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DRAFT SAT. 8 PM October 25, 1993 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: BRUCE REED JOSE CERDA III SUBJECT: CRIME BILL FUNDING I. ACTION-FORCING EVENT The crime bill will be taken up on the Senate floor and in the House Judiciary Committee next week. As the crime issue takes on increasing urgency in Congress and the countryside, we face the prospect of a bidding war in both houses, in which Republicans and even liberal Democrats compete to prove that they care more about crime than the Administration. Senator Biden and others are urging us to pre-empt this debate by pledging more resources for cops, drug treatment, and prisons. II. BACKGROUND A. House Update The outlook for passing some kind of crime bill by Thanksgiving may have improved significantly. In the House, Chairman Brooks has given up trying to find habeas reform and death penalty provisions that can attract a majority of House Democrats, and has decided to postpone consideration of those issues until next year. The Black Caucus opposed his habeas proposal, even though it was more liberal than ours and much more liberal than current law, and he does not believe he could get a majority to vote the crime bill out of committee without substantial prodding from the Administration or unacceptable revisions in habeas. Brooks plans instead to break out the key components -- cops, boot camps, drug courts, Safe Schools, and the Brady Bill -- and pass them all separately. If the Republicans go along, the crime measures can then be passed quickly under suspension in the House, and easily reconciled with Senate versions. This strategy avoids the specter of an irreconcilable conference, and should assure that the Brady Bill and most key elements of the crime bill will be on your desk by Thanksgiving. reduces the chance of a gridlocked Biden is considering a similar strategy in the Senate, but he has less control over the outcome. Hatch may agree to drop habeas, but Gramm and other Republicans will force 1