Wednesday, May 6, 2015

PPT Assisted Sovereign Suicide

Obama’s Trade Bill Gets Boost as Mitch McConnell Vows Vote ‘Soon’, Posted on May 6, 2015 Written by bloomberg.com
The Sen­ate major­ity leader says he has been work­ing with the White House on pass­ing the deal.
The U.S. Sen­ate will take up leg­is­la­tion to give Pres­i­dent Barack Obama the trade nego­ti­at­ing author­ity he wants “very soon,” Sen­ate Major­ity Leader Mitch McConnell said.
“It’s been almost an out of body expe­ri­ence but we’ve been work­ing closely with the White House,” McConnell told reporters Tues­day as he said the trade bill would fol­low action on two other mea­sures. “We’re work­ing together to try to get it across the fin­ish line.”
Sen­ate Demo­c­ra­tic Leader Harry Reid, a foe of “fast-track” trade author­ity, called on Repub­li­cans to first con­sider mea­sures to extend fed­eral high­way fund­ing and mod­ify U.S. sur­veil­lance laws.
The Obama admin­is­tra­tion is seek­ing to build a coali­tion of mostly Repub­li­cans and a few Democ­rats to back the trade bill, which lets the pres­i­dent send agree­ments in Con­gress for a quick vote with­out amendments.
Obama says the abil­ity will help him com­plete the Trans-Pacific Part­ner­ship, a top second-term goal.
In the House, the bill faces oppo­si­tion from most Democ­rats and some Repub­li­cans. House Speaker John Boehner, an Ohio Repub­li­can, has said Obama will need to per­suade Democ­rats to back him, some­thing McConnell said is happening.
“At the risk of hav­ing some of you lit­er­ally faint, I want to com­pli­ment the pres­i­dent for the way he’s han­dling the trade issue,” McConnell said.
‘Clear-Eyed Look’
White House press sec­re­tary Josh Earnest on Tues­day said the admin­is­tra­tion has made the case to indi­vid­ual law­mak­ers, empha­siz­ing that the trade mea­sure is good for workers.
“The pres­i­dent is hope­ful that Democ­rats, as they take a clear-eyed look at this pro­posal will acknowl­edge that the best way to advance the kinds of pro­gres­sive val­ues and the best way to advance the inter­ests of mid­dle class fam­i­lies all across the coun­try, is to sup­port this par­tic­u­lar trade bill,” Earnest said.
McConnell brushed off Reid’s request to delay action until Con­gress dis­poses of the High­way Trust Fund exten­sion and mod­i­fi­ca­tion of the Patriot Act, which cov­ers surveillance.
Set­ting the agenda is “the respon­si­bil­ity of the major­ity, and we’ll be going to do trade pro­mo­tion author­ity next,” McConnell said.
Asked whether 60 sen­a­tors would vote to advance the bill, a pro­ce­dural step in a cham­ber where Repub­li­cans hold 54 seats, McConnell said: “We sure hope so. We’re work­ing it hard.” Seven Democ­rats voted in the Sen­ate Finance Com­mit­tee to approve the bill, sug­gest­ing Reid lacks the votes to stall the measure.
Demo­c­ra­tic Votes
In the House, the num­ber of Democ­rats say­ing they are will­ing to vote for the leg­is­la­tion increased the past few days, bring­ing the total to at least 16 who are pub­licly supportive.
Demo­c­ra­tic Rep­re­sen­ta­tives Ami Bera of Cal­i­for­nia and John Delaney of Mary­land last week said they’d vote yes. And Rep­re­sen­ta­tive Suzanne Bonam­ici of Ore­gon also came out in favor yesterday.
“A trade agree­ment done right will not only make it eas­ier to sell American-made goods, it will level the play­ing field by reduc­ing tar­iffs that cur­rently make it dif­fi­cult to com­pete in many of the world’s mar­kets,” Bonam­ici said on her website.
House Major­ity Leader Kevin McCarthy of Cal­i­for­nia, who sets the floor-vote sched­ule, sig­naled to fel­low Repub­li­cans in a memo last week there will be no vote on fast-track author­ity until at least after the Memo­r­ial Day recess. McCarthy said the House will “con­tinue to lay the ground­work” for pass­ing nego­ti­at­ing author­ity this month.
Early pro­jec­tions inside the House from both sides of the aisle — and from some out­side groups — sug­gest there is a floor of about 180 House Repub­li­cans inclined to sup­port a trade pro­mo­tion author­ity bill, and a ceil­ing of about 200 Repub­li­cans. Over­all, 217 votes will be needed for pas­sage in a cham­ber where 432 seats are now filled.
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