If Reid schedules any votes, it will occur after the midterms.
Via The Hill
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) has upset some Democratic senators by backtracking on his commitment to put spending bills on the floor this summer.
The broken promise is not sitting well with appropriators, but Democratic sources point to the November elections, noting appropriations bills attract a slew of controversial amendments. Keeping the legislation off the floor shields vulnerable Democrats from taking tough votes that could be used in campaign ads this fall.
Reid told Senate Appropriations Committee Chairwoman Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) earlier this year that he would set aside June and July for debating appropriations bills on the floor, but no spending measure came up for a vote last month and the July calendar is already full with other priorities.
Mikulski said in May that she expected to spend the weeks before the August recess putting the long-derailed appropriations process back on track.
“We’re going to be on the floor June and July and I have a commitment from Sen. Reid to do that,” she told The Hill at the time.
Instead, the Senate will consider a sportsmen’s bill, sponsored by vulnerable Democratic Sen. Kay Hagan (D-N.C.), a reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank, legislation responding to the Supreme Court’s decision in Burwell vs. Hobby Lobby Stores, an emergency supplemental appropriations bill addressing the flood of illegal immigrants on the southwestern border, and a bill addressing the shortfall in the Highway Trust Fund.
Jim Manley, a Democratic strategist and a former aide to Reid, said it is the leader’s job to protect his vulnerable colleagues months before a tough election.
“That’s what leaders do, is protect their caucus. In a perfect world where everything is on the up and up, we would have the free flow of amendments as we’ve seen in years past,” Manley said.
A senior Democratic aide said spending bills would come to the floor if Republican and Democratic appropriators reach a deal that would guarantee they would reach a final up-or-down vote.
The staffer also pointed out that Reid can’t bring spending bills to the floor unless they have been marked up in committee.
The Senate Appropriations Committee has passed seven spending measures this year and the defense appropriations bill will be marked up next week.
Mikulski has not scheduled markups on three spending measures — the Energy and Water, the Labor Health and Human Services, and the Financial Services appropriations bills — despite expectations that the measures would be readied for floor consideration before the August break.
A Democratic senator on the Appropriations Committee said Reid pressed Mikulski to delay the markups and added that she is “frustrated.”
“It’s Reid’s decision,” said the lawmaker, who requested anonymity. “My guess is a couple of senators went to him and said they didn’t want to vote on some amendments.”
The senator expressed concern that Reid has adopted a defensive posture and suggested a better strategy would be to pass the bills so Democrats could brag about the popular provisions in the legislation.
The senior Democratic aide pushed back on those claims.
“It was not Reid’s decision to cancel any markups,” the aide said, calling the claim flatly untrue.

