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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: Sane/Freeze Report 1/7/93
- Message-ID: <1993Jan9.081045.10604@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: PACH
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Sat, 9 Jan 1993 08:10:45 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 212
-
- /** sf.lobby: 112.0 **/
- ** Topic: S/F Weekly Report 1-7-93 **
- ** Written 9:21 am Jan 7, 1993 by sfnatldc in cdp:sf.lobby **
-
- WEEKLY WASHINGTON REPORT
- For The Week Of January 7, 1993
-
- The Weekly Legislative Report is updated on the second
- business day of each week by SANE/FREEZE: Campaign for Global
- Security and the SANE/FREEZE Education Fund. This report is based
- on the political objectives adopted by the 1992 SANE/FREEZE:
- Campaign for Global Security National Congress.
-
- Please help us by reporting your lobbying activities to Burt
- Glass or Ira Shorr at (202) 862-9740, by fax at (202) 862-9762, by
- PeaceNet mail message to "sfnatldc," or by written report (form
- available from legislative office) to SANE/FREEZE: Campaign for
- Global Security, attn.: Weekly Washington Report, 1819 H Street,
- NW, Suite 640, Washington, D.C., 20006-3603.
-
- START II AGREEMENT REACHED
-
- President Bush and Russian President Bush signed an agreement
- Sunday, January 3, to reduce the number of nuclear warheads between
- their two countries to no more than 6,500 - removing from service
- more than two-thirds of the warheads deployed in 1990.
-
- The treaty, if ratified by the Senate and the Russian
- parliament, would eliminate the destabilizing multi-warhead land
- missiles from both sides. The reductions may be fully realized by
- the year 2000 if the United States pays for part of the Russian
- disarmament. The Senate is expected to approve the treaty this
- year, but passage in the Russian parliament is no certainty in
- light of its current political divisions.
-
- ACTION: Write the Russian embassy and voice your support for
- the "START II" treaty: Embassy of Russian, attn.: Igor Nevorov,
- 1125 16th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036.
-
- KEY HOUSE COMMITTEES NAMED
-
- The House has named new committee members for the 103rd
- Congress. Following is a near complete listing of committees of
- interest to the peace community, with members listed in order of
- seniority:
-
- House Armed Services Committee (33-22, with two vacancies):
- Democrats - Aspin (WI, chair, soon to be replaced by Dellums),
- Montgomery (AL), Dellums (CA, probable chair), Schroeder (CO),
- Hutto (FL), Skelton (MO), McCurdy (OK), Lloyd (TN), Sisisky (VA),
- Spratt (SC), McCloskey (IN), Ortiz (TX), Hochbrueckner (NY),
- Pickett (VA), Lancaster (NC), Evans (IL), Bilbray (NV), Tanner
- (TN), Browder (AL), Taylor (MS), Abercrombie (HI), T. Andrews (ME),
- Edwards (TX), D. Johnson (GA), Tejeda (TX), Mann (OH), Stupak (MN),
- Meehan (MA), Underwood (Guam), Harman (CA), McHale (PA)...
-
- Republicans - Spence (SC, ranking member), Stump (AZ), Hunter
- (CA), Kasich (OH), Bateman (VA), Hansen (UT), Weldon (PA), Kyl
- (AZ), Ravenel (SC), Dornan (CA), Hefley (CO), Machtley (RI), Saxton
- ((NJ), Cunningham (CA), Inhofe (OK), Buyer (IN), Torkildsen (MA),
- Fowler (FL), McHugh (NY), Talent (MO), Everett (AL), Bartlett (MD).
-
- Foreign Affairs Committee (26-18, with three vacancies):
- Democrats - Lee Hamilton (IN, chair), Gejdenson (CT), Lantos (CA),
- Torricelli (NJ), Berman (CA), Ackerman (NY), Johnston (FL), Engel
- (NY), Faleomavaega (Am. Samoa), Oberstar (MN), Schumer (NY),
- Martinez (CA), Borski (PA), Payne (NJ), R. Andrews (NJ), Menendez
- (NJ), S. Brown (OH), McKinney (GA), Cantwell (WA), Hastings (FL),
- Fingerhut (OH), Deutsch (FL), Wynn (MD)...
-
- Republicans - Gilman (NY, ranking member), Goodling (PA),
- Leach (IA), Roth (WI), Snowe (ME), Hyde (IL), Bereuter (NE), Smith
- (NJ), Burton (IN), Meyers (KS), Gallegly (CA), Ros-Lehtinen (FL),
- Ballenger (NC), Rohrbacher (CA), Levy (NY), Manzullo (IL), Diaz-
- Balart (FL), Royce (CA).
-
- Also, Rep. Martin Sabo (D-MN) beat out Rep. John Spratt (D-SC)
- for the chair of the Budget Committee by a vote Wednesday of 149-
- 112.
-
- FRESH(WO)MEN SENATORS NAMED TO SOME COMMITTEES
-
- The Democratic Party Steering Committee announced yesterday a
- series of freshwoman and freshman appointments to Senate
- committees, though there may be other appointments to follow:
-
- Carol Moseley Braun (D-IL): Judiciary Committee and the
- Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee; Ben Nighthorse
- Campbell (D-CO): Energy and Natural Resources Committee, Banking,
- Housing and Urban Affairs; Patty Murray (D-WA): Appropriations
- Committee, Ethics Committee, Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs
- Committee; Diane Feinstein (D-CA): Appropriations Committee,
- Judiciary Committee...
-
- Harlen Mathews (D-TN), who replaced Sen. Al Gore: Energy and
- Natural Resources Committee, Foreign Relations Committee; Barbara
- Boxer (D-CA): Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee; Russ
- Feingold (D-WI): Foreign Relations Committee, Agriculture
- Committee; Robert Krueger (D-TX), to replace Sen. Lloyd Bentsen:
- Energy and Natural Resources Committee.
-
- CABINET CONFIRMATION HEARINGS
-
- President-elect Clinton's department secretaries will have a
- major influence over peace and justice issue, and unlike the Reagan
- and Bush cabinet members, their ears may be open to the SANE/FREEZE
- message.
-
- The Senate begins this week to conduct confirmation hearings
- for these posts, and the questions they ask will provide the public
- with an insight as to how key administration officials will act
- after the inauguration. Hearings for Defense Secretary-designate
- Les Aspin are scheduled for Thursday, January 7, hearings for
- Secretary of State-designate Warren Christopher are scheduled for
- January 13-14, and hearings for Energy Secretary-designate Hazel
- O'Leary are scheduled for January 19.
-
- Following are the names of a few high-level administration
- officials named so far:
-
- Economic Policy: Lloyd Bentsen (Treasury), Leon Panetta (OMB
- Director), Robert Rubin (Chair, National Economic Council), Laura
- D'Andrea Tyson (Chair, Council of Economic Advisers), Robert Reich
- (Labor) Ronald Brown (Commerce), Mickey Kantor (U.S. Trade
- Representative).
-
- Foreign/Defense Policy: Warren Christopher (State), Les Aspin
- (Defense), Anthony Lake (National Security Adviser), R. James
- Woolsey (CIA), Madeline Albright (UN Ambassador).
-
- Domestic Policy: Zoe Baird (Attorney General), Donna Shalala
- (Housing and Urban Development), Jesse Brown (Veterans), Richard
- Riley (Education) Federico Pena (Transportation).
-
- Natural Resources: Hazel O'Leary (Energy), Carol Browner
- (EPA), Bruce Babbitt (Interior), Mike Espy (Agriculture).
-
- ACTION: Call or write Senators on the Foreign Relations
- Committee and ask them to ask Mr. Christopher about his plans to
- curtail the international trade in conventional weapons, since the
- United States is currently the world's leading weapons exporter.
- Some key Foreign Relations Committee members: Pell (D-RI), Biden
- (D-DE), Sarbanes (D-MD), Kerry (D-MA), Simon (D-IL), Moynihan (D-
- NY), Wofford (D-PA), Jeffords (R-VT).
-
- ACTION: Call or write Senators on the Energy and Natural
- Resources Committee and ask them to ask Ms. O'Leary whether or not
- she believes further nuclear tests are needed following the current
- moratorium, and if so, how many and why. Some key Energy and
- Natural Resources Committee members: Dale Bumpers (D-AR), Mark
- Hatfield (R-OR), Bill Bradley (NJ) and Paul Wellstone (MN).
-
- NUCLEAR TESTING
-
- Several strategies for Congressional and administration action
- are emerging to follow up on last year's successful enactment of a
- nine-month moratorium on nuclear weapons tests, but many
- Congressional leaders are waiting until Clinton's team is in place
- and they have had a chance to meet with them before they introduce
- legislation. An early focus has been placed on the State Department
- to pressure its leadership to re-start the Comprehensive Test Ban
- Treaty talks junked by President Reagan early in his term. After
- talks were underway, the focus would shift to extending the
- moratorium so as to strengthen negotiations toward a CTB.
-
- Other activists hope to amend the Partial Test Ban Treaty to
- "make it comprehensive" through an amendment conference later this
- year. Others believe a CTB is best achieved through the UN
- Conference on Disarmament, which recently finished multilateral
- negotiations to eliminate chemical weapons.
-
- NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION
-
- President-elect Clinton has made it clear that nuclear
- proliferation will be one his top foreign policy agenda items this
- year, and it is likely that Congress will follow his lead. Clinton
- will have to balance economic concerns, championed by the Commerce
- Department and regions heavily dependent on military production,
- with security concerns, championed by Defense (probably) and
- perhaps State.
-
- For its part, Congress may reconsider the comprehensive non-
- proliferation bill introduced last session by Sen. John Glenn (D-
- OH), which died in a "pre-1992-adjournment gridlock." Stronger
- measures, similar to last year's "Title III," may be brought before
- the House by Rep. Ed Markey (D-MA) and others. Congress may also
- consider boosting money for the UN's International Atomic Energy
- Agency.
-
- CONVENTIONAL ARMS TRANSFERS
-
- Because Clinton is on record as supporting the F-15 fighter
- sale to Saudi Arabia and the F-16 sale to Taiwan, it is likely
- these major transfers will be completed. However, renewed interest
- in this issue from the media and within Congress may force the
- introduction of legislation improving Congressional oversight of
- arms sales, possibly by increasing the period time in which
- Congress is to be notified of major transfers. Also, non-binding
- resolutions criticizing accelerated arms transfers are likely to be
- introduced.
-
- CONGRESSIONAL CALENDAR
-
- January 8-19: House and Senate in recess
- January 13-15: Signing of Chemical Weapons Convention in Paris
- January 18: Martin Luther King, Jr., Holiday
- January 20: Inauguration Day
- January 21: Deadline for Pengagon report on Star Wars
- February 1: Scheduled date for submission of FY 94 budget
- March 1: Deadling for Administration report on nuclear testing
-
- ** End of text from cdp:sf.lobby **
-