Here's a recap of the Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) votes
in the House and Senate:
On May 22 the Senate passed a TPA bill and a Trade
Adjustment Assistance (TAA) bill as a package and sent it to the House. On June
12, the House voted on TPA and TAA separately with the understanding that both
TPA and TAA must be passed by the House to match the Senate action on the
TPA/TAA package.
Although the House passed the TPA bill by 219-211, it
rejected the TAA bill by 126-302. This lopsided vote against the TAA bill
resulted from most Democrats voting against the bill as a way to temporarily
stop the approval of TPA.
Since the House failed to pass both the TPA and TAA portions
of the original Senate package, GOP leadership tried a new approach involving
passing a standalone TPA bill (attached to an unrelated bill, H.R. 2146) on
June 18 by 218-208 and sending it to the Senate for a vote. The Senate will
have a cloture vote on the TPA bill on Tuesday, June 23.
Although the Senate passed its TPA/TAA package by 62-37 on
May 22, it is still possible to defeat TPA in the upcoming Senate cloture vote
on the standalone TPA bill by convincing a few senators to change their vote.
It takes 60 votes to invoke cloture and prevent a filibuster, so as few as
three senators could stop passage of TPA by changing their minds and allowing a
filibuster to prevent a vote on TPA. Click here to see how your senators voted
on TPA on May 22. You should phone your senators no matter how they voted to
help the ones who voted against TPA to stay the course, and to help convince
those who voted for TPA to switch their vote.
Here's the new information from Senator Jeff Sessions
(R-Ala.), who has read the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, that should
change some minds regarding the upcoming TPA vote in the Senate:
It is essential that there be no misunderstanding:
fast-track [TPA] preapproves the formation of not only the unprecedentedly
large Trans-Pacific Partnership, but an unlimited number of such agreements
over the next six years. Those pacts include three of the most ambitious ever
contemplated. After TPP comes the Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership (TTIP) between the United States and the European Union, followed
by the Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA), seeking as one [of] its goals labor
mobility among more than 50 nations. Together, these three international
compacts encompass three-fourths of the world's GDP. Including the nations
whose membership is being courted for after enactment, the countries involved
would encompass nearly 90 percent of global GDP. Yet, through fast-track,
Congress will have authorized the President to ink these deals before a page of
them has been made public. Then, the Executive sends Congress
"implementing" legislation to change U.S. law-legislation which
cannot be amended, cannot be filibustered, and will not be subjected to the Constitutional
requirement for a two-thirds treaty vote....
This nation has never seen an agreement that compares to the
TPP, which forms a new Pacific Union. This is far more than a trade agreement,
but creates a self-governing and self-perpetuating Commission with
extraordinary implications for American workers and American sovereignty.
Such a historic international regulatory Commission should
never be fast-tracked, and should never be put on a path to passage until every
word has been publicly scrutinized, every question answered, and every last
power understood by Congress and the American people." Please take the
following actions:
Phone both your senators on Monday, June 22, and tell them
to vote NO on the cloture vote for TPA (planned for Tuesday, June 23), and if
cloture is invoked (filibuster prevented), vote NO on the TPA bill itself.
Click here for phone numbers for DC and district offices.
Tell them that you agree with Senator Sessions that TPA must
be defeated because TPA would make it easier for the TPP, TTIP, and TISA
agreements to be approved that would lead to a Pacific Union, an Atlantic
Union, and increased labor mobility between the United States and 50 or so
other nations, respectively.
Tell them any other talking points against TPA that you find
relevant in Sessions' statement above. Please send your senators an editable,
prewritten email with reasons that they should vote NO on TPA.
Source: The John Birch Society, jbs.org
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