{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"CD096: Fast Tracking Fast Track (Trade Promotion Authority)","description":"Time-sensitive episode! Congress is rushing to pass a bill that would grant the President Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), which hands Congress' power to negotiate international treaties to the Executive Branch. In this episode, we look at the details of the Trade Promotion Authority bill. Is giving the Executive Branch this power a good idea?  Please Contact Your Representative in the House www.house.gov Please Contact Your Two Senators www.senate.gov  Please support Congressional Dish:  Click here to contribute with PayPal or Bitcoin; click the PayPal &quot;Make it Monthly&quot; checkbox to create a monthly subscription Click here to support Congressional Dish for each episode via Patreon Mail Contributions to: 5753 Hwy 85 North #4576 Crestview, FL 32536  Thank you for supporting truly independent media!  Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) or Fast Track H.R. 1890: &quot;Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities and Accountability Act of 2015&quot; S. 995: &quot;Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities and Accountability Act of 2015&quot; The following links are to the text of H.R. 1890, as introduced in the the House Ways and Means Committee. The Senate, as of April 26, has not sent the text of their version to the Government Publishing Office to be released to the public. [caption id=&quot;attachment_1743&quot; align=&quot;aligncenter&quot; width=&quot;968&quot;] Despite having been introduced on April 16 and passed out of the Senate Finance Committee on April 22, the text of Trade Promotion Authority had still not been submitted for public publishing on April 26[\/caption]  Section 2: Negotiating Objectives   Elimination of trade laws that keep multinational corporations out of foreign countries  Expand the Investor State Dispute System Allow multinational corporations  access to the world's resources Get other countries  to change their laws  Eliminate taxes that companies have to pay to sell their products in other countries (tariffs)  Remove regulations that prevent businesses from operating in other countries  Agriculture   Prevent countries from refusing foreign food for safety reasons unless an approved international scientific organization says the concerns are legit.  Force countries to eliminate subsidies for their own industries  Eliminate government owned industries  Prohibit labeling requirements for food that &quot;affect&quot; biotechnology (for example, genetically modified foods) and making labeling requirements  eligible for lawsuits in the Investor State Dispute System  Prohibits restrictions  &quot;not based on scientific principles&quot;    Foreign Investment   Eliminate exceptions for when a foreign corporation is treated the same as a domestic corporation  Allow money to be transferred into and out of the country  Eliminate performance requirements for opening and operating a business in a foreign country Create laws that  force governments to pay companies for law that reclaim their land from corporations  Create an appeal process for the Investor State Dispute System Ensure that Investor State Dispute System rulings  are made public, that hearings are open to the public, and that businesses, unions, and NGO's have a way to make their opinions heard in Investor State Dispute System cases, even if those businesses, unions and NGOs are not a part of the case.  Intellectual Property  Make sure that companies have the legal and technological means  to prevent unauthorized use of their copyrighted material over the Internet   Enforcement must include civil, administrative, and criminal mechanisms    Prohibit laws that require local storage or processing of digital data  Prohibit taxes on electronic transfers  Regulatory Practices   Require regulations be &quot;based on sound science, cost benefit analysis, or risk assessment&quot; Have countries  match their laws  Eliminate price controls  Government-Owned Industries   Eliminate government owned industries that compete with private companies  Localization   Eliminate and prevent laws that require multinational corporations to operate facilities or keep assets in a country where they want to do business  Labor and Environment  Require countries to  adopt &quot;internationally recognized core labor standards&quot;  Allows environmental laws to be weakened (see exception)  Allow countries to enforce labor and environmental laws at their discretion  &quot;Ensure that labor, environmental, or safety politics and practices of the parties to trade agreements with the United States do not arbitrarily or unjustifiably discriminate against United States exports or serve as disguised barriers to trade.&quot; Ensure that  labor and environmental laws are subject to the Investor State Dispute System  Prohibit foreign countries from enforcing labor and environmental law within the United States  Anti-Corruption   &quot;Encourage and support&quot; anti-corruption and anti-bribery initiatives  Section 3: Trade Promotion Authority for the President   The President may enter into agreements with foreign countries before  July 1, 2018  That can (and likely will) be extended until July 1, 2021. The President has to  request the extension in writing and submit reports to Congress and  if Congress does nothing, the extension is automatically approved.    Procedures for the President to Enter International Agreements  The President must notify Congress of his intention to begin negotiations  90 days before they start  30 days before starting negotiations, the President must publish a summary of the negotiation objectives on a publicly available website. Before entering into an agreement,  the President must &quot;consult&quot; with various Committees and inform them of the  &quot;nature of the agreement&quot; and the &quot;general effect of the agreement on existing laws&quot; At least  180 days before entering the agreement, the President must submit a report to Congress of the proposals that &quot;may be&quot; in the final agreement. At least  90 days before entering the agreement, the President must provide the International Trade Commission - which is not a part of Congress - with details of the agreement as it exists at that time and request an assessment of the agreement. At least  90 days before entering the agreement, the President must publish his intention to enter the agreement in the Federal Register.  60 days before entering into the agreement, the President must publish the text of the agreement on a publicly available Internet website of the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative.  30 days before entering the agreement, the President must give Congress the final text and a plan for implementing and enforcing it.  Congress will make changes needed to existing U.S. law with an implementing bill Any agreement with a foreign government  that is not disclosed to Congress before the implementing bill is introduced will have no force or effect.  Congressional Involvement in Negotiations  The U.S. Trade Representative  must meet with any member of Congress who requests a meeting The U.S. Trade Representative  must provide any member of Congress access to negotiation documents, including classified materials The United States Trade Representative must  &quot;consult&quot; with various committees at various stages of negotiations. The U.S. Trade Representative - not Congress - will  write guidelines on &quot;enhanced coordination with Congress&quot; and the USTR can  revise the guidelines whenever he wants to. The U.S. Trade Representative  will have to accredit at least 10 members of Congress to the trade delegation. It's unclear if they will be able to participate in the actual negotiations.   How to rescind Trade Promotion Authority  If the Senate Finance Committee meets to pass the implementing bill,  and it doesn't pass, a &quot;disapproval resolution&quot; will be passed and sent to the Senate floor.  Any member of the House or Senate can introduce a &quot;disapproval resolution&quot;  In the House, the resolution goes to the Committee on Ways and Means AND the Committee on Rules   If either of these Committees does not pass the resolution, it can not go to the House floor for a vote If the Committee on Ways and Means does not pass the resolution in 6 legislative days,  the resolution dies.   In the Senate, the resolution goes to the Committee on Finance.   If the Committee on Finance does not pass the resolution, it can not go to the Senate floor for a vote    Information for the Public  The U.S. Trade Representative  will create written guidelines on public access to information regarding agreements, which he can revise at any time.   Chief Transparency Officer  Creates a new position in the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative - the Chief Transparency Officer - who will &quot;consult&quot; with Congress on transparency policy, &quot;assist' the public, and &quot;advise&quot; the U.S. Trade Representative  Sovereignty   &quot;No provision of any trade agreement... that is inconsistent with any law of the United States, any State of the United States, or any locality of the United States shall have effect.&quot;  &quot;Reports...issued by dispute settlement panels... shall have no binding effect on the law of the United States, the Government of the United States, or the law or government of any State or locality of the United States.&quot;   Hearings Discussed in This Episode  &quot;Congress and U.S. Trade Policy&quot;, Senate Finance Committee, April 16, 2015. [caption id=&quot;attachment_1745&quot; align=&quot;aligncenter&quot; width=&quot;314&quot;] People available for questions during the April 16 surprise hearing in the Senate Finance Committee about Trade Promotion Authority[\/caption]  &quot;Congress and U.S. Trade Policy&quot;, Senate Finance Committee, April 21, 2015. [caption id=&quot;attachment_1746&quot; align=&quot;aligncenter&quot; width=&quot;303&quot;] People available for questions during the April 22 Senate Finance Committee hearing on Trade Promotion Authority [\/caption]  Mark-Up Hearing for S. 995 (the Trade Promotion Authority bill), Senate Finance Committee, April 22, 2015.  Mark-Up Hearing for H.R. 1890(the Trade Promotion Authority bill), House Ways and Means Committee, April 22, 2015.  Additional Information  U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman bundled between $200,000- $500,000 for Barack Obama's political campaigns, Center for Responsive Politics  Senator John Thune has taken over $1.6 million from Agribusiness, Center for Responsive Politics Is the Bt Protein Safe for Human Consumption?, ucbiotech.org - University of California, February 2012. USDA Fact sheet on Country of Origin Labeling (COOL)   Music Presented in This Episode  Intro &amp;amp; Exit:  Tired of Being Lied To by David Ippolito (found on Music Alley by mevio)  ","author_name":"Congressional Dish","author_url":"https:\/\/congressionaldish.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/3516618\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/393ba9\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/content\/8867028"}