House OKs Measures to Ease Sanctions Against Cuba
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2004
WASHINGTON A day after moving to nullify the Bush
administration's new rules restricting family travel to Cuba, the
House on Wednesday voted to remove barriers to agriculture sales
and student exchanges in the island nation.
But, as in past years, actions by the House and Senate to
ease decades of economic and social sanctions imposed on Cuba are
expected to make little headway against an administration
determined not to make life easier for Fidel Castro's government.
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The White House has threatened to veto a $90 billion
Transportation and Treasury Department spending bill if it contains
any language to weaken sanctions. The bill, for fiscal 2005
programs, passed 397-12.
Mexican Trucks
The House also courted a presidential veto by eliminating a
two-year certification exemption for foreign-built trucks that
travel in the United States. The provision is aimed at Mexican
trucks that, under the 1993 North American Free Trade Agreement,
were promised full access to U.S. roadways.
Rep. Ernest Istook, R-Okla, chairman of the subcommittee
overseeing the spending bill, suggested that the provisions on Cuba
would "evaporate" when the House and Senate come together to write
a final version of the bill. The White House is "very
unequivocal" about the veto threat, he said, and "my
responsibility ... is to produce a bill that will pass into law."
For years, during the Clinton and Bush administrations,
Democrats and free-trade Republicans have, with little success,
questioned the effectiveness of trying to end the 45-year-old
Castro regime through a policy of isolation.
The Senate Appropriations Committee, on three different spending
bills this year, has moved to prevent the government from enforcing
restrictions on travel, gift parcels to Cuban family members, and
food sales to Cuba.
The House on Wednesday approved two of the Cuba amendments
without a roll call vote.
The first, introduced by Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., would
make it easier to sell agricultural products, medicine and medical
supplies to Cuba. Sales of such goods have been legal since 2001,
but restrictions on commercial financing and credit guarantees have
discouraged exports.
The second, sponsored by Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Calif., prohibits
funds to enforce regulations promulgated June 30 this year that
erect obstacles to American student programs in Cuba. The rules are
"just plain undemocratic and punitive and simply don't make sense
for Americans," she said.
On Tuesday the House voted 225-174 to approve an amendment by
Rep. Jim Davis, D-Fla., that blocks another June 30 rule allowing
Cuban-Americans to visit family in Cuba only once every three
years. Davis' provision would restore the old system allowing one
visit a year.
A far broader proposal by Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y., to end
the economic embargo with Cuba, lost 225-188.
Diaz-Balart: Don't 'Reward the Dictatorship'
Cuban-American Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., led the
opposition to any easing of sanctions, saying it was "in bad
taste" to give breaks to Castro at a time he is stepping up the
suppression of dissidents. "We don't think it is appropriate now
to reward the dictatorship with financing," he said of Waters'
amendment.
The trucking amendment, backed by Rep. John Olver, D-Mass.,
prevents the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration from
enforcing proposed rules to give a two-year exemption from U.S.
safety standards for foreign-built trucks that have previously
entered the United States. It passed 339-70, but, like the Cuba
provisions, might not survive a House-Senate conference.
The Supreme Court in June agreed that the Bush administration
had the authority to lift a moratorium on Mexican truckers
operating in the United States, a defeat for union, consumer and
environmental groups that have sought to ban Mexican trucks from
U.S. roads.
Olver stressed that all trucks, whether American or foreign,
should meet the same safety standards.
Rep. Jim Kolbe, who opposed the amendment, said that Mexican trucks
did have to meet the same standards, and that the exemption applied only
to labeling requirements for the condition of the truck when it was
manufactured. "This is a bogus amendment designed to keep Mexican
trucks out of the United States," he said.
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