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House finally OKs Sandy aid; Senate action expected soon

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Seventy-eight days after Superstorm Sandy battered the Northeast, the House on Tuesday approved $50.5 billion in disaster relief in a vote that exposed divisions within Republican ranks and foreshadowed the spending fights that lie ahead. 

The measure, passed 241 to 180, could be approved by the Senate as early as next week.

Approval came after House Speaker John A. Boehner drew a tongue-lashing from New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, a fellow Republican, for delaying a vote on the emergency aid about two weeks ago, during the lame-duck session of Congress.

The bill, along with a $9.7-billion flood insurance measure recently signed by President Barack Obama, would bring the total relief to about $60 billion.

Northeast officials welcomed the action, saying that many of their residents were still struggling to recover from the second-costliest storm in U.S. history after Hurricane Katrina.

Christie joined New York Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo and Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy in a joint statement applauding the House action and predicting Senate approval of “this long-awaited relief.”

“The tradition of Congress being there and providing support for Americans during times of crisis, no matter where they live across this great country, lives on in today’s vote in the House of Representatives,’’ they said.

Disaster relief typically draws strong bipartisan support. But with Washington awash in red ink, conservative lawmakers have pushed to offset new spending with cuts elsewhere in the budget. Deficit hawks also challenged whether spending for such things as shoring up defenses against future storms was an emergency, arguing that it should be considered during the normal budget process. 

All Democrats voted for the bill except Rep. Jim Cooper of Tennessee.  Among Republicans, opponents outnumbered supporters, 179-49.

“A tragedy like Hurricane Sandy shouldn’t be used as an excuse for a grab bag of spending having nothing to do with emergency relief,” protested Rep. Tom McClintock, R-Calif. “Republicans were supposed to change the way things are done around here. Clearly, we have not.” 

But Rep. Frank A. LoBiondo, R-N.J., asked, “What does the misery index have to get to for our constituents” to receive aid?

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