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View Article  U.S. Aid To S.E. Asia "Stingy" - Updated!
U.S. Aid To S.E. Asia "Stingy" - Updated!


This little tidbit noted by Atrios should catch on the conservative talk radio today. (It's called "WHO Radio" in Central Iowa)

From the Washington Times:

The Bush administration yesterday pledged $15 million to Asian nations hit by a tsunami that has killed more than 22,500 people, although the United Nations' humanitarian-aid chief called the donation "stingy."

Now what would prompt someone to call such a donation "stingy"?

From MSNBC:

The war on terror will take center stage at next month’s second inauguration for Bush in Washington, D.C.

...
The estimated budget for the event is $30-40 million, but that will not cover security costs.

UPDATE ONE:  The Washington Times report quoted above is a complete lie.  It seems that the Washington Times and the WSJ have gone out of their way to use an international crisis to malign the ever-hated United Nations.

The Gadflyer has a post detailing how two outlets outright fabricating a story echoes through the media outlets - and outrages Blog For Iowa posters....

Somewhat surprisingly, the WSJ points out the notion of using a natural disaster to further a political cause:

People prone to hysteria often become further unhinged in the face of a great disaster, and that may explain these remarkable comments on the tsunami disaster. Still, these comments by the movement's leadership may serve as a case study of how such imaginings work their way into public discussion of the environment.

The author of this comment then proceeds to write about how the Kyoto Protocol is holding back South Asian nations from creating a Tsuanmi warning system similar to the one used by Pacific Rim nations.

I swear - you can't make this stuff up.


UPDATE TWO:

It seems that shame is an important motivator.  From today's Washington Post:

The Bush administration more than doubled its financial commitment yesterday to provide relief to nations suffering from the Indian Ocean tsunami, amid complaints that the vacationing President Bush has been insensitive to a humanitarian catastrophe of epic proportions.

As the death toll surpassed 50,000 with no sign of abating, the U.S. Agency for International Development added $20 million to an earlier pledge of $15 million to provide relief, and the Pentagon dispatched an aircraft carrier and other military assets to the region. Secretary of State Colin L. Powell, in morning television appearances, chafed at a top U.N. aid official's comment on Monday that wealthy countries were being stingy with aid. "The United States is not stingy," Powell said on CNN.

Of course, one must take note of what happens when this administraton is shamed into a course of action - blame Bill Clinton!!

Earlier yesterday, White House spokesman Trent Duffy said [Bush] was confident he could monitor events effectively without returning to Washington or making public statements in Crawford, where he spent part of the day clearing brush and bicycling. Explaining the about-face, a White House official said: "[Bush] wanted to be fully briefed on our efforts. He didn't want to make a symbolic statement about 'We feel your pain.' "

Many Bush aides believe Clinton was too quick to head for the cameras to hold forth on tragedies with his trademark empathy. "Actions speak louder than words," a top Bush aide said, describing [Bush]'s view of his appropriate role.

As I noted earlier - you can't make this stuff up.



UPDATE THREE: An mportant note on this story.  There are several groups out there providing relief aid to those stricken by the tsunami now.  Here are a couple that I know of immediately (not an exhaustive list, by any means.  Note:  More links added 12/29):

Lutheran World Relief

United Methodist Committee On Relief

American Red Cross

... and for a good overview of other charities rasing money and providing relief efforts:

Bread For The World

If there are other organizations operating relief efforts that you support, please post them below.
View Article  Naughty and Nice 2004
Naughty and Nice 2004

American Progress

The Progress Report makes this year's holiday list and checks it twice

Naughty: Merck, for spending millions to market the pain-reliever Vioxx to consumers long after the company knew it was unsafe.
Nice: Dr. David Graham, of the FDA's Office of Drug Safety, for fighting to keep dangerous drugs off the market.  

Naughty: Bernard Kerik, for turning an apartment donated for weary Ground Zero police and rescue workers into a love nest for his adulterous affairs.
Nice: Miramax Films, for putting the kibosh on Kerik's summer blockbuster biopic.

Naughty: Congress, for underfunding the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). allocating "$164 million less than needed to cover the expected 24 percent increase in home heating costs" this winter.
Nice: Richard Hamann and his wife, Donna, for paying the electricity bills for the entire town of Anthon, Iowa, because they wanted to give something back to their community.

Naughty: NRA Radio, for broadcasting anti-gun-control propaganda and calling it legitimate news.
Nice: Ed Schultz, Arnie Arnesen, Tony Trupiano, Thom Hartmann, Wendy Wilde, Al Franken, Katherine Lanpher and the rest of the Air America crew, for showing progressive radio can be thought-provoking, hard-hitting and fun.

Naughty: Department of Homeland Security, for omitting "major sites" like chemical plants and dams from its unfinished national database of potential terrorist targets.
Nice: Department of Homeland Security, for including "water parks and miniature golf courses" in the national database. At your local putt putt, the terrorists never win.

Naughty: The Environmental Protection Agency, for using camcorders to bribe parents into offering up their toddlers as guinea pigs for a study about the dangers of pesticides on children…sponsored by the chemical industry.
Nice: The Natural Resources Defense Council, for fighting to protect kids from the harmful effects of pesticides and chemicals. 

Naughty: Right-wing conservatives in the House of Representatives, for changing ethics rules so Tom DeLay (R-TX) could one day be their indicted leader.
Nice: Whistleblowers like Bunnatine Greenhouse, Richard Foster and Paul O'Neill, for holding our government to a higher ethical standard.

Naughty: Medicare head Tom Scully, Rep. Billy Tauzin, Rep. James Greenwood and trade representatives Ralph Ives and Claude Burcky, for using public service for personal benefit, taking lucrative, top-dollar jobs with the pharmaceutical industry they had formerly regulated.
Nice: Rep. Henry Waxman, for using public service for public benefit, compiling reports on everything from the Halliburton to undue secrecy in the White House.

Naughty: EPA administrator Mike Leavitt, for blaming pollution on poverty.
Nice: The Union of Concerned Scientists, for giving us the facts about global warming, pollution, clean energy and the Bush administration's ideological approach to science.

Naughty: Sinclair Media, for planning to run an hour long anti-Kerry screed as "news" just before the U.S. presidential election.
Nice: Media Matters and the blogosphere [and Rapid Response!], for forcing Sinclair to change its plans. (And continuing to demand that Sinclair stop broadcasting one-sided political spin.)

View Article  FDA's Credibility Hits Yet Another Low as Consumer Health Lands on Back Burner


FDA's Credibility Hits Yet Another Low as Consumer Health Lands on Back Burner

American Progress

Pfizer's Greed A National Shame

The drug maker Pfizer "reaffirmed its commitment" over the weekend to keep its prescription painkiller, Celebrex, on the market, despite a disclosure last week that the drug more than tripled the risk of heart attacks, strokes and death among those taking high doses in a national trial. That level of risk is even greater than the one found in patients taking the similar painkiller, Vioxx, in a similar trial that led Merck to withdraw Vioxx in September. The results have "raised new questions about how well federal drug regulators protect the public and worsened drug makers' already dismal image." Indeed, reports following the discovery have shown Celebrex, "fast-tracked" by the agency and never even proved it protected the stomach from gastrointestinal problems associated with aspirin and ibuprofen – its primary advantage over existing pain relievers.

MARKETING TO MIDDLE AGE: Celebrex and Vioxx were designed for senior citizens, who have the highest risk of stomach bleeding – "principally people over 65 years who have suffered from gastrointestinal problems," – but marketed aggressively to middle-aged Americans, who could have benefited just as well from traditional painkillers like aspirin. Dorothy Hamill, the 1976 Olympic figure skating gold medalist, "was the middle-aged celebrity face of Vioxx," while commercials for Celebrex targeted "baby boomers beginning to suffer from arthritis." Many medical experts "now say that Celebrex and Vioxx, selling for $2 or $3 a pill, have been too widely prescribed to patients who could safely obtain the same pain benefits from over-the-counter drugs costing pennies apiece." Under pressure from the FDA, Pfizer now says it will halt advertising to consumers, but not to doctors.

THE PASSING LANE: Celebrex, like Vioxx, was "fast-tracked" by the FDA, because it was suggested the drug would help cut the rate of gastrointestinal bleeding associated with older painkillers. That meant the FDA took only six months to approve the drug, even though scientists concluded it had not "sufficiently demonstrated" it reduced the rate of the gastrointestinal problems compared with existing painkillers. Later studies by Pfizer "were never convincing enough for the agency to remove the warning from Celebrex's labeling." In other words, Celebrex "has never been proven to the FDA's satisfaction to have the stomach-protecting benefits that originally were supposed to be the point of that category of drugs."

THE 'SPECTACULAR' FDA: Celebrex and Vioxx are not the only drugs to come under scrutiny lately. On the same day the Celebrex study broke, "in less than 12 hours," AstraZeneca reported that a trial of Iressa, a lung cancer drug approved in the United States last year, showed that the drug did not prolong lives. Eli Lilly warned doctors that Strattera, its drug to treat attention deficit disorder had caused severe liver injury in at least two patients. And doctors writing in a prominent medical journal recommended that physicians stop prescribing Pfizer's Bextra painkiller. So what was the White House's reaction to the finding that several FDA approved drugs are ineffective or dangerous? White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card said the agency was doing a "spectacular job."

SPECTACULAR NEGLIGENCE: The Washington Post reports the FDA, "which regulates almost one-quarter of the U.S. economy, has been without a permanent chief for almost two-thirds of the time that Bush has been in office." The agency also has had a "high number of temporary appointees administering its centers, offices and divisions, including the key positions running the offices that evaluate new drugs and monitor the safety record of approved medications." The White House's negligence plays right into the hands of major drug companies, which would rather "have no one there than someone who favors a proactive stance that might slow down the industry or raise hard questions about profitable drugs." Observers say the agency's lack of leadership has made it "less able to respond quickly and effectively to emerging problems."

SPECTACULAR FUNDRAISERS: Another reason Bush has not appointed an FDA head may be that some Democrats have signaled they would "strongly oppose any nominee from the pharmaceutical industry." But the pharmaceutical industry, which was the major winner in last year's prescription drug bill, includes some of the GOP's biggest supporters. And of health industry contributors, Pfizer is number one. Company executives have contributed $2.7 million to Republicans since 2000, and the drugmaker's political action committee (PAC) has pitched in more than $1.4 million. Since 2000, 79 percent of the company's contributions have gone to Republicans. Merck has made almost $1.8 million in political donations since 2000, 74 percent to Republicans.

View Article  Bush Propaganda Machine Takes Aim at Social Security
  Bush Propaganda Machine Takes Aim at Social Security


Brace yourself for more Orwellian doublespeak, sleight of hand, smoke and mirrors and bald-faced lies, as the Bushies launch their public relations campaign to drum up popular support for dismantling…er, I mean privatizing, Social Security.   Progressives have another opportunity to watch helplessly as the Bushies continue getting away with saying down is up and black is white.  If all goes according to plan, and with help from the compliant media, no one will notice what is being taken from them in broad daylight. 

Groups with friendly, politically-correct sounding names such as For our Grandchildren, Alliance for Worker Retirement Security,  Women for Social Security Choice [get it?  women…choice…oh, they are shameless!] are all part of the strategy to convince the country that we need to rid ourselves of that dastardly program, Social Security.  And to add insult to injury, they call themselves grassroots organizations while receiving funding from such groups as right-wing zealots, Club for Growth (the one they’re willing to name)…Read on.  Then write a letter to your local newspaper. 

Help reframe this issue for the asleep-at-the-wheel media by calling it what it is.  This is not about reform, updating, reshaping or overhaul:  this is an attempt to dismantle, undo, take down, rob, destroy, Social Security, a government program that works.


New York Times

By Edmund L. Andrews

WASHINGTON, Dec. 16 - Introduced as a "single mom" from Iowa, Sandra Jaques was cool and confident as she praised Bush's plan to partly replace Social Security with private savings accounts. 

But Ms. Jaques is not any random single mother. She is the Iowa state director of a conservative advocacy group, FreedomWorks, whose founders are Jack F. Kemp, the former vice-presidential nominee, and Dick Armey, the former House Republican leader.

[Another advocate for private accounts] Leanne Abdnor said she had raised start-up money from friends, whom she would not identify. She said the group would wage a publicity campaign to counter groups that oppose private accounts.

Support for overhauling Social Security also comes from numerous self-described grass-roots organizations: For Our Grandchildren, which employed Ms. Jaques as a director in Iowa; SocialSecurityChoice.org, backed by pro-business political groups like Club for Growth; and USANext, a Virginia-based group run by Charles Jarvis, a former Reagan administration official.

(click here to read the entire article)


Join your fellow Iowans in the fight to take back the media for ordinary citizens.  Click here to join RapidResponse - Iowa.

View Article  Buying Into Failure: The Abolition of Social Security
 Buying Into Failure: The Abolition of Social Security


As we hear more and more pundits and politicians on television tell us the enormous wealth that we will accumulate by eliminating Social Security, there is a large piece of information missing: government-sponsored private investments simply don't work.

Paul Krugman notes the failure of such proposals today.


Yet, aside from giving the Cato Institute and other organizations promoting Social Security privatization the space to present upbeat tales from Chile, the U.S. news media have provided their readers and viewers with little information about international experience. In particular, the public hasn't been let in on two open secrets:

 Privatization dissipates a large fraction of workers' contributions on fees to investment companies.

 It leaves many retirees in poverty.

Decades of conservative marketing have convinced Americans that government programs always create bloated bureaucracies, while the private sector is always lean and efficient. But when it comes to retirement security, the opposite is true. More than 99 percent of Social Security's revenues go toward benefits, and less than 1 percent for overhead. In Chile's system, management fees are around 20 times as high. And that's a typical number for privatized systems.

...

Privatizers who laud the Chilean system never mention that it has yet to deliver on its promise to reduce government spending. More than 20 years after the system was created, the government is still pouring in money. Why? Because, as a Federal Reserve study puts it, the Chilean government must "provide subsidies for workers failing to accumulate enough capital to provide a minimum pension." In other words, privatization would have condemned many retirees to dire poverty, and the government stepped back in to save them.

The same thing is happening in Britain. Its Pensions Commission warns that those who think Mrs. Thatcher's privatization solved the pension problem are living in a "fool's paradise." A lot of additional government spending will be required to avoid the return of widespread poverty among the elderly - a problem that Britain, like the U.S., thought it had solved.

Britain's experience is directly relevant to the Bush administration's plans. If current hints are an indication, the final plan will probably claim to save money in the future by reducing guaranteed Social Security benefits. These savings will be an illusion: 20 years from now, an American version of Britain's commission will warn that big additional government spending is needed to avert a looming surge in poverty among retirees.

 So the Bush administration wants to scrap a retirement system that works, and can be made financially sound for generations to come with modest reforms. Instead, it wants to buy into failure, emulating systems that, when tried elsewhere, have neither saved money nor protected the elderly from poverty.


The problem of elderly poverty in the United States - for the most part - has been solved in 2004 America.

Something else of note: despite the supposed windfall that will be produced from the pockets of Wall Street financiers - the phrase "benefit reduction" is still in play.

Krugman was nice about it - the comission the current administration set up to study the so-called crisis in 2001 plainly called it a "cut":


Although Bush's Social Security commission gave him three main recommendations in 2001 on how to fix the system, Bush has not said which alternative, if any, he would support. The main plan put forward by that commission would cut future promised benefits for younger workers in exchange for allowing private investment accounts.

McClellan suggested Bush would follow the commission's direction without explicitly endorsing one of its proposals. "That bipartisan commission put forward some innovative ideas to solve this problem," McClellan said. "The president said that should be a guide for us moving forward."


Folks - it doesn't get any clearer than this.  This is a false crisis, generated by those that want to pick the pockets of the American public for personal profit.

Josh Marshall is putting together a list of where congressional delegations stand on this issue.  For the Rapid Response folks:  we need to contact the Iowa delegation and find out where they stand on this.

If anyone finds out, we'll post it here - and send any interesting comments to whomever wants to print them - and keep them around for 2006. 



One last item on this today:  the Social Security Abolition movement is being promoted by bringing "regular Iowans" to Washington - so they can lie to the American people.
View Article  Meet the New [USDA] Boss

Meet the New [USDA] Boss


Last Friday's American Progress Report gives us a summary of some of the policies pursued by Mike Johanns,an Iowa native and current Nebraska governor who was nominated as the new U.S. Secretary of Agriculture, replacing outgoing Ann Veneman.


In a victory for corporate agribusiness and a defeat for family farmers, Bush nominated Nebraska Gov Mike Johanns to become the next Secretary of Agriculture.  Announcing Johanns's nomination yesterday, Bush called the governor "a faithful friend of America's farmers and ranchers".  But as governor, Johanns worked persistently to undermine a law passed by a citizen initiative in 1982 that protects family farmers in Nebraska by banning most corporate agriculture.  Johanns used $300,000 from the Bush administration to fund a biased study of the law – called I-300 – produced by a Texas consulting firm. Predictably, the study recommended making it "easier for agribusiness to gobble up traditional family farm agriculture" in Nebraska.  Johanns's study also suggested "more taxpayer financed corporate welfare by 'incenting' the outside corporations that would be gobbling up individual owned farm and rural businesses".  As his next step in undermining the law, Johanns pushed a bill in the Nebraska legislature which would "establish a 20-member task force to lookat the pros and cons of I-300" (Johanns was to appoint 18 of the 20 members). The legislature understood the purpose of the task force was "to weaken the state's anti-corporate farm law" and, thankfully, it was defeated.  But if Johanns is put in control of federal agriculture policy, his corporate agenda will be much more difficult for the nation's small farmers to overcome.

JOHANNS PROPOSES SCHOOL FUNDING CUTS TO PRESERVE CORPORATE WELFARE: In the face of a multi-million dollar budget shortfall, Johanns adamantly defended Nebraska's massive corporate welfare program The state has given away $13 billion on the program since 1988 for giant corporations like IBP, ConAgra and Union Pacific Corporations profited to the tune of $148 million in 2001 alone.  Each year, Nebraska spends three times as much on corporate welfare as on the entire University of Nebraska school system.  Instead of trimming back corporate giveaways, Johanns "called for 10 percent cuts to higher education and K-12 school aid"

JOHANNS FAVORS LOWER WAGES FOR WORKERS AT SUBSIDIZED COMPANIES: A bill was introduced in the Nebraska legislature that would require workers at companies receiving subsidies from Nebraska to be "paid at least $870 per hour if they have health insurance, and $957 for those without".  Johanns supported an alternative proposal that would pay workers at taxpayer subsidized corporations lower wages, with no increase if the company didn't provide health care.

JOHANNS FAVORS WITHHOLDING MAD COW INFORMATION FROM THE PUBLIC: With Johanns in charge,you'll likely know a lot less about the safety of the food you eat. As governor,Johanns has expressed opposition to the Department of Agriculture's policy of informing the public when the nation's beef supply may be contaminated. Johanns asked the Department of Agriculture to reconsider their policy of announcing when initial tests of cattle show they may be infected with Mad Cow disease, also known as BSE. Johanns's position runs counter to the conclusions of the USDA inspector general, which found the agency isn't doing enough to protect the public from Mad Cow contamination.


The American Progress Report gave us an idea of what types of experience Mr. Johanns has in agricultural policy.  Columnist Alan Guebert gives us an idea of what issues Mr. Johanns will have to face in the next four years:


LETTER FROM AMERICA:
NEW USDA BOSS FACES TROUBLE
WITH CONGRESS AND FARMERS

ALAN GUEBERT, AG COMM: To hear George W. Bush tell it, Michael Johanns, Bush's nominee to succeed U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Ann Veneman, is an accomplished trade negotiator, ardent defender of American farmers, ranchers and biofuels and a proven leader with "executive skill."

 Moreover, explained Bush December 2, Johanns, governor of the nation's fourth largest farm state, Nebraska, and now in line to lead nation's fourth largest government agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, "grew up close to the land."

 Right, as U.S. farmers are fond of reminding politicians who boast they grew up on a farm, "So did every mule and hog in America."

 Truth is, nothing in Johanns' background has prepared him for the challenges he now faces in what he somewhat romantically calls his "dream job," running the $82 billion, 113,000-employee USDA.

 After a rapid and certain confirmation by the U.S. Senate in January, nothing about leading USDA will be romantic. Johanns' will face domestic and foreign farm fires immediately --- if not sooner.

 First, America's ballooning federal debt, an all-time record $413 billion in 2004, guarantees USDA farm programs will go under the knife in Congress in 2005. Already, rumors suggest the White House has alerted all federal agencies to expect heavy budget cuts; maybe two to four percent below 2004 levels.

 For USDA that means the fiscal conservatives in Congress who won sweeping election victories in the Republican "red" heartland last month could slice as much as $3 billion from food aid and farm support programs.

 That will be a tough diet because Congress, with Bush's blessing, already made the easy cuts in 2003 and 2004. For example, in the last two fiscal years Congress lopped more than $1 billion from 2002 Farm Bill soil and water conservation programs.

 As such, any new cuts will dismantle many rural development programs, slice deeper into conservation and begin paring farm price support programs.

 Current ideas center on cutting annual "base" payments guaranteed grain and cotton producers under the 2002 Farm Bill as well as lowering Farm Bill-pegged commodity prices that deliver greater government support as commodity prices fall.

 Johanns' job in the budget fight will be two-fold. First must position himself and [Bush] as a defenders of farmers so rural congressman and senators have political cover with their constituents when cuts are made.

 The operative line Johanns must learn is "Congress wanted deeper cuts, but [Bush] and I limited the damage." It may pinch the truth, but, hey, this is politics.

 The second job will be far harder --- convincing farmers and ranchers that less money for American agriculture is good for them and the country.

 The supporting line for that argument is plain: America must reform (read that cut) most of farm price support programs to complete world trade talks.

 That script was a better seller before November 22, the day USDA announced that for the first time in nearly 50 years the U.S. will not run and farm trade surplus in 2005. The news shocked American farmers who have long warmed themselves with the thought that "America feeds the world."

 Not anymore. According to USDA's latest estimates, U.S. farm exports in 2005 will be $56 billion, nearly $7 billion under 2004's. More importantly, 2005 ag imports will be (in a curious coincidence) an identical $56 billion, $9 billion more than as recently as 2003.

 That means in just four short years White House economic and trade policies have taken the US farm trade surplus from $13.6 billion in 2001 to zero in 2005.

 Gov. Johanns will be looked to by farmers to stop that freefall. While Bush touts Johanns' trade experience, the governor's actual experience is mostly as a salesman. Over the past six years he has led nearly a dozen one-and two-day Nebraska trade junkets to the Far East and South American.

 If that makes Johanns a trade expert, then anyone who has watched a baseball game at New York's hallowed Yankee Stadium is Babe Ruth.

 Johanns' best links to agriculture came as a politician; he has not farmed since childhood in Iowa. As Nebraska governor, though, he served as chairman of the National Governor's Association Biotechnology Partnership with American business.

 Johanns' ties to agribusiness were tested last January when he led an effort to undermine a Nebraska law called Initiative-300, the toughest anti-corporate farming law in America. It was a raw political move to open the nation's biggest red meat-producing state to corporate livestock integrator-meatpackers.

 The effort quickly backfired, however, and Johanns was soundly rebuked by Nebraska farmers and ranchers who cherish their independence almost as much as their cherish their guns.

 It is a lesson Johanns may endure again as he prepares to battle for Bush farm policy initiatives--budget cuts and more free trade --- in the U.S. and abroad. Both will be met with worry and anguish on the farms and ranches of America.

 Bottom line for Secretary-to-be Johanns? He's Ann Veneman with a firmer handshake and a quicker smile. The problems he faces, however, are the not only the same as Veneman's, they are bigger, too.

Mr. Guebert's column is excerpted from A.V. Kreb's Agribusiness Examiner #383.  Alan Guebert is the author of the weekly column Farm and Food File, as well as this weekly column written for European and Asian newspapers.


View Article  "As Sound As Any Scientist"
"As Sound As Any Scientist"

From the Anchorage Daily News:

All three members of Alaska's congressional delegation dispute the conclusion of leading scientists that human activity is causing the rapid warming of the Arctic that is wrecking villages and melting glaciers.

 Alaska's lone congressman, Republican Rep. Don Young, went so far as dismissing the major new report on Arctic climate change. He called it ammunition for fearmongers.

 "My biggest concern is that people are going to use this so-called study to try to influence the way and standard of living that occurs within the United States," Young said.

 "I don't believe it is our fault. That's an opinion," Young said. "It's as sound as any scientist's."

On a not-so-ironically related topic, Congress decided that funding science education (and science education research) isn't that important:

EDUCATION AND HUMAN RESOURCES funding declines 10.4% or $97.6 million in this fiscal year. The conferees provided $79.4 million for the Math and Science Partnerships program, retaining it in this directorate. The Administration had requested $80.0 million for this program in the Research and Related Activities Directorate, a proposed transfer that was widely criticized on Capitol Hill.

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