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From bigxc@prairienet.orgFri Feb 24 06:20:50 1995
Date: Fri, 24 Feb 95 04:30:04 CST
From: Brian Redman <bigxc@prairienet.org>
To: Multiple recipients of list <conspire@prairienet.org>
Subject: The Mexican Rescue Package
THE MEXICAN RESCUE PACKAGE
[From The Congressional Record -- House, H1271-H1278, Feb. 6, 1995]
THE SPEAKER PRO TEMPORE:
Under the Speaker's announced policy of January 4, 1995, the
gentlewoman from Ohio [Ms. Kaptur] is recognized for 60 minutes
as the designee of the minority leader.
MS. KAPTUR:
Mr. Speaker, we are holding this special order this evening
because our various offices here on Capitol Hill have been
inundated with telephone calls and inquiries regarding the
Mexican rescue package, and many questions are being asked by
constituents and citizens of our country that we can not, in
fact, answer.
I was asked today how much money has already left our U.S.
Treasury as part of the drawdown on the deal that was announced
last week by the Secretary of the Treasury and the President. The
facts are that we cannot tell you.
Therefore tomorrow morning, likely after the morning business,
there will be a special resolution brought up here in the House,
and it will be a privileged resolution. In that resolution we
will be asking for a vote of the House and a ruling of the
Speaker so that we can obtain the information that we cannot give
you this evening about the terms of the arrangement that was made
by our Government with the nation of Mexico. Our resolution
requires that the Comptroller General of the United States report
back to us within a 7-day period.
So, we would try to draw to the Members' attention that this vote
will likely occur tomorrow morning after the regular morning
business, the 1-minutes and, perhaps, a vote on the Journal, and
we will look forward to that moment.
It is likely that in the way that the resolution will be brought
up there will be very little time for debate. There may actually
be an effort by certain interests in this Chamber to table the
resolution, and we would ask the Members to vote against tabling
the resolution so that, in fact, we will have an opportunity to
get the facts that we really want.
Mr. Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from Oregon [Mr. DeFazio].
MR. DeFAZIO:
So, the situation we are confronted with is the Treasury, in
concert with the Federal Reserve Board, agencies of the Federal
Government of the United States, have extended, as far as we
know, in excess of $40 billion of credits, loan guarantees,
currency swaps and other instruments to Mexico, that our
questions regarding the source of these funds, the exact amount
and the term of these funds, whether or not these funds are
somehow secured -- you know, what authorization exists for
extending these funds without coming to Congress for
appropriations; the gentlewoman [is] saying that there is a
possibility that this House will not ask to have those questions
answered, that we could just be shut down here on the floor by
ruling of the chair, and we will have no opportunity for debate,
no opportunity to go forward and ask these questions.
I, for one, as a Representative of a district from the Far West
United States, feel that my constituents -- this is not the
greatest issue before them, but they would certainly like to know
what authority the President, the Secretary of the Treasury, and
the Federal Reserve, have, if it was extended to them by
Congress, what amounts of money are controlled, what risks are
involved, what collateral are involved. I mean all sorts of
things we would like to know about even a small business
transaction let alone one of this magnitude.
But in this ruling we could just be shut down and not have any
opportunity to discuss that?
MS. KAPTUR:
That is really what the vote tomorrow is about. We know that the
constitutional authority of the House as the place within the
Congress; that is, the first to authorize and appropriate dollars
through the U.S. Treasury, was essentially shut off. Our Members
were muzzled. We were not privy to information that should be
ours in relation to the dollars of our taxpayers being put at
risk either inside the United States or outside the United
States, and we thought we were going to have full debate and
disclosure on this matter when a decision was made without the
involvement of the legislative branch of the United States of
America.
We now have to resort to special parliamentary tactics in order
to bring this measure to a vote on the floor, and the gentleman
is correct, that there are so many questions we want answers to
that we are being asked, which are impossible for us to obtain,
and we think that that is not what the Constitution intended,
that in fact this is not a monarchy, this is not a parliamentary
government. We are not an arm of the executive branch. We have
our own status within the Constitution, and our constituents have
an absolute right to know when their tax dollars are at risk, as
they are, in this agreement, what the terms of that agreement
are, what the terms of repayment are, what the nature of the
collateral is. We need to know how fast money is being drawn
down. Otherwise you cannot make a judgement as to what might
happen in the future.
What type of precedent does this set? It is our understanding
that never has the authority of this particular set of
institutions within the Government of the United States been used
to such a degree, and, therefore, we think there are some very
serious constitutional questions to be asked, as well as
questions to be asked about the nature of the agreement itself.
You know, I say with some humor this evening, "I hope the Mayor
of Washington, DC, will take it in the humor that I offer it,
but, you know that the District of Columbia here in our Nation's
Capital has been having a lot of difficulty with its finances and
is about to go bankrupt. It has been on all the pages here in the
Nation's Capital and in other parts of the country, and we know
that it's going to cost the District of Columbia real money to
bail itself out, and it's money that we don't have in this
Congress."
So I had an idea over the weekend that what we ought to do for
the Mayor of Washington and the citizens of the Nation's Capital
is to get the executive branch involved because they obviously
are very creative in figuring out how to make things happen and
make it seem as though you are not spending any real money, and
they ought to work up a Mexico-type deal for Washington.
MR. DeFAZIO:
Perhaps, if the gentlewoman would yield, I like that idea, and
perhaps what the Government of the District of Columbia could do
would be similar to what Wall Street has been doing.
They can go down to Mexico, get a bunch of pesos, which are
declining rapidly in value, and then they can take and exchange
them to the Federal Reserve Board for United States dollars at a
preferred rate, and by arbitraging this they can probably earn up
to a billion quite readily, and they can pay off their debts.
I mean, if we can do this for the Government of Mexico and the
Wall Street speculators, why would we not do it for the District
of Columbia?
MS. KAPTUR:
I figure, if the Capital of Mexico can draw on the taxpayers of
the United States, why should not the Capital of the United
States be able to draw on the taxpayers of the United States? I
agree with the gentleman, and, knowing that those tesobonos are
paying anywhere between 20 and 40 percent interest rates, the
Mayor of Washington would certainly be well advised to get in on
that because he could probably get the money he needs in a flash.
MR. DeFAZIO:
I bet, if the gentlewoman would yield further, I would imagine,
if the city were to engage, perhaps, Goldman Sachs as their
financial adviser, perhaps they could do very well on this matter
because, if I could go back to the questions the gentlewoman is
asking, as I recall, the gentlewoman from Ohio and a number of us
signed a letter with a series of questions probably 3 weeks ago --
MS. KAPTUR:
There were 13.
MR. DeFAZIO:
To the Treasury and the Secretary of the Treasury and asked many
of these same questions in a just, straightforward, and friendly
manner. We thought it was things it was essential we know before
any sort of bailout go forward.
Have we had any response?
MS. KAPTUR:
I am glad the gentleman put that on the *Record*.
We asked over 12 questions, over a dozen questions; the first
one: Who are the creditors that Mexico was paying off, seeing as
how they were going to be borrowing the money from us to do it.
We wanted to know specifically. We did not want to know some sort
of general answer.
We have received no reply from the Department of Treasury to our
questions.
MR. DeFAZIO:
So, if the gentlewoman would yield further, it is not exactly
like we are sandbagging them with this resolution of inquiry. We
have been waiting 3 weeks on issues of national concern involving
tens of billions of taxpayers' dollars, and we have had no
response to a group of Members of Congress who have asked these
questions.
MS. KAPTUR:
That is correct.
I yield to the gentleman from Ohio [Mr. Brown].
MR. BROWN of Ohio:
You know, as bad as we thought, as bad an idea as we thought the
bailout was 3 weeks ago, in the last few days, with Alan
Greenspan and the Federal Reserve raising interest rates in this
country, it only exacerbates the problem in Mexico. If you
remember 2 weeks ago, 3 weeks ago, Mr. Greenspan was all over the
Congress, lobbying, talking to Republicans, talking to Democrats,
meeting with Speaker Gingrich, talking to the President,
everybody he could, about this Mexican bailout on the one hand.
Then on the other hand we began to hear stories that he was
leaking out that the Federal Reserve is about to increase
interest rates.
When that happens, when interest rates are increased in this
country, which happened last week, in addition to what it does to
home buying, homebuilding, the cost of credit, the costs to
borrowed money for small businesses, all the hurt that puts on
the economy, what it does with the Mexico situation is simply
pull the rug out from under this whole bailout situation whereas
the price, the cost, as the dollar gets stronger, the peso by
definition gets weaker, which means that the $16 billion or so
that Mexico already owes back to western investors gets more
expensive so that it decreases the chance of pay back. It means
those loan guarantees and direct loans may in fact not be paid
back, but increases the chances there, and at the same time it
undercuts the whole ability of the Mexican Government to get back
on its feet in the Mexican society.
It simply does not make sense that the Federal Reserve did both
of those things, or the Federal Reserve Chairman did both of
those things the same month.
MS. KAPTUR:
If I might reclaim my time just for a second, does it not
interest you that over the last year the Federal Reserve of our
country raised interest rates six times, and during that period
of time, of course, it became more lucrative for funds to be
drawn into the United States and away from Mexico? This was all
going on at the same time. We were asking ourselves why are
interest rates going up in the United States when there is no
inflation.
MR. BROWN of Ohio:
American investors were benefiting. There were incentive for
American investors to pull their money out, and that is what
accelerated the whole downward plunge of the peso. You couple the
politics of NAFTA, that the Mexican Government and the American
Government did not want any peso devaluation during NAFTA, the
Mexican government did not want any peso devaluation, although it
could have been done in small increments during their own
Presidential elections. So the politics of Mexico and the easy
availability of money sent to Mexico, and the American bankers
and American investors sending their money down there, the
Mexicans glad to receive it, certainly with the NAFTA stamp of
approval, yes, our Government was saying it is O.K. to invest
there, all played into this.
MS. KAPTUR:
If I might yield time to the gentleman from Vermont [Mr.
Sanders].
MR. SANDERS:
I thank the gentlewoman from Ohio. We are back together again,
right.
MR. DeFAZIO:
After hours.
MR. SANDERS:
Fourteen months ago many of us, all of us, and many other of our
colleagues told the American people that we thought the NAFTA
agreement was going to be a disaster. On the other side we had
the President, we had the Republican leadership, we had virtually
every major corporate newspaper in America, who were telling us
what a wonderful deal NAFTA was going to be for American workers,
for Mexican workers, and for the people in general.
Fourteen months have come and gone, and sadly, sadly, virtually
every concern that we had at that time has proven to be true. And
after the 14 months, instead of our friends who supported NAFTA
coming forward and saying, "O.K., we admit it, we made a mistake,
we were wrong, everybody is wrong, they were wrong"; but instead
of coming forward and saying they were wrong, what they now come
forward and say is, "Hey, we need a $40-plus billion loan
guarantee to Mexico, because NAFTA has been such a success that
the Mexican economy is disintegrating, their Government is
extremely unstable, and therefore, at a time when small business
in America is in trouble and we do not offer them loan
guarantees, family farmers in America, we do not offer them loan
guarantees, we have a $200 billion deficit."
And what irritates me very much is every single day on the floor
of this House, Members of Congress say, "Hey, we have to cut back
on Social Security, on Medicare, on Medicaid, on nutrition
programs for hungry children and hungry senior citizens. We have
got to do that." We do not have enough money. And yet apparently
there is not quite that concern for putting $40 billion of
taxpayers' money at risk for this bailout.
The first point I would like to make this evening in terms of
this bailout is it is very interesting who is for it and who is
against it. Polls indicate, I think the latest poll I saw is that
some 80 percent of the American people are against this bailout.
Maybe some of the viewers would say, well, obviously all the
Mexican people are for this bailout.
Wrong. Polls indicate, as I understand it, that a healthy
majority of Mexicans are against the bailout because they are
concerned about the sovereignty of their nation.
MR. BROWN of Ohio:
If the gentleman will yield, including one of the major
presidential candidates in Mexico who has come out against and
spoken at a rally of literally tens of thousands of Mexicans, I
would add.
MR. SANDERS:
So you have the American people against the bailout, you have the
Mexican people against the bailout. And one of the frustrations
that all of us share is that we know that, if that vote had come
to the floor of the House, the U.S. Congress, House and Senate,
Republicans and Democrats, and the only independent, were all
against the bailout.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
How did the gentleman vote on this issue?
MR. SANDERS:
Well, that is a very interesting question. I was about to vote no
for the bailout. Unfortunately, it never came to the floor of the
House. I have not yet voted on it.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
How did Ms. Kaptur vote on the issue?
MS. KAPTUR:
On this bailout issue, we have not had a chance to vote on it.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
How did the Speaker of the House vote on the issue?
MS. KAPTUR:
The Speaker of the House has not had a chance to vote on this
matter.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
The chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means, the chairman of
the Committee on Appropriations?
MS. KAPTUR:
The chairman of the Committee on Appropriations I spoke with the
other day. There has been no bill referred to his committee.
There is not a bill that has been brought up here to the
Congress.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
Twenty billion dollars of American tax dollars, and there was not
a vote in the Congress of the United States. Is that what you are
telling me?
MS. KAPTUR:
There has not been a vote here in the Congress of the United
States.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
When will Congress get a chance to vote on this?
MS. KAPTUR:
We were trying very hard to get a vote, hopefully tomorrow. We
introduced a bill on Friday. Because the Speaker will not bring
up the bill, we have to use very unusual procedures to force a
bill on the floor, which we expect will come up tomorrow sometime
after 11 o'clock, under very prescribed rules where we will have
very little opportunity to debate. But we have not been able to
get any hearings in the committees of any significance. We have
not been able to get a bill. The executive branch did this
completely on their own, without the Congress being involved.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
Ms. Kaptur, is it really fair to say the executive branch did
this entirely on their own? Let us go back the 13 months that my
friend Mr. Sanders made reference to. What was then minority
whip, now Speaker of the House Gingrich's position on NAFTA?
MS. KAPTUR:
Mr. Gingrich was a very strong supporter of NAFTA, and in fact
when NAFTA got in trouble, he ended up rounding up the votes to
ultimately pass it. There were I think 43 votes that were
switched at the end.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
So again going back to what Mr. Sanders had to say, what
incentive then does Speaker of the House Gingrich have to bring
this to a vote? After all, his folks got their $20 billion. The
American people are left holding the bag. Four hundred and
thirty-five Congressmen never voted on it. Folks back home do not
know if they were for it or against it. What recourse is there
for a Member of Congress who feels like his constituents have
gotten the short end of this stick and that his constituents'
children have gotten the short end of the stick? After all, they
have already lent $20 billion. But it is my understanding, please
correct me if I am wrong, there is $35 billion in this fund. That
means there is $15 billion still to be left at the whim of the
President. To put that as a reference to the citizens of this
country, $35 billion is roughly what this Nation will spend on
its veterans this year. Yet, you are telling me, without a vote
in this body, up to $35 billion can be pledged by the United
States, with little or no guarantee that it will ever be repaid.
As a matter of fact, I have heard the Mexicans have made only one
debt payment one time in the past dozen years or so.
MS. KAPTUR:
If the gentleman will yield, what has been very interesting is if
you look back over the decade of the 1980s, this fund was used
every once in a while, especially around the 1982 Presidential
elections in Mexico, to prop up that Government. There were loans
made from this fund, $500 million, $1 billion. Then you went up
to 1988 when there was another Presidential election in Mexico,
and they used $1.1 or $1.2 billion out of the funds to prop up
the existing Government there.
Now the Presidential elections of this past August 1994: The fund
was used again over these numbers of years. Mexico has never
really paid back its money. It has refinanced its debt, which is
getting larger and larger and larger.
That is like if you had a credit card and you never paid the
principal and you just kept adding more and more debt and then
you were charged a higher interest rate.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
So if you would explain to the Members who might still be
watching, what is it that you are trying to accomplish tomorrow?
MS. KAPTUR:
What we are trying to accomplish tomorrow is to give the 435
Members of this House a chance to vote against the Mexican rescue
package. We have essentially been muzzled. The executive branch,
in conjunction with the leadership of this institution, went
around the other 434 Members of the Congress of the United
States.
We want our chance to vote.
MR. DeFAZIO:
Mr. Speaker, if the gentlewoman will continue to yield, I would
like to clarify, I think that we do not even have to characterize
it in exactly that fashion. We are asking the basic questions
regarding the extension of these credits to Mexico. How much
money is involved? What risks are there for the U.S. taxpayer?
And the series of interrogatories, someone could vote in support
of our resolution tomorrow, not having made up their mind but
saying as a representative of the people they need more
information.
So I would say that the Members who would support our resolution
would be both Members who already feel that they have enough
information to say no to the bailout for Mexico, but I would say
for the other Members of this body, I cannot imagine that any
single person in this body who has not had those questions
answered could vote in support of it.
I can see where you could still have an open mind and say, I
would like to know what risks we have, how much it is costing,
what the terms are, what our exposure is. But we do not have
that. So I would characterize the vote tomorrow a little
differently.
MS. KAPTUR:
The gentleman is correct. If one reads the resolution, it asks
for us to have the constitutional authority retained here as we
would hope we could tomorrow, and then it asks the Comptroller
General to report back on the specifics of the package that was
negotiated by the administration. I think the gentleman from
Mississippi would like to comment.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
I wanted to get back to something the gentleman from Vermont
mentioned, when he said that Wall Street was all in favor of
NAFTA and Wall Street was all in favor of the bailout.
In fact, former U.S. Trade Representative, Ms. Carla Hills, who
used to come regularly up to Congress and tell us what a great
deal NAFTA was, has written an article for the Washington Post
saying we have to bail out these poor people.
It was funny that just 1.5 years ago, when Ms. Hills came before
the Merchant Marine Committee and I brought to her attention that
a lot of shrimpers in the gulf coast, a lot of people in the
garment plants would probably lose their jobs as a result of
NAFTA, she said, "that is economic Darwinism. You just have to
have some people who are going to suffer when things like this
happen, but it is for the benefit of everybody that this
happens."
Would someone explain the wisdom to me why it is O.K. to let
somebody who makes $5.50 an hour working at a sewing machine all
day lose their job, but when some Wall Street investor loses a
couple of bucks on his investments down in Mexico, or maybe a lot
more than a couple bucks, that it suddenly becomes the
responsibility of the working people of this country, the very
same working people that you may have put out of work to bail
them out, to go on the line and cosign that loan? And above all,
why is it right that this huge expenditure, the equivalent of the
Veterans Administration budget, is being made available for the
President alone to spend and the Congress of the United States,
which is given the constitutional duty, not privilege but the
constitutional duty to see how our money is spent, what kind of
debts we incur, where is the Speaker? Where is the minority
leader? Is this not crazy that neither party's head is demanding
a vote on this and that 6, 7, 12 Members have to be the ones to
come forward and, by using the rules of the House, demand a vote
on this? It is just not right.
MS. KAPTUR:
It is interesting, because I come from the Midwest, midwestern
part of our country, as did the gentleman from Ohio, Congressman
Brown, who has joined us, the gentleman from Vermont, Congressman
Sanders, comes from the northeast, the gentleman comes from the
Deep South in Mississippi, the gentleman from Oregon, Mr.
DeFazio, it has been very interesting to me to see the breadth of
support inside this institution on this issue.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
If I may interrupt, on both sides of the aisle.
MS. KAPTUR:
On both sides of the aisle.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
There are, I believe as many Republican sponsors of this
resolution as Democrats. I think that is very important, because
I think a number of the Republicans are at odds with what their
leadership has done, which is, again, to deprive the majority of
the Members of this body just expressing this sentiment, yes or
no, this is a tremendous obligation.
I know it is more than three times the State budget for a whole
year of my home State.
MR. DeFAZIO:
If the gentlewoman would yield further, I was talking to a
freshman Republican Member today, and that freshman stated
unequivocally that they had done a whip of their own group and
there were 3 Members of the 73-Member Republican freshman class
who were prepared or leaning toward voting for the bailout of
Mexico.
So I think what has happened here is the leaders on both sides
can count, and they did count. When they counted, they found
probably out of this entire institution, the representatives of
the people of the United States of America, duly elected and all
equal under the Constitution, that probably less than 100 were
willing to vote for this bailout.
Now I guess what we are being told is we just do not know, we
just do not know the facts. Well, then, give us the facts. That
is what we are asking here. If there are facts that would change
my mind, bring them forward. But there is an absence of fact and
we are being treated as though we, as elected representatives of
the people, well, we just do not know better. This is something
that the big folks on Wall Street, the Federal Reserve decided in
secret, Robin Rubin, managing director of Goldman, Sachs and the
President behind closed doors, and public discussion is
foreclosed and votes of the people are prohibited.
MR. SANDERS:
My friend from Oregon is exactly right, as is my friend from
Mississippi.
My friend from Mississippi makes an interesting point, if he will
allow me to amplify his statement a little bit, that all over
this country there are people who work for $5 an hour and $6 an
hour and $8 an hour. And they go to work every day and many of
them do not have any health insurance, and we are told that the
Government does not have the money to provide health insurance.
Their jobs are uprooted and taken to Mexico or to China and we
are told, "Hey, that is the way life goes, that is what the
market system is about, no security, you are out on the street."
They pay unfairly too much in taxes, that is the way the system
goes.
And nobody is hearing their pain. And then suddenly our friends
from Wall Street, who by the way, let us be honest about this, in
the last few years have made out like bandits in their
investments in Mexico. In the city of Burlington, Vermont, people
put their money in the savings bank to make 3 percent, 4 percent,
5 percent, safe investment; in Mexico people were making 50
percent, people were making 100 percent of their investments. And
then suddenly, for reasons that we do not fully know, we know
some of them, the economy of Mexico took a tumble and their
investments went sour.
And how amazing it is, and I remember this when I was mayor of
the city of Burlington, it was not the poor people and the
working people who came into my office to ask for help. It was
always the powerful and the wealthy who tell us, "What can you do
for us?" and they are back again. These people who have the
money, who have made out like bandits, have suddenly taken a
loss.
Well, when you invest in a risky proposition, that is the nature
of the game, is it not? You stand to win a lot if things go well,
you stand to lose if things go badly.
I absolutely agree with my friend from Mississippi that it is an
outrage to go back to the working people in this country, some of
them who have lost their jobs from these very same folks who have
taken their plants to Mexico, and then to ask working people of
America to bail them out.
To pick up on the point from my friend from Oregon, what makes me
really sad is not only the horror of this whole agreement, but in
fact as a result of it there will be even more people giving up
on the democratic process. We just had an election recently and
62 percent of the people did not come out to vote. They no longer
believe that the Government of the United States represents their
interests. What do you think this action on the part of the
President is going to do to the political process?
You are standing up from Oregon, you are standing up from
Mississippi, you are standing up from Ohio, many of us are
standing up and the people are saying, "What difference does it
make? Thanks for standing up for us, but you don't have any
power. We send you here to represent us but you can't do anything
about it. Why do you want me to come out and vote for you or vote
for anybody else?"
I think one of the other aspects about this agreement which
disturbs me is not only the agreement itself, which we disagree
with, but the process which denies the elected officials of this
country to stand up and do what is best for their districts.
MS. KAPTUR:
Mr. Speaker, I think the gentleman raises some excellent,
excellent points. I know that there are working people across
this country who feel that they have lost voice at the highest
levels of our Government.
What is equally disturbing to think about, Mr. Speaker, is that
for the people of Mexico who have no voice, the working people of
Mexico who have no voice, if our Government, and I think they
were in cahoots with the top leaders of Mexico, has now caused
the standard of living in Mexico to be cut by half, and it wasn't
very high anyway, there are people who are hungry and there are
people who are streaming across our borders now because our
Government was too greedy for some of the interests that
supported it and some of the top leaders in the Government of the
United States, then shame on us as the most powerful economic
force on this continent.
I yield to the gentleman from Mississippi [Mr. Taylor], who
wanted to make a comment.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
The only point I wanted to make, Mr. Speaker, and I wanted to get
back as to the very eloquent delivery by the former mayor of
Burlington, could he not just vote against the appropriation for
this when it comes up?
MR. SANDERS:
If the gentleman knows, Mr. Speaker, if I had the opportunity to,
I could and I would, but I do not have the opportunity.
Unfortunately, as we have been discussing, we do not have that
opportunity.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
Mr. Speaker, isn't it interesting that every group -- there are
groups like the National Taxpayers Union, Common Cause, groups
that represent the defense industry, groups that represent the
homeless, everyone has a score card on how you voted. You hear
the Nation has incurred at least a $20 billion liability and
there was not even a vote on it, and there will not be a vote on
it next year or the following year or the following year, unless
something happens.
Mr. Speaker, I think the point all of us are trying to make, and
maybe not saying as well as we can, is that the reason we need
the information, the reason for the vote tomorrow morning, is
that, No. 1, we find out just how far our liability goes with
this; just what kind of assets, if any, the Mexicans have
pledged. I have heard they pledged oil revenues that have already
been pledged to pay other bills, so, therefore, they are really
not available to get our money back. What kind of track record do
the Mexicans have in paying things back? Where did this money
come from?
Isn't it interesting, Mr. Speaker, that while everything comes
before this body, from the amount of money we will have to mail
letters home to our constituents, the amount of money we will
spend on B-2 bombers, the amount of money we will spend on
housing and urban development, the amount of money we will spend
on veterans, all these things, sometimes much, much smaller
amounts dealing in just tens of thousands of dollars, we will get
an up-or-down vote on, but for $20 billion, neither the President
of the United States nor the Speaker of the House nor the
minority leader even thought we ought to have a vote. The only
chance we get to rectify that starts tomorrow.
MR. SANDERS:
If the gentlewoman will yield further, Mr. Speaker, the gentleman
makes a very important point. There almost seems to be an inverse
relationship between the amount of money that is being spent and
the level of discussion that takes place here.
We are seeing a whole lot of discussion on the National Council
on the Humanities and Public Broadcasting, right? Every day,
people are down here, some on one position, some on the other. It
is a matter of a few hundred million dollars.
What we are talking about is more than $20 billion, and as of
this moment, we do not have a vote on that, and that is clearly
an outrage.
MR. DeFAZIO:
If the gentleman will continue to yield, Mr. Speaker, in an
answer to the gentleman's earlier inquiry, there has not been a
vote on an appropriation for the Economic Stabilization Fund
since 1934, 60 years since an appropriation has been voted for,
yet the fund has continued to garner money through Treasury
withdrawals, through having money printed, and they exchange some
sort of bizarre notes which they obtain from the International
Monetary Fund. They give them to our Treasury in exchange for
dollars which the Treasury orders printed at the Mint.
If you want to talk about creating something out of nothing but
obligating the American people, and if Alan Greenspan is
concerned about inflation, how about the inflation that is caused
when you just run the presses overnight, running out whatever the
largest denomination of bills is, I don't know, a thousand
$10,000 bills, so we can shovel that money over to the Economic
Stabilization Fund, so we can send it to Mexico, or so that we
can secure the loans of Mexico?
Also, Mr. Speaker, the gentlewoman put together an excellent list
in response to your query here. I have heard a little bit about
this "We will guarantee these funds with the oil revenues." There
is a list here put together by the gentlewoman from Ohio [Ms.
Kaptur].
The gentleman is right, those funds are already 100 percent
committed. In fact, they are so committed that the Mexican oil
company has not been able to invest any money in exploration or
maintenance, because their funds are so over committed already.
You go through the list: Pemex bonds, 7.75 percent; French
francs, $750 million; Euro notes, Pemex, 8.375; $400 million,
Austrian bond, dated July 23, 1993, due 1998. The list goes on
and on and on. They are already well in hock for any oil they can
pump until their supplies are exhausted, and we are going to take
security out of this? You can't get blood out of a turnip.
MS. KAPTUR:
If the gentleman will yield on that, Mr. Speaker, Oil and Gas
magazine also reported about that by the end of this decade, by
1997, 1998, 1999, Mexico will be a net importer of oil because
the number of barrels she has been able to produce has been cut
in half, and because capital investment has not been able to be
made in capital plant, and because of instability among the
workers in the oilfields in Mexico, where conditions are just
terrible.
Mr. Speaker, I think any wise investor would question that, oil
being used as collateral.
If I might respond to the gentleman from Vermont [Mr. Sanders],
who raised a good point, when it is a small item involving the
budget, we get tied up in knots here, right?
When we are talking about $20 or $40 billion or however much the
American people will be on the line, it is like the Stealth
bomber. It goes through here, nobody saw it, we didn't vote on
it. It happened, it is a happening in America, but we didn't have
anything to do with it.
Mr. Speaker, I remember when the President came up here with his
State of the Union speech. He didn't like the fact that the
Department of Agriculture had spent a few thousand dollars trying
to eliminate ticks. He spent a long time talking about ticks.
If you come from a rural area, a lot of my district is rural,
that can be a pretty significant problem for people. In fact, we
had one gentleman here in Congress, Berkeley Bedell, who had to
leave Congress because he got Lyme disease. If you know anything
about what can happen, it is a pretty serious area to be doing
research on, so I didn't quite understand why he picked that
particular few thousand dollar expenditure out.
Here we are talking about an enormous amount of money, and the
gentleman from Mississippi [Mr. Taylor] said, "Could we vote on
it in the Committee on Appropriations?"
I asked one of the subcommittee chairs of Appropriations, "Will
this come up before your subcommittee this year? Will we get a
vote? How will we get a vote on this?"
He said, "Well, you know, yes, the Treasury Department is under
our sub-committee's jurisdiction, but this particular fund, I
guess it is more like foreign aid, so we don't think it would
come under us."
This is the kind of fund, it is like mercury. If you have ever
seen mercury and you try to put your finger on it, it keeps
moving around. You can't pin it down, really; $20 billion, maybe
$40 billion, and it is rising every day.
So here we stand, at 9 o'clock at night Washington time, trying
to say it is our responsibility to vote on this kind of money,
and putting our taxpayers at this kind of risk.
I yield to the gentleman from Mississippi.
MR. TAYLOR of Mississippi:
Again, Mr. Speaker, I would like to point out that in the past
couple of weeks this chamber has taken some steps toward getting
our financial house in order.
Regardless of where you stand on it, the House has passed a line-
item veto. The Speaker as we speak is holding a press conference
bragging about how that is somehow going to save the House of
Representatives from itself, but we passed it.
A few weeks ago we passed the balanced budget amendment, which I
supported, because I think we have to be accountable. We passed
earlier on the first day a resolution calling for an audit of
every single House office and every single budget within the
House of Representatives.
But going back to what Mr. Sanders says, if it makes sense and
the Speaker will support an audit for a congressional office that
has a budget of about $600,000, don't you think he would support
an audit of a fund that has $35 billion in it; we think $35
billion, because no one really knows for sure, and it is the
taxpayers' money. It is not the Speaker's money, it is not the
money of the gentleman from Vermont [Mr. Sanders], and it is
certainly not my money.
But don't the taxpayers deserve to know where it came from, where
it is going, and don't they deserve an up-or-down vote of their
elected representative on how this money ought to be spent,
especially when our Nation's veterans are being told, "There is
not enough room in the military hospitals for you;" especially
when every university within short order in the continental
United States is going to get a letter saying "Don't ask for as
much money as you got last year, money is tight;" especially when
highway funds are getting ready to get cuts; especially when
everybody's State's budget, at least the money they receive from
the Federal Government, is going to get cut?
How on Earth can we say domestically we want all you people to
share in the pain, but if you are south of the Rio Grande, or if
you happen to be a big shot up on Wall Street, here is a blank
check for $20 billion, and here is $15 billion more when you need
it? And the vote tomorrow morning is the only chance the people
in this body are going to get to have an accounting on that.
I hope the Speaker will rule that this resolution is in order.
But if he does not rule it is in order, then we have got to
wonder whose side is he on. Is he on the side of accountability
or is he on the side of hiding all of this from the public?
I had an interesting call today from an Under Secretary of the
Treasury, and he will meet with a number of us tomorrow morning.
Interestingly enough, he said, "You know, I can't give you all
that information publicly." Why? I can understand a military
secret being kept from the public, we would not want our enemies
to know our capabilities of our weapons or troop strengths, but
why should not the public know how their money has been invested
and where it has been invested and what kind of return they have
on it, and what kind of promise we have to get this money back?
That troubles me. That is sort of like the old Washington
mentality, "We know it all and those folks back home don't know."
Tomorrow morning, the Members of this body will decide who they
are with, whether they think the people of America are smart
enough to know and ought to know where their money is coming
from, and where it is going, or whether they just think a couple
of guys, the Speaker, the President, the minority leader, a
couple of guys from the Treasury Department, whether they think
they alone ought to have the responsibility for $35 billion. That
is really what the vote tomorrow morning is all about.
No. 1, I would certainly encourage the Speaker to rule that this
resolution is in order so that we can have a vote on it. But, No.
2, if he decides that he will not rule it in order, then I think
he ought to at least be man enough to give us an hour to decide,
to make our pitch in front of the full body before any sort of a
motion is made to table it [i.e. kill it], because the people of
America deserve to know what in the heck is going on, and they
deserve an opportunity to fix this problem.
I want to thank the gentlewoman and both gentlemen for their
time.
MS. KAPTUR:
I want to thank the gentleman from Mississippi for being the lead
sponsor of this privileged resolution. The people of Mississippi
should be very proud of the gentleman, an independent, strong-
minded Member who stood up to the most powerful interests in
America, both political and economic.
In response to something the gentleman said, let me just mention
that I received a letter this week from a woman from Coral
Gables, Florida. She supports us in our efforts to get a vote on
this measure tomorrow. She sent this beautiful letter really
saying the people of America understand what is going on and
encouraging us in our efforts to get at the truth and to get the
figures for the American public.
But it was very interesting. She attached a letter to her letter
to me that had been written to her by the Chairman of the Banking
Committee in the House 2 years ago, Congressman Henry Gonzalez.
In this letter, and she even highlighted it in yellow ink for me,
she quotes some of his statements which I think are so
instructive I wanted to read them tonight, in which he said that
during NAFTA, the NAFTA debate, that he endeavored to bring out
that NAFTA was more than just a trade agreement. It is a free
trade and finance agreement. And he underlined finance. And he
was concerned that the finance and banking portions would turn
out to be the driving force, backed by the largest banks and
financial interests in this hemisphere. And he said NAFTA will
have profound implications for the safety and soundness of the
U.S. banking and financial services industries, the integrity of
the basic banking laws of this country and counteraction against
international money laundering.
Now that NAFTA has passed he said the stage may also be set for
another savings and loan style bailout as United States bankers
pursue risky investments in the unregulated Mexican market.
To his letter he then attached even more lengthy hearings that he
has held in his committee. I just want to read one paragraph here
by two gentlemen, Mr. Niko Valance and Mr. Andres Penaloza, who
testified before his committee that the omission of an exchange
rate stabilization mechanism in NAFTA was deliberate and a
mistake. Mr. Valance argued that without an established exchange
rate, stabilization mechanism, it is possible for foreign
corporations to exert pressure on the Mexican Government to
devalue the peso, thus lowering wages in terms of other
currencies.
In addition, Mr. Davidson cautions that the relatively volatile
currency in Mexico poses increased potential exchange and
interest rate risks to U.S. financial institutions. The fact that
these issues are not addressed in NAFTA was of considerable
concern to many of the witnesses.
MR. DeFAZIO:
If the gentlewoman will yield, it is interesting to hear those
statements from 2 years ago, because we have heard most recently
from the proponents of NAFTA, the apologists for NAFTA, the
Secretary of the Treasury and others, that no one could have
anticipated the circumstances. But yet the gentlewoman is saying
that letter from the chairman of the Banking Committee, a
neighbor to Mexico who lives just over the border, who
understands that country well and is sympathetic to the needs of
that country, he discerned these problems. What was the date on
that letter?
MS. KAPTUR:
The date on the letter was December 6, 1993, but the respective
sections from the *Congressional Record* were dated November 15,
1993, remarks by Mr. Gonzalez on NAFTA, page H9661.
MR. DeFAZIO:
That is absolutely extraordinary. So perhaps a rational person
could have anticipated that the peso was overvalued, that there
were problems with political manipulations of the currency values
in Mexico, and, in fact, that inextricably tying the fate of our
economy to Mexico, which seems to be what our administration is
telling us, was a mistake.
I would ask the gentlewoman if she noticed the statement in the
Washington Post last weekend where the Speaker said there was a
relationship between the minimum wage and the value of the peso
in Mexico and Mexican workers, and said he was hesitant to
support an increase in the minimum wage in the United States of
America for people who work in this country because that would
probably drive more jobs across the border.
So we have seen the value of the wages in Mexico, which were
pitiful to begin with compared to U.S. wages, dropped by 50
percent, and now we have to withhold any increase in the standard
of living for the people of the United States because we might
lose yet more manufacturing jobs to Mexico.
What happened to the promise of hundreds of thousands of jobs in
America as we sold goods to the Mexican people? I am puzzled.
MR. SANDERS:
Mr. Speaker, if the gentlewoman will yield, in Sunday's
Washington Post Raul Avila, president of the National Maquiladora
Industry Council, said that during the first 10 months of 1994
maquiladora employment increased 6.2 percent, over 600,000
employees, and importantly enough, as the gentlewoman has just
indicated, "The industry forecasts the opening of another 600
assembly plants this year."
MR. DeFAZIO:
If the gentlewoman will yield, that, I believe, was because of
the drop in the value of the peso.
MR. SANDERS:
The gentleman is exactly right. With cheaper labor it becomes a
better investment in the maquiladoras, and we can expect more
American companies to be going down there.
The gentleman and the gentlewoman raised interesting points a
while ago. I am a member of the Banking Committee that dealt with
the S&L fiasco, and as my colleagues will recall the concept "too
big to fail." Do my colleagues remember that concept? What too
big to fail means is that the taxpayers of America were obligated
to bail out very, very large banks because if they failed, the
repercussions of that failure were supposedly so great that it
would have been worse than bailing them out.
I would like my colleagues to comment on this thought. It seems
to me that that is precisely what is happening with regard to
Mexico. We are now asked, well, not asked, but the President is
proposing to put $40 billion of loan guarantees into Mexico.
Maybe the President is right and we do not know. Maybe, in fact,
this will improve the Mexican economy, everything will work out
well, and there will not be a loss of taxpayer money. That may be
true.
But let us look at the other side of the story. Maybe in fact the
Mexican economy will not improve and we will lose that $40
billion. What I would like to ask my colleagues is this: Is it
not possible that a year from now or 2 years from now a President
will come back and say we have got to provide even more loan
guarantees to Mexico because we already have $40 billion in the
hopper there; we cannot afford to lose that. We have to protect
that investment and, therefore, we need to put even more money
into Mexico?
And I think the implications of that are very, very frightening.
This Congress and this President are having a difficult enough
time running the American economy that we know something about on
behalf of American workers. We are not doing very well at that.
The idea that we have the knowledge or the ability to sustain the
Mexican economy, upon which we are dependent, is really quite
beyond me.
But I am afraid that we are going to have this too-big-to-fail
concept once again. Then we are going to have to pump more and
more money into Mexico, because if it fails, then we have lost
all the money we put into them last year.
MR. DeFAZIO:
I guess to bring it down to something smaller than billions, I
think I heard very early on in my life and the old saw, you know,
"If you owe the bank $1,000 and you cannot pay, you have got a
problem. If you owe the bank $100,000 and you cannot pay, the
bank has got a problem." That is where we are at here.
It is not only ultimately an obligation of the economic
stabilization fund, and it does occur in here that losses can be
incurred, and those losses would have to be made up, but also the
interest earnings, gains or losses of the economic stabilization
fund are reflected in the budget of the United States of America.
So if the economic stabilization fund loans to Mexico, $20
billion or so to Mexico go bad, then suddenly we are told that
not only do we have to come up with the money but that counts as
$20 billion more deficit for the United States of America.
MS. KAPTUR:
On that point, if you look at what we are spending on as a
Nation, the very first set of categories have to do with Social
Security, and especially Medicare, the cost that the taxpayers
subsidize Medicare. Defense is a large expenditure. Then comes
interest rates. Right after that, the fourth largest category of
spending in this Government is to pay the interest on the savings
and loan bailout which totals over $1 trillion. Our children's
children will be paying for that.
So when we get in these debt financing arrangements, what we are
talking about is obligating the people of our country so far down
the road you can hardly even see the end of it.
But in this situation with Mexico, we are not talking about money
we owe to ourselves. We are talking about money that is owed to
investors and creditors to foreign nations. This is a very
different animal than that exchange stabilization fund was meant
to be used for in the past.
I think what we are seeing is a different form of foreign aid,
which does not have to be voted on here in the Congress, and that
is not how a democracy should function or a democratic republic
should function. We should have the debate here. We as a people
must make a decision about what our relationship is to various
countries around the world.
MR. SANDERS:
My recollection -- and help me out here -- is that foreign aid
that we do vote on is about what, $15 or $16 billion?
MS. KAPTUR:
That is right.
MR. SANDERS:
There is a lot of debate. Many people throughout this country
think that is too much.
MS. KAPTUR:
Half of that is weapons.
MR. SANDERS:
All right. What we should appreciate is that this loan guarantee
to Mexico puts us at risk for over double what our entire foreign
aid package is today. Is that correct?
MS. KAPTUR:
That is correct. The gentleman is correct. I kept listening to
the President when he said, "Oh, this is not anything serious.
This is just cosigning a loan." I would say to the gentleman from
Oregon and the gentleman from Vermont what if someone came up to
you and said, "Would you sign a loan with me for $50,000? Right
now, sign it?"
MR. SANDERS:
For you, Ms. Kaptur, absolutely
MS. KAPTUR:
But maybe you do not know what my finances are like. I mean,
would you not want to know the credit history of that person,
what kind of assets the person had? And there is absolutely a
risk that something might go wrong. Cosigning the loan does not
absolve risk.
MR. SANDERS:
I was on a national television program the other day and one of
the proponents of this bailout was saying, well, the Mexican
economy is basically in good shape; they are having a short-term
cash flow problem. But basically it is strong. One of my
colleagues here talked about the national debt of Mexico. Is, in
fact, the Mexican economy strong and stable?
MS. KAPTUR:
The Mexican economy is not strong and stable, and the nation is
not politically stable, which is why there is all of this moving
up and down of the value of the peso. Mexico owes somewhere
between $160 and $200 billion. That is with a "b". That is in
public debt that is owed to other creditors. This is only one
small piece of it. This is probably the piece that they thought
they might be able to bite off without too many people
disagreeing, but there is a lot more money owed, and then inside
Mexico, because of the strange relationship between their private
sector and their public sector and their banks, there are all
kinds of debts internal to Mexico, and with interest rates going
up there and with the inflation rates going up, it is a very
unstable economic situation inside of Mexico.
The value of their money has just been cut in half. Lots of
businesses there have loans. The relationship of those businesses
to their banks, to the inflation rate, et cetera, is a very
unstable situation, and the largest revenue generator to the
Government is Pemex, the oil company.
Over, I think, nearly half the revenues of that Government are
generated by Pemex, so that is another place that the oil
revenues are pledged as collateral to their own Government.
I happen to believe that Mexico's main problems are not economic
but, rather, social and political; in other words, if you could
get a system there that operated in a more democratic fashion,
could you begin to put the pieces in place of an economic order
that shared the wealth with the vast majority of people rather
than just a few people on top.
MR. SANDERS:
The main point I wanted to make very briefly is that it is not
for sure that this $40 billion loan guarantee is without
significant risk, and that is the main point I wanted to make.
MS. KAPTUR:
It is absolutely with significant risk.
MR. DeFAZIO:
I think this was a question I asked very early on when I was
contacted, when I filed my legislation to withdraw from NAFTA.
They brought up all of these concerns about how it would further
destabilize the economic situation. They said we are only
cosigning, and I said, well, I understood if someone had
impeccable credit they would not need a cosigner. Usually you
want a cosigner because no one else wants to extend you credit,
and they think maybe you would not be good for it. If Mexico's
credit is so great, I suggest they go to the same Wall Street
financiers who have made 20- to 50-percent interest, nice rate of
return, and perhaps say, "Look, you have been making a lot of
money down in Mexico, how about extending some loans on favorable
terms, maybe only 15-20 percent interest per year as opposed to
what we have been paying you, still better than you can get
generally in the United States stock market, S&P index, United
States Treasury, better than you can get anywhere else."
I would assume the Wall Street financiers, thinking there is no
problem, if they want the Government to cosign, why do not they
just do it directly? Why do not they do it themselves? They are
telling us we will make money on this. The taxpayers might make
money on it. Might lose $40 billion on it, but, this is a river
boat gamble. We are river boat gamblers with $40 billion of
assets of the United States of America that belong to the people
of this country. I do not think so. That is not our role here.
Let the people on Wall Street be the river boat gamblers, not the
people on Main Street.
MS. KAPTUR:
I am telling you, if those people on Wall Street and in the banks
around this country made as risky investments as this group did
down in Mexico, our entire banking system would be in a state of
collapse.
MR. SANDERS:
Essentially what we want is two things. We need far more
information about this bailout and, second of all, and most
importantly, we want the U.S. Congress, which presumably was
elected to represent the American people, to be able to vote this
thing up or down, and in my view, the Congress would vote it
down.
Now, I think if the American people are upset about this process,
it is terribly important that they stand up, they tell the
President and the Republican leadership that they understand what
is going on, that they want a vote on the floor of the House,
they want the Members of Congress to represent their interest and
not put $40 billion at risk.
So we hope very much that the people will stand up, fight back,
and start calling their Members of Congress, the President's
office, and the leadership to demand a vote on this important
issue.
MS. KAPTUR:
I want to thank the gentleman from Vermont [Mr. Sanders] for
joining us this evening, the gentleman from Oregon [Mr. DeFazio],
the gentleman from Mississippi [Mr. Taylor], and the gentleman
from Ohio [Mr. Brown].
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
*USA Today*, Feb. 8, 1995, very tiny item: Mexico Plan Foes Fail:
Opponents of President Clinton's $20 billion rescue plan for
Mexico's embattled peso failed to dramatize their opposition
through a resolution seeking to reassert Congressional authority
over government spending. Critics lost a 288-143 floor vote that
would have allowed debate on the matter. -- Juan J. Waite.
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
*Washington Times*, National Weekly Edition, Feb. 20-26, 1995:
House will debate peso bailout: In a sharp reversal, House
Republican leaders will accede to demands from GOP freshman [and
others] and allow full floor debate on President Clinton's $47.5
billion bailout plan, which bypassed Congress.
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
*NBC News*, Bill Moyers commentary, Feb. 21, 1995 -- a good
commentary in which Moyers asks good questions about the bailout.
But notice that the commentary and the questions arrive after the
thing is already a *fait accompli*.
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
[Copies of The Congressional Record are normally available for
viewing at your local library.]
Brian Francis Redman bigxc@prairienet.org "The Big C"
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Coming to you from Illinois -- "The Land of Skolnick"
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