearing on the potential use of revenue from the repatriation of earnings as a source of highway funding.

A full schedule of congressional hearings for this week is included below:

Tuesday, June 23, 2015

House Committees

GSA Leasing in the Northeast
House Transportation and Infrastructure – Subcommittee on Economic Development, Public Buildings and Emergency Management
Subcommittee Panel Discussion
June 23, 11 a.m., Conference Rooms A/B, Sixth Floor, Jacob K. Javits Federal Office Building, 26 Federal Plaza, New York, N.Y.

VA Small Business Goals Reporting
House Veterans’ Affairs – Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations; House Small Business – Subcommittee on Investigations, Oversight and Regulations
Committee Joint Hearing
4 p.m., 334 Cannon Bldg.

Senate Committees

OPM Data Security Review
Senate Appropriations – Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government
Subcommittee Hearing
10:30 a.m., 124 Dirksen Bldg.

Fiscal 2016 Appropriations: Transportation-HUD
Senate Appropriations – Subcommittee on Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, and Related Agencies
Subcommittee Markup
10 a.m., 138 Dirksen Bldg.

National Flood Insurance Program
Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Full Committee News Conference/Briefing
10 a.m., 538 Dirksen Bldg.

Regulatory Overhaul Costs
Senate Budget; Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Committee Joint Hearing
10 a.m., G50 Dirksen Bldg.

Takata Air Bag Recall and Vehicle Safety Update
Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 253 Russell Bldg.

Carbon Regulation Impact on Energy Costs
Senate Environment and Public Works – Subcommittee on Clean Air and Nuclear Safety
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 406 Dirksen Bldg.

Ambassador Nominations
Senate Foreign Relations
Full Committee Confirmation Hearing
11 a.m., 419 Dirksen Bldg.

Fiscal 2016 Appropriations: Labor-HHS-Education
Senate Appropriations – Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies
Subcommittee Markup
3 p.m., 138 Dirksen Bldg.

American Energy Export Opportunities
Senate Foreign Relations – Subcommittee on Multilateral International Development, Multilateral Institutions and International Economic, Energy and Environmental Policy
Subcommittee Hearing
2:45 p.m., 419 Dirksen Bldg.

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

House Committees

U.S. International Food Aid
House Agriculture
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 1300 Longworth Bldg.

Fiscal 2016 Appropriations: Labor-HHS-Education
House Appropriations
Full Committee Markup
10:15 a.m., 2359 Rayburn Bldg.

Child Nutrition Assistance Compliance
House Education and the Workforce – Subcommittee on Early Childhood, Elementary and Secondary Education
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 2175 Rayburn Bldg.

Medicaid Demonstration Project Approval
House Energy and Commerce – Subcommittee on Health
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 2123 Rayburn Bldg.

Syrian Refugee Admission
House Homeland Security – Subcommittee on Counterterrorism and Intelligence
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 311 Cannon Bldg.

BLM Wind and Solar Reclamation Bonds
House Natural Resources – Subcommittee on Oversight & Investigations
Subcommittee Oversight Hearing
10:30 a.m., 1324 Longworth Bldg.

OPM Data Breach
House Oversight and Government Reform
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 2154 Rayburn Bldg.

EPA Clean-Power Plan Analysis
House Science, Space and Technology – Subcommittee on Energy; House Science, Space and Technology – Subcommittee on Environment
Committee Joint Hearing
10 a.m., 2318 Rayburn Bldg.

U.S. Train Control Implementation
House Transportation and Infrastructure – Subcommittee on Railroads, Pipelines and Hazardous Materials
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 2167 Rayburn Bldg.

Veterans Affairs Legislation
House Veterans’ Affairs – Subcommittee on Disability Assistance and Memorial Affairs
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 334 Cannon Bldg.

Health Law and Insurance Premiums
House Ways and Means – Subcommittee on Oversight
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 1100 Longworth Bldg.

Islamic State Assessment
House Armed Services – Subcommittee on Emerging Threats and Capabilities
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 2118 Rayburn Bldg.

U.S. Financial Sector Security
House Financial Services
Full Committee Hearing
2 p.m., 2128 Rayburn Bldg.

Colombia and the FARC
House Foreign Affairs – Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere
Subcommittee Hearing
3 p.m., 2172 Rayburn Bldg.

DHS Federal Cybersecurity Efforts
House Homeland Security – Subcommittee on Cybersecurity, Infrastructure Protection and Security Technologies
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 311 Cannon Bldg.

Puerto Rico Political and Economic Assessment
House Natural Resources – Subcommittee on Indian, Insular and Alaska Native Affairs
Subcommittee Oversight Hearing
2 p.m., 1324 Longworth Bldg.

Rural Transportation Issues
House Transportation and Infrastructure – Subcommittee on Highways and Transit
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 2167 Rayburn Bldg.

Repatriation Tax and Highway Funding
House Ways and Means – Subcommittee on Select Revenue Measures
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 1100 Longworth Bldg.

Senate Committees

Flood Insurance Management
Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 538 Dirksen Bldg.

Governmental Affairs Measures and Nominations
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Full Committee Markup
10 a.m., 342 Dirksen Bldg.

Native American Youth Suicide Prevention
Senate Indian Affairs
Full Committee Oversight Hearing
2:15 p.m., 628 Dirksen Bldg.

Work in Retirement
Senate Special Aging
Full Committee Hearing
2:15 p.m., 562 Dirksen Bldg.

Veterans Health Care and Benefits Legislation
Senate Veterans’ Affairs
Full Committee Markup
2:30 p.m., 418 Russell Bldg.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

House Committees

Welfare and Work Issues
House Agriculture – Subcommittee on Nutrition; House Ways and Means – Subcommittee on Human Resources
Committee Joint Hearing
10 a.m., 1100 Longworth Bldg.

Nuclear Deterrence Policy
House Armed Services
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 2118 Rayburn Bldg.

Vehicle-to-Vehicle Communications
House Energy and Commerce – Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 2123 Rayburn Bldg.

Public Health Bills
House Energy and Commerce – Subcommittee on Health
Subcommittee Hearing
10:15 a.m., 2322 Rayburn Bldg.

CFPB Misconduct Allegations
House Financial Services – Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 2128 Rayburn Bldg.

State Department and Religious Freedom Bills
House Foreign Affairs
Full Committee Markup
10 a.m., 2172 Rayburn Bldg.

Mineral Production Legislation
House Natural Resources – Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources
Subcommittee Hearing
10:30 a.m., 1334 Longworth Bldg.

Water Use and Infrastructure Bills
House Natural Resources – Subcommittee on Water, Power and Oceans
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 1324 Longworth Bldg.

IRS Inspector General Update
House Oversight and Government Reform
Full Committee Hearing
9 a.m., 2154 Rayburn Bldg.

National Science Foundation Employee Ethics Issues
House Science, Space and Technology – Subcommittee on Oversight; House Science, Space and Technology – Subcommittee on Research and Technology
Committee Joint Hearing
10 a.m., 2318 Rayburn Bldg.

GSA Proposed Transactional Data Rule
House Small Business – Subcommittee on Contracting and Workforce
Subcommittee Hearing
10 a.m., 2360 Rayburn Bldg.

VA Fiscal 2015 Budget Assessment
House Veterans’ Affairs
Full Committee Hearing
10:30 a.m., 334 Cannon Bldg.

Food Labeling Bills
House Agriculture – Subcommittee on Biotechnology, Horticulture and Research
Subcommittee Hearing
1:30 p.m., 1300 Longworth Bldg.

Defense Department Nuclear Enterprise Review
House Armed Services – Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 2212 Rayburn Bldg.

China and U.S. Universities
House Foreign Affairs – Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights and International Organizations
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 2172 Rayburn Bldg.

Criminal Justice Proposals
House Judiciary
Full Committee Panel Discussion
June 25 TBA, TBA

VA Major Lease Procurement
House Oversight and Government Reform – Subcommittee on National Security
Subcommittee Hearing
2 p.m., 2154 Rayburn Bldg.

Veterans Affairs Measures
House Veterans’ Affairs – Subcommittee on Economic Opportunity
Subcommittee Markup
2 p.m., 334 Cannon Bldg.

Senate Committees

COOL and Trade Retaliation
Senate Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., G50 Dirksen Bldg.

Transportation Infrastructure Financing
Senate Finance
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 215 Dirksen Bldg.

Iran Nuclear Agreement
Senate Foreign Relations
Full Committee Hearing
10 a.m., 419 Dirksen Bldg.

Cybersecurity and OPM Data Breach
Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs
Full Committee Hearing
9:30 a.m., 342 Dirksen Bldg.

Veterans and Economic Opportunity Policy
Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship
Full Committee Hearing
9:30 a.m., 428A Russell Bldg.

Impact of a Greek Default
Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs – Subcommittee on National Security and International Trade and Finance
Subcommittee Hearing
1:30 p.m., 538 Dirksen Bldg.

Friday, June 26, 2015

House Committees

Public Shipyards and Navy Operations
House Armed Services – Subcommittee on Readiness
Subcommittee Hearing
8 a.m., 2212 Rayburn Bldg.

U.S. Space Security
House Armed Services – Subcommittee on Strategic Forces
Subcommittee Hearing
10:30 a.m., 2212 Rayburn Bldg.

Eminent Domain and Property Rights
House Judiciary – Subcommittee on the Constitution and Civil Justice
Subcommittee Hearing
9 a.m., 2141 Rayburn Bldg.

Astrobiology Outlook
House Science, Space and Technology
Full Committee Hearing
9 a.m., 2318 Rayburn Bldg.

Photo of Kaitlyn McClure Kaitlyn McClure

Kaitlyn McClure is a policy advisor in Covington’s Public Policy Practice, leveraging her experience in government and politics to provide strategic advisory services and support to clients with legislative matters before government agencies and Congress.

Kaitlyn is also a member of the firm’s Election…

Kaitlyn McClure is a policy advisor in Covington’s Public Policy Practice, leveraging her experience in government and politics to provide strategic advisory services and support to clients with legislative matters before government agencies and Congress.

Kaitlyn is also a member of the firm’s Election and Political Law Practice Group. She advises clients on their registration and reporting obligations under the federal Lobbying Disclosure Act, state and local lobbying laws, and the operation and reporting obligations of their connected PACs.

Before joining the firm, Kaitlyn was the Associate Vice President of Client Relations at DDC Advocacy. Prior to working for DDC, Kaitlyn served as the strategy assistant for former presidential candidate Governor Mitt Romney. Her experience also includes working in the U.S. Senate as a legislative assistant for Republican Senators John Hoeven of North Dakota and Judd Gregg of New Hampshire.