Last week Congressional Republican leaders dropped the $18 billion request from a popular emergency-spending bill.
The measure became one of the most popular bills she's ever sponsored.
These are highly popular bills that President Clinton is expected to sign.
But they made a strategic decision not to filibuster the highly popular family-leave bill in February.
And the Senate rejected his plan to include medical savings accounts in a popular bill to make health insurance more accessible.
Another popular bill would outlaw restrictions on what doctors could tell patients about treatment options.
That way, he said, the lawmakers did not have to worry about opposing what might otherwise have been a popular bill.
Some Republicans insisted today that they had no intention of delaying a vote on a popular bill.
Republicans have recently offered popular bills, like raising military pay and this one, which addresses education without additional cost.
Some of the Administration's proposals overlap two popular bipartisan bills already introduced.