Monday, April 18, 2011

Measure Twice, Cut Once

As I mentioned in a previous blog, budget wrangling would consume Congressional energy and compress floor time for policy issues like the Durbin Interchange Amendment. This week certainly was no exception. And, with passage of legislation to fund the government through the end of the fiscal year, Congress is now taking its traditional April recess and won't return to Washington until May 2.

The Senate continued off and on consideration of a small business bill (S. 493) for the third consecutive week. The Tester Amendment to delay the Federal Reserve rule on debit card interchange remains pending to S. 493, but so do several other amendments. Senate leadership and the bill sponsors continue negotiations on the remaining amendments to be brought to a vote before final passage.

Yesterday, Sen. Tester (D-Montana) took advantage of some floor time to pitch his amendment once again. In a reasoned and deliberate speech to his colleagues, he defended his request to delay the implementation of Durbin so that lawmakers could get it right. He used the old carpenter metaphor of "measure twice, cut once." Speaking for rural America he defended the proposed delay so that interchange regulation will not adversely affect credit unions and community banks, which are an important part of the financial system for rural America. Take a look:



Sen. Durbin perhaps was too busy excoriating JPMChase CEO Jamie Diamond to jump to the floor and rebut Tester.

The House companion to the Tester effort (H.R. 1081) gained several more cosponsors this week (currently standing at 85). At this writing, the House appears likely to continue its position that the Senate act first.

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