Tangle - The $1.6 trillion omnibus bill.
Episode Date: January 10, 2023Last month, Congress passed a $1.65 trillion government funding bill that provides record allocations for defense and sends more emergency aid to Ukraine. The bill passed by a 225-201 vote in the Hous...e, largely along party lines, after passing the Senate 68-29, with the support of 18 Senate Republicans, including minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY). The bill is a massive, 4,100-page piece of legislation that does not only pertain to funding, but also implements new laws. You can read today's podcast here, today’s “Under the Radar” story here, and today’s “Have a nice day” story here.Today’s clickables: Quick Hits (2:06), Today’s Story (3:41), Left’s Take (10:54), Right’s Take (15:26), Isaac’s Take (19:59), Under the Radar (24:12), Numbers (25:13), Have A Nice Day (25:57).You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here.Our podcast is written by Isaac Saul and edited by Zosha Warpeha. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75.Our newsletter is edited by Bailey Saul, Sean Brady, Ari Weitzman, and produced in conjunction with Tangle’s social media manager Magdalena Bokowa, who also created our logo.--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tanglenews/message Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Last season, over 102,000 influenza cases have been reported across Canada, which is nearly double the historic average of 52,000 cases.
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Talk to your pharmacist or doctor about getting a flu shot.
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Side effects and allergic reactions can occur, and 100% protection is not guaranteed. Learn more at flucellvax.ca.
From executive producer Isaac Saul, this is Tangle.
Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening, and welcome to the Tangle Podcast,
the place we get views from across the political spectrum.
Some independent thinking without all that hysterical nonsense you find everywhere else.
I'm your host, Isaac Saul, and on today's episode, we are talking about the omnibus bill that passed Congress shortly before Christmas, right before the
Tangle hiatus. Perhaps one of the most important pieces of legislation, probably the most important
piece of legislation of the year. So even though it was a couple of weeks ago, we're going to cover
it today. Before we jump in, though, we do have a correction,
a rather annoying one. Welcome back, right? Well, yesterday we inaccurately referred to
Senator Bob Casey as a Republican from Pennsylvania. Senator Casey is a Democrat.
Somehow this error slipped past three Pennsylvania residents reviewing the newsletter, including me,
Pennsylvania residents reviewing the newsletter, including me, obviously the guy who writes it.
My only excuse is that I've written so much about retiring Republican Senator Pat Toomey because of this past election. Pat Toomey is being replaced by either John Fetterman or Mehmet Oz that I just
got so used to writing R-PA, it kind of became a reflex. So I don't really have an explanation for it other than that. I
couldn't believe it when somebody pointed it out. And yeah, that's a new correction.
This is our 75th correction in Tangle's 180-week history and our first correction since December
14th. We track corrections and place them at the top of the podcast in order to maximize transparency
with our readers. All right, with that out of the way, we're going to jump in with our quick hits for the day.
First up, the House adopted a new rules package that was the centerpiece of negotiations for Representative
Kevin McCarthy's election as Speaker. Number two, roughly 10 classified documents were found by
President Biden's lawyer at his former private office were returned to the National Archives
and are now being reviewed by the Justice Department. Number three, thousands of nurses
at two New York City hospitals walked out in protest over working conditions and
salaries. Number four, a grand jury in Fulton County, Georgia, dissolved after filing its
final report on 2020 election interference. There will be a hearing on January 24th to determine
whether to make their findings public. Number five, President Biden declared a state of emergency in
California, where 90% of the population, more than 34 million people, are under flood watches.
Congress just unveiling their $1.7 trillion, yes, another trillion dollar spending bill, ladies and gentlemen.
This is supposedly to keep the government funded through next September.
Now, they have to pass the package by midnight on Friday.
It's a 4,100 page package.
Early this morning, congressional leaders unveiled the details of the spending bill to avoid a shutdown.
Huge omnibus spending bill could be the spending bill to avoid a shutdown.
Huge omnibus spending bill could be the final measure passed by this Congress, and buried within it are actually some big changes for retirement plans.
Last month, Congress passed a $1.66 trillion government funding bill that provides record
allocations for defense and sends more emergency aid to Ukraine. The bill passed by a 225-201 vote
in the House, largely along party lines, after passing the Senate by a 68-29 vote with support
from 18 Senate Republicans, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. A reminder,
an omnibus bill is the way Congress groups together budgets from across the federal
government into a single huge bill that supplies funding for the whole government for the entire
year. Due to congressional dysfunction, the federal government's budget is often running
on what's called a continuing resolution, or a CR, which is a stopgap funding bill.
An omnibus bill is a long-term spending agreement that lasts an entire fiscal
year, combining all 12 appropriation budgets. In case you don't know them, this is a quick
helpful rundown of those budgets, courtesy of Representative Mike Simpson. Agricultural,
Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and related agencies, which oversee funding for
the USDA, except the Forest Service. Commerce, Justice, Science, and related
agencies, which oversees funding for things like the Department of Commerce, the Department of
Justice, NASA, and other agencies. Defense, which oversees funding for the military, intelligence
agencies, and other agencies related to national defense. Energy and Water Development, which
oversees funding for the Department of Energy, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineer, and other agencies. Financial Services and General Government, which oversees funding
for the Department of Treasury, the Executive Office of the Presidency, and other government
functions. Homeland Security, which oversees funding for the Department of Homeland Security.
Interior, Environment, and Related Agencies, which oversees funding for the Department of the
Interior, the EPA, the U.S. Forest Service,
and a number of other independent agencies. Labor, Health, and Human Services, Education,
and Related Agencies, which oversees funding for the Department of Education, the Department of
Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, and other agencies. The Legislative Branch,
which oversees funding for the House of Representatives, the Senate Legislative Branch
oversees funding for the U.S. Senate, the U.S. Capitol, the Library of Congress, and other legislative branch
functions. Military Construction, Veteran Affairs, and Related Agencies, which oversees funding for
the military construction, including military housing, the Department of Veterans Affairs,
and related agencies. State Foreign Operations and Related Programs, which oversees funding for
the U.S. State Department,
USAID, and other related programs. And finally, the Transportation, Housing and Urban Development
and Related Agencies, which oversees funding for the Department of Transportation, HUD,
and related agencies. So what just happened? Well, right before Christmas, Congress passed a $1.65
trillion omnibus bill to fund the government
through September. There is $858 billion in defense spending, up $76 billion from last year,
and $772.5 billion in non-defense domestic discretionary spending, up $42.5 billion from
last year. The bill is a massive 4,100-page piece of legislation that does not
pertain to just funding, but implements new laws. We will try to highlight the major items that made
it in and those that didn't. So, what got in? $45 billion of aid for Ukraine and allies,
$40 billion to help communities hit by natural disasters, and funding for the Internal Revenue
Services, or IRS, that kept spending flat.
Members rewrote the Electoral Count Act to make it harder to overturn certified elections
and clarify that a vice president has only a ceremonial role in vote counting.
It also bans the app TikTok on government phones and creates new retirement rules
that create incentives for saving, gives part-time workers access to retirement benefits,
and raises the age when required minimum distributions from some accounts must start.
Among many other things, the bill also includes an extension of the Special Immigrant Visa Program
that offers green cards to Afghans who helped during the war, permanent funding for meals for
low-income children during the summer, funding for U.S. attorneys in the January 6 trials.
Workplace accommodations like additional bathroom breaks, extra time to pump breast milk, and relief from heavy lifting for pregnant and nursing workers.
Changes to Medicaid to allow states to reevaluate eligibility for enrollees who sign up during the pandemic and no longer meet requirements to qualify.
A $500 increase in the maximum amount that can be given
in Pell Grants, $5 billion for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program, additional funding for
the U.S. Capitol Police, additional funding for mental health services and schools, $3.6 billion
in funding for homeless assistant grants, boosted funding for the National Park Service and the
Environmental Protection Agency, a delay in the implementation of new regulations for Maine's lobster industry until 2029,
and an increase in the National Labor Relations Board funding by $25 million,
the first increase in almost a decade.
What didn't get in?
The White House failed to negotiate the inclusion of $10 billion in additional funding for the
pandemic, an extension of the child tax credit,
or legislation that would have shielded banks from penalties if they handle marijuana-related
transactions. Congress also ultimately rejected legislation that would have narrowed the
sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine convictions despite having bipartisan
support. Some other things the bill did not include, a final resolution on where the new FBI headquarters will be, the Afghan Adjustment Act, which would have given Afghan allies a path to permanent residency before the expiration of their temporary status, a measure that would have given federal money to projects that restore habitats for struggling species, the reversal of family and business tax laws that will take effect this year after being scheduled in former President Trump's 2017 tax reform bill, the Open At Markets Act, which aimed to promote competition and cost
reduction in the at-market, and energy permitting reforms that were being pushed by Senator Joe
Manchin. Today, we'll take a look at some arguments from the left and the right about
these provisions and this bill as a whole, and then my take.
First up, we'll start with what the left is saying. The left is mixed on the bill,
with some criticizing the things that were left out and others celebrating certain legislative gains.
Many writers criticized the process but celebrated non-budget-related legislation
that got shoehorned in.
Others specifically celebrated the inclusion of the Electoral Count Act.
The Bloomberg editorial board said the omnibus bill is
deliberately unintelligible to voters and a parody of fiscal
incompetence. Here's the good news. It could have been worse. Until the past few days, a more
ambitious deal had been taking shape, the board said. The idea was to combine business tax cuts
supported by Republicans with a permanent expansion of the child tax credit favored by Democrats.
Without big offsetting tax increases or spending cuts, a plan along these lines would
have increased public borrowing enormously, something the U.S. can ill afford. It's good
that the deal has avoided this error. Some other elements are welcome too. The plan incorporates
the Senate's version of the Electoral Count Reform Act, a bipartisan response to the machinations of
January 2021 that will make it harder to overturn the results of future
presidential elections. Also good and equally remote from budget policy, the bill bans the
use of TikTok on many government-issued devices on national security grounds, they added. These
and other sensible ingredients shouldn't distract attention from the defects of the larger process.
Congress failed to pass any of the regular appropriation bills for the
fiscal year that began in October. Beyond averting an immediate crisis, though, policymakers show no
inclination to weigh costs and benefits, choose among competing priorities, or otherwise make
any difficult decisions. In the New Republic, Tory Otten said the bill left three very popular
items out. Two measures seeking to reform marijuana and cocaine policy
have been left out of the omnibus,
despite bipartisan support for both.
Congress had sought to allow cannabis companies
to open bank accounts.
Since marijuana is currently illegal under federal law,
most banks won't take a dispensary's deposits,
forcing the business to operate on a mostly cash basis,
Otten said.
The second measure, the Equal Act,
was aimed at reducing the disparity
in sentencing for crack versus powder cocaine offenses. Current laws for crack cocaine are
much stricter. An individual needs to possess 500 grams of powder cocaine to trigger the five-year
mandatory sentence, but only 28 grams of crack. These rules disproportionately affect people of
color. The Omnibus also leaves out the Afghan Adjustment
Act, which would have expanded the special immigrant visa program to help people fleeing
Afghanistan and created a path to permanent residency for those already here, she said.
The omnibus does not revive the expanded child tax credit, which helped lift millions of children
out of poverty over the past year. The CTC was dramatically expanded in the first months of the
Biden administration.
Up to $3,600 per child was delivered to parents, including to households that were previously ineligible because they had no income, and helped cut the national child poverty rate nearly in half.
But those benefits expired last December, and roughly 4 million kids fell back into poverty.
In MSNBC, Hayes Brown said Congress is finally closing an election loophole
that Trump exploited. Based on Charles Yu's award-winning book, Interior Chinatown follows
the story of Willis Wu, a background character trapped in a police procedural who dreams about
a world beyond Chinatown. When he inadvertently becomes a witness to a crime, Willis begins to
unravel a criminal web, his family's buried history, and what it feels like to be in the spotlight.
Interior Chinatown is streaming November 19th, only on Disney+.
The flu remains a serious disease.
Last season, over 102,000 influenza cases have been reported across Canada, which is nearly double the historic average of 52,000 cases.
What can you do this flu season?
Talk to your pharmacist or doctor about getting a flu shot.
Consider FluCellVax Quad and help protect yourself from the flu.
It's the first cell-based flu vaccine authorized in Canada for ages six months and older, and
it may be available for free in your province.
Side effects and allergic reactions can occur, and 100% protection is not guaranteed.
Learn more at FluCcellvax.ca.
These minor changes would have been impossible to accomplish in just a few weeks when Republicans
take over the House, Brown said. The Electoral Count Reform Act clarifies some of the supposed
loopholes that Trump world lawyers cited when pushing former Vice President Mike Pence
to nullify Joe Biden's win on January 6,
2021. The clarification includes language making clear that the Vice President's role is ceremonial,
meaning that the Vice President doesn't have the power to toss out states' electoral votes
or send it back to the states. The act also raises the threshold for members of Congress
to object to electoral votes and makes it harder for state legislatures or governors to ignore the
popular vote when certifying electoral college votes. Now, in the spirit of the season, I need to offer a mea culpa, Brown added.
I viewed Mitch McConnell's support with skepticism, concluding that it was part of a strategy to weaken support for the Democrats' John Lewis Freedom to Vote Act and dubbed it a poison pill.
In hindsight, though, there's no evidence that support for the ECA siphoned support for the John Lewis bill. Even after the Senate GOP filibustered the voting
rights bill again, McConnell kept on supporting the bipartisan efforts to update the Electoral
Count Act, and the two Democrats who could have voted to carve out an exception on the filibuster
didn't use the ECA negotiations as an excuse to let the larger bill die.
Alright, that is it for the leftist thing, which brings us to what the right is saying.
The right is overwhelmingly critical of the bill, saying it's a spending bonanza and the legislative process is broken. Some described
it as one of the most irresponsible budgets in American history. Others argued that even though
the bill was irresponsible, Republicans had little choice but to help pass it. In National Review,
Philip Klein called it a scandal. It is not a scandal to be added to the salacious and shocking
catalog of notorious Washington scandals, but a scandal precisely because what is happening has become a completely ordinary way for business to be conducted in Washington, Klein said.
Sure, lawmakers could have followed a process in which a budget is unveiled and then passed
in the spring, and all priorities are discussed within relevant committees in full public view
for months. Legislative text could be released well in advance of any vote, allowing for plenty
of time to view it and debate amendments.
And lawmakers could divide different policies into different bills so that each can be evaluated on its own merits.
But running things this way would risk subjecting policies to actual debate.
Instead, Congress has passed a series of short-term funding measures since the fiscal year began on October 1st so they could manufacture a crisis in the waning days of 2022, he said.
This has allowed congressional leaders and their staffs to hide behind closed doors,
load a freight train with their preferred government-funded goodies, get the media to
describe it as a must-pass bill, and dare anyone to vote against the final product and risk shutting
down the government ahead of Christmas. Any senator who wants Electoral Count Act reform
will have to vote to increase
funding for Medicaid. Anybody who wants to finance the military will need to vote to increase spending
on food stamps and for more infrastructure money. Anybody who does not blindly agree to pass this
mammoth piece of legislation will be accused of leaving a lump of coal in the stockings of
American veterans. The Wall Street Journal editorial board called it the ugliest omnibus bill ever.
Democrats failed in their duty to pass normal spending bills, so they're using this omnibus
to finance all of government with $1.65 trillion for fiscal 2023. But wait, it's worse. Congress
is also adding major policy changes, many of which deserve separate votes or couldn't pass
by themselves. From healthcare to presidential election rules to regulation of the beauty industry, the board said. Republicans are boasting about a symbolic
$275 million cut to the IRS's annual budget, but that's a drop in the $80 billion gusher bestowed
on the agency in August. The overall discretionary pot holds as much as $16 billion in earmarks,
including $656 million in parting gifts for retiring
Senate Appropriations Vice Chairman Richard Shelby. Past omnibuses included discrete policy
riders, though don't confuse those with the major legislation in this bill. This omnibus bans TikTok
on government devices, the board said. Congress is jamming through major changes in public land
management, a plan to phase out large-scale drift net fishing, new oversight on horse racing, a restructure of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, changes to help Boeing meet aircraft certification deadlines, and alterations to lobster regulation.
That's before lawmakers shoehorned in sweeping health care changes on everything from Medicaid eligibility to the Children's Health Insurance Program to Medicare provider payments. In the Washington Post, Henry Olson said Republicans should support
the terrible omnibus bill. The question isn't whether this bill measures up. It is about whether
there is a preferable alternative. The answer, sadly, is that there are no better ways forward,
Olson said. Because Democrats will continue to control the Senate, they have effective veto power on any spending packages they don't find palatable regardless of who controls
the House. In other words, it is unlikely Republicans would get anything better even if
they waited to take control of the House. The idea that Congress should just fund programs at their
current levels or pass a continuing resolution and Congress speak is also not an acceptable option.
pass a continuing resolution in Congress speak is also not an acceptable option. The United States must increase its defense spending quickly to meet the threat posed by China. The omnibus,
as odious as it is in many respects, will do that, hiking defense spending by about 10 percent,
Olson said. A continuing resolution, by contrast, would delay rearmament. That would be an intolerable
outcome in a world where our allies are dramatically increasing their spending and China threatens our Pacific defense posture. The notion that
Republicans should threaten to shut down the government until they get their way also fails
to pass muster. Americans, rather sensibly, prefer compromise to dysfunction.
All right, that is it for the rightist thing, which brings us to my take.
So the low hanging fruit here is to say the obvious, that Congress is dysfunctional, that the system is broken, and that few things illustrate this reality better than the anatomy
of the omnibus bill and the process that made it law.
But words like dysfunction make it sound as if the driver has lost control of the bus.
The reality is the opposite. Members of Congress are operating in their comfort zones,
in a new reality where last-minute, must-pass omnibus budgets get stuffed with things they can brag about to their constituents and get exposed to little or no debate. The process is nearly
identical to what happened last year. It's hard to think of a fitting analogy for this, but I'll
give you my best shot. Imagine there are a team of doctors, Congress, that's seeing a group of 50
patients, American citizens, and trying to address their health, all the things that are and aren't
working in our country at the federal level. Ideally, these doctors would spend time with each patient, assess their health, consult
colleagues who specialize in certain conditions, come up with treatment plans, propose their
plans, review each other's plans, consult studies on the drugs they might use, discuss
treatment with the patients, enact consensus plans, then spend months or years following
up to see if the treatment actually worked.
That'd be a pretty good functional outcome.
Imagine instead that the doctors write down every ailment they hear from the patients,
put all those ailments on one giant list,
Google prescription drugs that treat those ailments,
then give all their patients all the drugs they can find and tell them their options are
A. Don't treat your ailment at all
or B. Take all this medicine, some of which you may or may not
need, and we'll see if it improves your condition. Also, you have 30 seconds to decide and we're not
really sure about the side effects of some of these drugs. That's basically what's happening
right now. Does this mean every medicine you're going to take is useless, too expensive, and
ineffective? No. Some of the medicine will actually work. Shoot, 20 or 30 of the patients may even get better.
A few might stumble onto a miracle drug.
But a lot of it won't work.
A lot of it will be too expensive.
And a lot of great treatments won't be prescribed
because the doctors spent approximately zero time
talking to each other or consulting experts in their fields.
Even worse, a lot of the doctors are confident in their plan
because they know they've thrown just enough medicine out there
that just enough of their patients will get better that they will probably keep their jobs.
So, are there parts of this omnibus bill that I'm happy about? Sure. The Electoral Count Reform Act
is smart. The changes to retirement rules seem beneficial. All that is well and good. But guess
what? This is supposed to be about our budget, not passing election reform or social media bans.
Were there things left out that I wanted? Yes, definitely.
Put the slam-dunk bipartisan drug reforms at the top of the list.
It's totally confounding to me how something like that doesn't make it into a bill like this,
so don't ask me why it got cut. I don't have a good answer.
Meanwhile, Medicare's hospital insurance trust fund will run out of money by 2028, and Congress did nothing. Many of the Afghan allies who risked
life and limb for our war on terrorism abroad are at high risk of deportation soon. Energy
permitting reform, which would have traded the completion of a single natural gas pipeline in
West Virginia for a future where sustainable infrastructure projects could be more easily
completed, somehow died. But again, the culprit here isn't that incompetent members of Congress
can't legislate within an otherwise functional system. It's that competent members of Congress
have learned to function in a legislative system that itself is increasingly dysfunctional.
This is why, after the Freedom Caucus held up a House Speaker candidate insisting members return to regular order,
vote on individual appropriation bills,
receive 72 hours to review legislation,
and balance the budget,
I think we should acknowledge the reasonable ideas they are floating.
A good deal of media coverage emphasizes bad ideas,
or that some of the members of their own caucus
dismiss them as legislative terrorists,
or pretends everything they're suggesting is absurd.
But we can see in real time while some of their demands are truly much-needed reforms. caucus dismiss them as legislative terrorists or pretends everything they're suggesting is absurd,
but we can see in real time why some of their demands are truly much-needed reforms.
At the very least, we should all be able to acknowledge that the current state of play is unacceptable.
Alright, that is it for my take. We are skipping today's reader question because this podcast got
kind of long already, so we'll jump right into our story that matters. New polling shows that
Republicans and Democrats are sharply divided over what groups of Americans face discrimination.
More than 80% of Democrats say Black, Latino, gay, and Jewish people face prejudice,
while a majority of Republicans say discrimination is more often aimed at white people and Christians. Some 59% of Republicans in the journal survey said that
white people face discrimination or prejudice compared with 21% of Democrats who said so,
the Wall Street Journal reported. By contrast, 88% of Democrats said black people face discrimination
or prejudice compared with 49% of Republicans who said so. These divides are
critical to the political battles happening over how race, gender, and history are discussed and
taught in schools. Wall Street Journal has the story, and there's a link to it in today's episode
description. Next up is our numbers section. The amount of funding in the omnibus bill for the cost of war
toxic exposures fund was $5 billion. The amount of funding to improve Puerto Rico's electrical
grid was $1 billion. The amount of funding to respond to the water crisis in Jackson, Mississippi
was $600 million. The increase in funding for the U.S. Capitol Police Department was $132 million.
The amount of funding in the bill for a hiking trail in Georgia named after Michelle Obama
was $3.6 million.
The amount of funding in the bill for the city of Hallandale Beach to build an all-electric
bus fleet and electric vehicle charging facility in Florida was $1.5 million.
All right, and last but not least, our Have a Nice Day section.
A new United Nations report released yesterday shows that the Earth's ozone layer is expected
to return to 1980 levels in the next few decades.
Every four years, the UN conducts an assessment of the Montreal Protocol of 1987's impact,
and this is one of the most encouraging reports yet.
More than 35 years after 198 countries agreed to ban a class of chemicals in refrigerants
and aerosols that damage the ozone layer, improvement remains slow and steady.
Scientists are calling it one of the biggest ecological victories in human history, citing
the global cooperation and observable positive impacts of the ban.
The Associated Press has the story, and there's a link to it in today's episode description.
All right, that is it for today's podcast. As always, if you want to support our work,
please go to readtangle.com slash membership to subscribe. We'll be right back here tomorrow,
same time. Have a good one. Peace.
Our podcast is written by me, Isaac Saul, and edited by Zosia Warpea.
Our script is edited by Sean Brady, Ari Weitzman, and Bailey Saul.
Shout out to our interns, Audrey Moorhead and Watkins Kelly,
and our social media manager, Magdalena Bokova, who created our podcast logo.
Music for the podcast was produced by Diet75. For more from Tangle, check out our website at www.tangle.com. We'll be right back. Chinatown. When he inadvertently becomes a witness to a crime, Willis begins to unravel a criminal
web, his family's buried history, and what it feels like to be in the spotlight. Interior
Chinatown is streaming November 19th, only on Disney+. The flu remains a serious disease.
Last season, over 102,000 influenza cases have been reported across Canada, which is nearly
double the historic average of 52,000 cases. What can you do this flu season?
Talk to your pharmacist or doctor about getting a flu shot.
Consider FluCellVax Quad and help protect yourself from the flu.
It's the first cell-based flu vaccine authorized in Canada for ages 6 months and older,
and it may be available for free in your province.
Side effects and allergic reactions can occur, and 100% protection is not guaranteed.