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March 28, 2008
The last day of recess

Congress' two-week Easter recess ends on Monday and, like all recesses, this one passed too slowly for my editors and too quickly for me.

When the House and Senate return, they head into an eight-week session until Memorial Day. That probably will be the longest stretch that they are in session this election year.

While Congress will be overshadowed by the presidential race, the House and Senate must go about the standard business of government: namely, getting the budget resolution passed and starting work on the dozen or so appropriations bills that keep the government running each year.

The House and Senate will work to reconcile the differences in their respective budget resolutions. On Wednesday and Thursday, the House will consider a Global AIDS bill, and the U.S. Fire Administration Reauthorization Act.

The Senate will reconsider a housing foreclosure-relief bill, which Republicans had filibustered earlier this month.

Perhaps the biggest even will occur a week from Monday, on April 8, at 9:30 a.m., when Gen. David Petraeus and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker will testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee and Senate Foreign Relations Committee later that day.

Posted at 10:31 AM

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Tom Bell has covered numerous beats for the Portland Press Herald since 1999, including education, marine, business and the Maine Legislature. He worked nine years at the Anchorage Daily News, including a year as a correspondent in the Russian Far East following the break-up of the Soviet Union.


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Dieter Bradbury's is the Press Herald's political correnspondent. His career at the newspaper started in 1980, and includes 21 years as a reporter and seven as an editor. Bradbury is a graduate of the University of Southern Maine.

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Kelley Bouchard has been a staff writer at the Portland Press Herald since 1998, covering a variety of municipal beats and statewide issues. A Lewiston native and University of Maine graduate, she previously worked in Massachusetts.

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Justin Ellis has been a reporter with the Portland Press Herald since 2003. He has covered politics on every level and also writes a weekly column on culture and young people as well as the NXT blog. He is a graduate of the Missouri School of Journalism.

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Matt Wickenheiser has been at the Press Herald for six years. Wickenheiser is a native of Madawaska and a 1994 graduate of the University of Maine. He thinks his first politcal memory is of waving to First Lady Rosalyn Carter.


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