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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: SANE/FREEZE LEGISLATIVE REPORT September 9, 1992
- Message-ID: <1992Sep12.010855.5771@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Date: Sat, 12 Sep 1992 01:08:55 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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-
- /** sf.lobby: 106.0 **/
- ** Topic: S/F Leg. Report 9-9-92 **
- ** Written 11:24 am Sep 9, 1992 by sfnatldc in cdp:sf.lobby **
- SANE/FREEZE:CGS WEEKLY LEGISLATIVE REPORT
- For The Week Of September 9, 1992
-
- The Weekly Legislative Report is updated on the second
- business day of each week by the SANE/FREEZE: Campaign for Global
- Security legislative office (while Congress is session). This
- report is based on the political objectives adopted by the 1991
- SANE/FREEZE: Campaign for Global Security National Congress. A
- short version of this report is available each week on the
- SANE/FREEZE Legislative Hotline. The number: (202) 862-9760.
-
- Please help us by reporting your lobbying activities to Burt
- Glass at (202) 862-9740, by fax at (202) 862-9762, by PeaceNet
- mail message to "sfnatldc," or by written report (form available
- from our legislative office) to SANE/FREEZE: Campaign for Global
- Security, attn.: Burt Glass, 1819 H Street, NW, Suite 640,
- Washington, D.C., 20006-3603.
-
- TOP PRIORITY: "STAR WARS" AND THE SENATE DEFENSE BILL
-
- In a surprise vote just before the August recess, the Senate
- rejected, 49-43, a motion to table an amendment to the Defense
- Authorization bill to cut $1 billion from a committee request of
- $4.3 billion for the "Star Wars" Strategic Defense Initiative.
- The vote appeared to clear the way for approval of the amendment,
- offered by Sens. Jim Sasser (D-TN) and Dale Bumpers (D-AR).
-
- But unnerved Republicans, led by Sens. Malcolm Wallop (R-WY)
- and Jim Warner (R-VA), blocked a vote on the amendment by
- refusing a request for "unanimous consent" which permits the
- Senate to bring items up for debate and votes. The logjam pushed
- consideration of the entire Defense Authorization bill back until
- next week.
-
- The following Senators voted against tabling the Sasser-
- Bumpers amendment (the SANE/FREEZE position):
-
- Adams, Akaka, Baucus, Biden, Boren, Bradley, Breaux, Bryan,
- Bumpers, Byrd, Chafee, Conrad, Cranston, Daschle, DeConcini,
- Dodd, Ford, Fowler, Glenn, Graham, Grassley, Harkin, Hatfield,
- Jeffords, Johnston, Kassebaum, Kennedy, Kerrey, Kerry, Kohl,
- Lautenberg, Leahy, Levin, Lieberman, Metzenbaum, Mikulski,
- Mitchell, Moynihan, Pell, Pryor, Reid, Riegle, Robb, Rockefeller,
- Sanford, Sarbanes, Sasser, Simon, Wofford.
-
- Absent: Burdick, Garn, Gore, Hatch, Helms, Kasten,
- Wellstone, Wirth.
-
- Senate Armed Services Committee chair Sam Nunn (D-GA)
- opposed the Sasser-Bumpers SDI cut, but was clearly exasperated
- by the actions of Wallop and other pro-SDI Senators. Nunn,
- Wallop, Sasser, Bumpers and Jim Warner (R-VA) are said to be
- negotiating this week over the issue.
-
- ACTION: Urge your Senators to support the Sasser-Bumpers
- amendment to the Defense Authorization bill to trim SDI funding
- by $1 billion. Focus especially on Senators who voted against the
- amendment's tabling prior to the recess, such as Senators Akaka,
- Dodd, Fowler, Graham (FL), Grassley, Kassebaum and Robb.
-
- SECOND PRIORITY: HARKIN'S TRANSFER AMENDMENT
-
- Sen. Tom Harkin (D-IA) is preparing an amendment to the
- fiscal year 1993 Labor, Health and Human Services and Education
- Appropriations bill that would transfer $3.85 billion from
- unobligated military accounts to a variety of domestic programs
- targeted at children's needs.
-
- The amendment, which Harkin is expected to offer on the
- floor to the full Senate in mid-September, would require 60 votes
- for approval because it violates the 1990 Budget Enforcement Act,
- which forbids the transfer of funds between discretionary
- accounts such as defense and domestic needs. The barrier is
- scheduled to be removed for fiscal 1994.
-
- The $3.85 billion would be spent on such programs a Head
- Start ($600 million), child abuse/family violence prevention
- ($100 million), AIDS research ($100 million) and education ($1.35
- billion). This amendment may be the last chance for the Senate to
- cast a clear vote for new federal budget priorities this year.
-
- ACTION: Call your Senators today and urge them to support
- the Harkin Transfer Amendment for New Priorities to the FY 93
- Labor, HHS and Education Appropriations bill.
-
- UPDATE: NUCLEAR TESTING MORATORIUM
-
- Sen. William Cohen (R-ME) may still offer on the Senate
- floor next week his amendment to the Defense Authorization bill
- to permit more nuclear weapons tests than called for in the
- Energy and Water Appropriations bill. The Senate voted, 68-26, on
- August 3 in favor of an amendment to that appropriations bill
- calling for a nine-month moratorium on nuclear weapons tests and
- a permanent end to all tests by 1996.
-
- Cohen's amendment would only halt nuclear tests until the
- President certified that negotiations had begun with Russia to
- end tests. The Department of Energy could conduct up to 20 tests
- for "safety and reliability" through 1998 - not 15 through 1996 -
- and then could continue if the President certified that further
- tests were required. Congress could stop the additional tests if
- they passed a "Resolution of Disapproval," which may require a
- two-thirds majority.
-
- The following Senators voted AGAINST the Hatfield-Mitchell-
- Exon amendment in August: Brown, Bryan, Burns, Coats, Cochran,
- Cohen, Craig, Dole, Domenici, Garn, Gramm (TX), Hollings, Lott,
- Lugar, Mack, McCain, Nickles, Reid, Roth, Rudman, Simpson, Smith,
- Symms, Thurmond, Wallop, Warner.
-
- The following Senators did not vote: Burdick, Dixon, Gore,
- Hatch, Helms, Seymour.
-
- The conference committee to reconcile the different House
- and Senate versions of the testing moratorium attached to their
- respective Energy and Water Appropriations bill is expected to
- meet next week. The House approved a 12-month moratorium with no
- end date, and the Senate approved a nine-month moratorium with a
- 1996 end-date, as described above.
-
- Rep. Tom Bevill (D-AL), chair of the House Energy and Water
- Appropriations subcommittee, and Sen. J. Bennett Johnston (D-LA),
- chair of the Senate subcommittee, both would like to take all
- testing moratorium language out of the bill. Legally, the
- conference committee is permitted to do so, but it may be
- politically difficult in light of the votes in both houses.
-
- The following Representatives serve on the House
- subcommittee and are expected to be a part of the conference
- committee: Bevill, Fazio, Thomas, Chapman, Skaggs, Dwyer, Myers,
- Pursell, Gallo. The following Senators serve on the Senate
- committee and are also expected to a part of the conference
- committee: Johnston, Byrd, Hollings, Sasser, DeConcini, Reid,
- Hatfield, Garn, Cochran, Domenici, Specter, Nickles.
-
- ACTION: Urge your Senator to oppose the Cohen amendment to
- the Defense Authorization bill. If your Representative serves on
- the Energy and Water Appropriations subcommittee, listed above,
- call today and urge him or her to keep the moratorium language in
- the appropriations bill.
-
- UPDATE: OTHER AMENDMENTS: B-2, TROOPS & CONVERSION
-
- Senators Pat Leahy (D-VT), William Cohen (R-ME) and Carl
- Levin (D-MI) are expected to offer an amendment to the Senate
- Defense Authorization bill next week to delete $2.6 billion for
- additional B-2 bombers. The Senate Armed Services Committee and
- the full House want the additional funds to build a total of 20
- planes.
-
- Sen. Harris Wofford (D-PA) is expected to offer an amendment
- to the same bill to place a 100,000 troop cap on the number of
- U.S. soldiers in Europe by 1995 - about 50,000 less than the Bush
- Administration suggests. A similar provision already has passed
- the House.
-
- Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-MA) may offer an amendment modify and
- in some ways improve the $1.2 billion economic conversion package
- adopted by the Senate just before the recess. Its provisions
- include:
-
- * Provide an additional year of School Impact Aid to
- defense-impacted school districts.
-
- * Authorize changes to the Economic Dislocation and Worker
- Adjustment Assistance program and to the Defense Conversion
- Adjustment Act, by providing certain defense workers job-training
- assistance up to six months prior to their lay-off and to extend
- the definition of "dislocated worker" in law to permit more
- flexibility in helping defense workers.
-
- * Boost worker involvement in federally-supported technology
- programs.
-
- ACTION: Call your Senators and urge them to support the
- Leahy-Cohen-Levin amendment to cut B-2 funding; the Wofford
- amendment to place a 100,000-U.S. troop cap in Europe by 1995;
- and to the Kennedy amendment to strengthen the Senate's economic
- conversion program.
-
- UPDATE: ADVANCED FIGHTER SALES TO TAIWAN, SAUDI ARABIA
-
- Placing the importance of his re-election over the country's
- long-term security interests, President Bush began his push for
- two major arms sales of advanced fighter aircraft.
-
- Congressional opposition to the sale of F-16s to Taiwan and
- F-15s to Saudi Arabia has been slow to develop, in part because
- Democratic Presidential candidate Bill Clinton supports both
- sales and the perception that the country badly needs the jobs
- created by the sales. SANE/FREEZE and a national coalition of
- organizations oppose the sales because they are seen as part of
- the dangerous and ultimately destabilizing trade in international
- advanced weaponry.
-
- A letter last fall circulated by Sen. Howard Metzenbaum (D-
- OH) in opposition to the Saudi F-15 sale gathered signatures from
- 67 Senators, but since then Israel has signaled that it may not
- actively oppose the sale and Democrats in Congress are wary of
- undermining Clinton's presidential run by disagreeing with him
- over a major policy decision. Also, the aircraft is largely built
- by McDonnell-Douglas in Missouri - a major "battleground" state
- for both presidential candidates. A similar situation exists
- regarding the F-16 sale to Taiwan. That aircraft is built by
- General Dynamics in Texas.
-
- The President has yet to give formal announcement of the
- sale to Congress. Once that announcement is made, Congress has 30
- days to block the sale with a two-thirds vote in both houses.
-
- ACTION: Write or call your Senators and Representatives and
- urge them to oppose both sales, mentioning your concern over the
- U.S. role as the No. 1 arms trader.
- ** End of text from cdp:sf.lobby **
-