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Politics : Sharks in the Septic Tank -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Greg or e who wrote (14889)5/29/2001 7:10:59 PM
From: 2MAR$  Respond to of 82486
 
I guess the hang~over has gotten better ?

Do you drink in front of your children greg ?
If so , you should really give it up...ASAP.



To: Greg or e who wrote (14889)5/29/2001 7:22:37 PM
From: 2MAR$  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 82486
 
Vietnam-US pact likely in Congress by June 4 -aide ( the wheels of time turn)

By Sonya Hepinstall
WASHINGTON, May 29 (Reuters) - The Bush administration has
indicated it will send a widely supported but long-delayed
trade agreement with Vietnam to the U.S. Congress for a vote
within the next week, a congressional aide said on Tuesday.
U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick told Sen. John
Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, on Friday that the bilateral
trade agreement (BTA) signed by both countries last July in
Hanoi would come to Congress by Monday, June 4, the aide said.

"Kerry talked to him on Friday and indeed Zoellick
indicated that it would come up early June, by the 4th," the
Democratic Senate aide, who is knowledgeable about the issue
but asked not to be named, told Reuters. It could be passed by
August or earlier, the aide said.

The office of the USTR could not confirm the report.
President George W. Bush has been facing pressure from a
growing group of lawmakers, including Sen. Charles Grassley,
the Republican chairman of the Senate Finance Committee which
will handle the legislation, to send up the historic agreement
quickly.
The administration had hoped to tie the popular pact to a
more controversial bill to give the White House broad new trade
negotiating authority, which could delay it for years.

But congressional sources have been saying in recent days
that the administration was rethinking that position.
The Vietnamese have chafed at the wait. The trade pact,
negotiated over four years, would give Vietnam "normal trade
relations" status and lead to a cut in tariffs on Vietnamese
textiles from around 60 percent to around five percent.
Vice-Foreign Minister Chu Tuan Cap told Reuters in Vietnam
on Tuesday ratification was in both countries' interests.

The timing of the pact's arrival has been complicated by
"Jackson-Vanik" provisions on Vietnam which Bush must decide
whether to waive by June 3.
The waiver, granted for the last three years under former
President Bill Clinton, would allow U.S. companies to continue
receiving U.S. Export-Import Bank loans and other aid to do
business in Vietnam.
The bilateral trade pact carries with it so-called
fast-track procedures aiming at getting it to a final vote
quickly.
Under those procedures, the pact must be moved out of
committee within 45 congressional working days and then be
voted on by the full houses within another 15 congressional
working days. No amendments are allowed.
"Under the terms of the law it moves fairly expeditiously.
I think senate finance will act pretty quickly once it comes up
here, I think probably the second week in June," the aide said.
"Generally... the votes are here and the votes are on the House
side as well."
The United States and Vietnam reestablished diplomatic
relations in 1995, two decades after the end of the Vietnam
War.
((Washington newsroom, +1 202 898 8474, fax +1 202 898 8383,
sonya.hepinstall@reuters.com))
REUTERS
*** end of story ***