While the country focuses on the Tiger  Woods scandal and the upcoming holidays, the United States senate is  set to pass a filibuster proof end-of-year $1.1 trillion spending that  will reward most federal agencies with a generous budget increase. It  also includes a loan guarantee program for steel companies, and an improved  arbitration process to challenge General Motors' and Chrysler's decisions  to close more than 2,000 dealerships.
The $1.1 trillion measure combines much  of the year's unfinished budget work - only a $626 billion Pentagon  spending measure would remain - into a 1,000-plus-page catchall spending  bill that would give Cabinet departments such as Education, Health and  Human Services and State increases far exceeding inflation.
 
After a 60-36 test vote on Friday in  which Democrats and a handful of Republicans helped the measure clear  another GOP obstacle, the bill was expected to win on Saturday the 60  Senate votes necessary to guarantee passage. A final vote is expected  Sunday.
The measure provides spending increases  averaging about 10 percent to programs under immediate control of Congress,  blending increases for veterans' programs, NASA and the FBI with a pay  raise for federal workers and help for car dealers.
 
It bundles six of the 12 annual spending  bills, capping a dysfunctional appropriations process in which House  leaders blocked Republicans from debating key issues while Senate Republicans  dragged out debates.
Just the $626 billion defense bill would  remain. That's being held back to serve as a vehicle to advance must-pass  legislation such as the debt increase.