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L awmakers have returned to the halls of Congress after weeks of campaigning for the midterm elections, and Democrats are scrambling to pass several of their top agenda items before losing control of the House in January.
House Democrats face a long list of to-do items during the lame-duck period , eyeing several agenda items they haven’t yet accomplished over the last two years. However, passing such legislation may be easier said than done as Democrats still face a 50-50 split in the Senate, meaning the party will have to forge compromises with Republicans if it wishes to push crucial agenda items through the upper chamber.
Here are four items on Democrats’ to-do list they hope to accomplish before the end of the year.
At the top of the list, Congress is tasked with funding the government.
Lawmakers previously passed a short-term funding bill in September to keep the government funding while Congress works out the final kinks in its budget, with that bill set to expire on Dec. 16. As a result, lawmakers have made it their top priority to pass a government funding bill as they returned from recess earlier this week.
Because the funding legislation must be passed to keep the government running, Democrats may seek to add additional measures, such as increased financial support for Ukraine amid the war in Russia, as a way to pass more items on their agenda during the lame-duck session.
The funding bill is also the last chance for Democrats and the Biden administration to push their economic agenda before Republicans take control of the House in January. For the last two years, President Joe Biden has managed to pass historic measures for infrastructure and climate spending thanks to Democratic majorities in Congress.
Democrats in the Senate are also seeking to pass the Respect for Marriage Act Wednesday, which would codify same-sex and interracial marriage into federal law. Democrats have made the legislation a top priority during the current lame-duck period, hoping to garner as much Republican support as possible in the Senate to push the legislation through.
The bill previously passed the House in July with 47 Republicans joining Democrats to back the legislation. However, Senate Democrats pushed back a final vote until after the midterm elections in an effort to lock down GOP support that would guarantee the bill passes the upper chamber.
The bill advanced in the Senate on Wednesday with a 62-37 vote, surpassing the 60-vote threshold needed to defeat a filibuster. Up next will be a final vote on passage in the Senate, although an exact date for this has not yet been scheduled.
Democrats are also eyeing the passage of bipartisan legislation that would make it harder to overturn the results of a presidential election — a direct response to efforts by former President Donald Trump to block the certification of Biden’s win in 2020.
The Electoral Count Act passed the House earlier this year, with the Senate working up its own version of the legislation over the last few months. If the Senate manages to pass the bill, the updated version would need to clear the House once again before heading to Biden’s desk for approval.
The proposed revisions to the Electoral Count Act clarify provisions already laid out in the law, including the responsibilities of the vice president in overseeing the certification of election results and the expectations for a smooth transition of power.
The debt ceiling has long been a legislative priority among Democrats in Congress, although it may be unlikely party lawmakers will make much headway before the lame-duck session expires.
Democrats have argued the debt limit must be raised in order to avoid defaulting on loans, while Republicans have remained adamant that the Democratic Party must agree to cut down on spending if it wishes to come to an agreement on raising the debt ceiling. Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said earlier this week that Democrats would “look at” the issue, stopping short of giving specific details.
“The debt ceiling, of course, is something that we have to deal with. And it’s something that we will look at over the next few weeks,” Schumer said during a press conference on Sunday. “I have to talk to the leadership first. We don’t know where the House is going to be.”
Although the ceiling doesn’t need to be raised immediately, Democrats have pushed to increase the debt limit while they still hold control of both chambers of Congress.


By
Ryan Smith

On 11/16/22 at 9:11 AM EST
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Kymberly Herrin, the former Playboy Playmate who appeared in an infamous sex scene in the classic movie Ghostbusters , has died at the age of 65, according to the Santa Barbara News-Press .
The outlet reported on Tuesday that Herrin passed away peacefully on October 28 in Santa Barbara, California. A cause of death has not been publicly revealed.
On October 28, Herrin's niece, Theresa Ramirez, took to Facebook to share a photo of the model and actress with her two late sisters posing together on a beach.
Herrin had shared the same image on her own Facebook page back in October 2014.
Captioning the image, Ramirez wrote: "They are all together now. [Broken heart emoji.] Aunt Kymberly Herrin. I love you [heart emoji]."
The post sparked a flood of condolences and tributes from family friends, one of whom wrote of Herrin: "She was so special to so many people, I am not sure she knew how many people loved and adored her. Her humor and her sensitivity towards others always touched me. Words are not enough. Heartache."
California native Herrin, who resided in Santa Barbara up until her death, according to the paper's obituary, graced the covers of several magazines, and appeared in the video for 1983 ZZ Top track "Legs."
Herrin also made appearances in such enduring classic 1980s movies as Romancing the Stone and the original Ghostbusters .
In Ghostbusters , which was released in 1984, Herrin appeared as a ghost who had a suggested tryst with Dan Aykroyd's character Ray Stantz.
While Stanz dreamed, the alluring apparition was seen hovering above his bed before undoing his belt buckle. The scene suggested that the ghost had performed a sex act on Stantz.
During an interview with Polygon in 2021, Aykroyd recounted the sequence as he remembered working with Herrin.
"Yes, I remember the woman who played that. Her name was Kym Herrin, and she was a Playboy Playmate. She played the ghost. Like, I wish they'd let that scene go a little longer," he said.
Aykroyd went on to state that such a scenario is not particularly far-fetched.
"Sexual encounters with spirits are very, very common," he added. "And there are some people that I know that have a house that have a presence and they don't try to purge it. They say, You know what, I'm going to stay with it and I'll live with it."
Per the News-Press , Herrin is survived by her mother Billie Dodson and brother Mark Herrin, as well as nieces and nephews and grandnieces and grandnephews.
The family has requested donations in Herrin's memory to the American Cancer Society to aid further research into preventing and treating breast cancer.
Update 11/16/22, 9:45 a.m. ET: This article was updated to add extra information.
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The Senate on Wednesday passed the Respect For Marriage Act, which would fortify marriage rights as the conservative Supreme Court that has signaled it could move to restrict them. The amended bill now heads back to the House, which will vote to send it to President Joe Biden for final approval. 

The advancement of the bill is a notable feat considering it faced the 60-vote filibuster in the Senate, which meant at least 10 Republicans needed to split with their party and support the bill. The bill passed by a vote of 62-37. Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) was absent attending to his wife who according to a statement from Sasse’s office to Politico “had a significant — but non-life-threatening — seizure” over the weekend. The legislation aims to officially repeal the 1996 Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defined marriage as being exclusively between a man and a woman. DOMA was superseded in 2015 by the Supreme Court’s ruling in Obergefell v. Hodges , which established same-sex marriage a right under the 14th Amendment. The bill would require states to recognize the validity of a marriage so long as it was legal in the state it took place in.



Following the death of Roe v. Wade in June, Justice Clarence Thomas indicated that he believed every Supreme Court decision justified under the 14th Amendment’s substantive due process precedent should be reconsidered . These cases include landmark civil rights rulings including the right to contraception, the overturning of sodomy laws, and the right to marriage for same-sex couples. 




Thomas’ indication that the court could potentially reassess these rights was a driving factor in the reintroduction of the RMFA, which was originally penned in 2009 and had failed to pass the muster of Congress on various occasions. “I, along with my Democratic colleagues, will not be idle bystanders while the constitutional rights and freedoms that underpin our democracy are shredded,” Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) said in July following the passage of the act in the House . Nadler implored the Senate to “provide much needed stability and certainty for the families that have been shaken to their core by Justice Thomas’ concurring opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson. ” 

Republicans criticized the RFMA as an attack on religious liberty, with some agreeing to vote for the bill if carve outs were made protecting religious liberty. Responding to concerns, a bipartisan group of senators delayed the vote until after the midterms, crafting an amendment to the bill addressing the question. In a joint statement released Tuesday, Sens. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wisc.), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Rob Portman (R-Ohio), Kyrsten Sinema (D-Ariz.), and Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) affirmed that the bill includes “commonsense language to confirm that this legislation fully respects and protects Americans’ religious liberties and diverse beliefs, while leaving intact the core mission of the legislation to protect marriage equality .”

Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) wrote on his personal Twitter account , however, that the bill poses “legal threats for holding sincere religious beliefs or convictions,” and that the existing protections “can only be described as severely anemic.” 




Religious institutions in Mike Lee’s own state disagree. In a surprise move the Mormon Church came out in support of the bill on Tuesday, stating that while same-sex marriage remains outlawed within their religion they are reassured the RFMA “includes appropriate religious freedom protections while respecting the law and preserving the rights of our LGBTQ brothers and sisters.”



Lee voted no, but his colleague in Utah, Mitt Romney, broke from his party and voted in favor of the legislation, releasing a statement explaining that his colleagues in the Senate assuaged his concerns about religious liberty and that while he believes “in traditional marriage Obergefell is and has been the law of the land upon which LGBTQ individuals have relied,” and that the legislation “provides certainty to many LGBTQ Americans.”
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