Posts Tagged ‘boehner’

01
August 2012

No House Vote on Bill to Lift Trade Barriers With Russia

Morningstar

House Republican leaders won’t bring legislation that would permanently lift trading restrictions with Russia before the congressional summer recess, a House Republican leadership aide said, delaying until the fall a debate on whether to lift one of the remaining Cold War-era economic barriers with the former American foe.

There had been a strong push to bring the legislation forward before the month-long recess begins next week. Ultimately the momentum fell short after several major labor unions, including the AFL-CIO, urged lawmakers to oppose the legislation in a concerted messaging effort last week.

The bill would permanently lift the Jackson-Vanik amendment, a measure that places trading restrictions on countries that seek to place controls on emigration. It initially became law in 1974 and was aimed squarely at Russia.

Since the end of the Cold War, the bill has been repealed annually by Congress. But with Russia set to join the World Trade Organization in August, the U.S. must permanently strike the measure from its books in order for American exporters to be able to compete for a larger share of Russian trade.

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31
October 2011

Kasparov: “How I ‘Called’ for War on Russia”

The Other Russia

Several days ago I spoke at a conference in Washington on the subject of the reset in relations between Russia and the US organized by the conservative Heritage Foundation, which traditionally represents the interests of the Republican Party. The fact that the main presenter was Speaker of the House of Representatives and Republican John Boehner shows how seriously the Republican Party is going to look at this issue during the upcoming electoral cycle. And there is nothing shocking about this. Every other foreign policy issue, whether it’s Afghanistan, Iran, or Iraq, is linked in one way or another with the actions of the Bush administration, while the idea for the reset in relations with Russia and the bets that were hedged on Medvedev – or, more specifically, on a split within the tandem – was thought up and materialized by the Obama administration. Putin’s imminent return to the post of president makes obvious the failure of Obama’s attempt to support “liberal modernizers” in the Kremlin, which the Republicans will undoubtedly remind him of before the next election.

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