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Congress faces agenda 
of unfinished business

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The GOP insists that tax rate increases are a non-starter.

“There’s a right way to do this and there’s a wrong way to do it,” Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., said Sunday.

House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, has signaled that a solution is imperative.

“2013 should be the year we begin to solve our debt through tax reform and entitlement reform,” he told reporters last week.

Crucial in the House this week is passage of legislation that would end Cold War trade restrictions so that U.S. exporters can take advantage of the lowered tariffs and greater market access that accompany Russia’s entry into the World Trade Organization. Russia officially joined the WTO in August and the United States is alone among more than 150 WTO members in not being able to enjoy the more open Russian market.

The measure has been a top priority of U.S. business groups seeking to expand business in the growing Russian economy. To placate critics of Russia’s poor human rights record, the trade bill is combined with legislation that would sanction Russian officials involved in human rights violations.

The Senate holds a procedural vote today on a sportsmen’s bill that Republicans weren’t keen on voting on before the election and handing a headline-grabbing win to Sen. Jon Tester of Montana, then considered one of the most vulnerable Democrats. Tester won anyway.

His bill combines 19 measures favorable to outdoorsmen, allowing more hunting and fishing on federal lands, letting bow hunters cross federal land where hunting isn’t allowed and encouraging federal land agencies to cooperate with state and local authorities to maintain shooting ranges.

The bill also would allow 41 hunters – including two in Montana – who killed polar bears in Canada just before a 2008 ban on polar bear trophy imports took effect to bring the bears’ bodies across the border. The hunters were not able to bring the trophies home before the Fish and Wildlife Services listed them as a threatened species.

A five-year farm bill passed by the Senate and by House committee last summer will either have to be extended into next year or passed in the remaining weeks of the session. The 2008 farm bill expired Sept. 30.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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