OPINION: How Courtney's little-noted bill become historic
Instead, the region and the country were preoccupied with a
By
H.R. 748 then headed for the
No one could know then that H.R. 748 was waiting to be transformed into something truly historic.
Procedure
Article 1, Section 7 of the
By tradition this has been taken to mean that all "money bills," involving revenues or appropriations, must originate in the House.
But in
The oil that greases the national economic engine had suddenly been removed and the economy grinded to a near halt, with millions abruptly unemployed, stock markets tanking and businesses facing insolvency.
The
McConnell, a willy veteran of congressional gamesmanship, knew if he could find the right House bill, he could replace the entire text to meet the constitutional requirement of origination in the House. He reached into his inbox and grabbed H.R. 748.
H.R. 748 returns
On
The measure was approved on a voice vote, Courtney in support.
"The CARES Act will put critical resources where they're needed most right now," Courtney said in a press release issued by his office.
The office made no mention of the strange, circuitous route his original legislation had taken to morph into the CARES Act.
"We thought about it, but it didn't seem appropriate in the context of what the country was confronting," he told me.
Ironically, in the press release, Courtney's office transposed the bill's numbers, referring to it as "H.R. 784."
Courtney said he had learned only a few days earlier that McConnell had used his bill as the vessel for the emergency relief package.
"I guess I will be part of a piece of historical trivia," said the congressman.
But what of the Cadillac Tax? Its repeal ended up being incorporated into the Fiscal Year 2020 federal budget, signed by the president in
"Repeal of the Cadillac Tax is a huge win for the middle-class families who were facing a misguided tax on their hard-won health benefits," said Courtney nine days before Christmas, after Trump signed the massive federal budget, including the repeal.
Courtney's comments didn't get much attention.
___
(c)2020 The Day (New London, Conn.)
Visit The Day (New London, Conn.) at www.theday.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



Sonoma County businesses with pandemic-related losses hit wall with commercial insurers
Minnesota Department of Health connects at least one COVID-19 case to Duluth long-term care facility
Advisor News
- Take advantage of the exploding $800B IRA rollover market
- Study finds more households move investable assets across firms
- Could workplace benefits help solve America’s long-term care gap?
- The best way to use a tax refund? Create a holistic plan
- CFP Board appoints K. Dane Snowden as CEO
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Court fines Cutter Financial $100,000, requires client notice of guilty verdict
- KBRA Releases Research – Private Credit: From Acquisitions to Partnerships—Asset Managers’ Growing Role With Life/Annuity Insurers
- $80k surrender charge at stake as Navy vet, Ameritas do battle in court
- Sammons Institutional Group® Launches Summit LadderedSM
- Protective Expands Life & Annuity Distribution with Alfa Insurance
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- Florida Blue expands cancer support for Medicare Advantage members
- Data from Stanford University Provide New Insights into Managed Care (The environmental chemical exposome and health insurance: Examining associations and effect modification of epigenetic aging in a representative sample of United States adults): Managed Care
- National Center for HIV Researcher Details Research in Health Insurance (Behavioral Readiness for Daily Oral PrEP in a Diverse Sample of Gay, Bisexual, and Other Men who have Sex with Men Who Have Not Been Offered PrEP by a Provider): Health Insurance
- When health insurance costs more than the mortgage
- Farmers Now Owe a Lot More for Health Insurance
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News