U.S.
House approves transportation bill with trade bank renewal
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[November 06, 2015]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of
Representatives on Thursday voted to pass a multi-year transportation
funding bill that also would revive the idled Export-Import Bank, but
final provisions are subject to negotiations with the Senate.
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The overwhelming 363-64 vote handed new House Speaker Paul Ryan
his first legislative victory. The measure authorizes federal
spending on road, bridge and rail transit infrastructure projects
for six years and provides guaranteed funding for three years, about
$339 billion.
Its passage takes EXIM, idled since the trade bank's charter expired
on June 30, a major step closer to being put back in business
offering loans and guarantees to support U.S. exports. Conservative
Republican critics of the trade finance agency have argued that EXIM
should be closed permanently because it provides unnecessary
"corporate welfare" to elite multinationals including Boeing Co and
General Electric Co.
The House bill renews EXIM's charter through Sept. 30, 2019, with
some reforms. That language is identical to the text of a
Senate-passed transportation bill, making EXIM nearly impossible to
exclude from negotiations to work out differences between the two
versions.
A number of proposed amendments aimed at curtailing the trade bank's
operations were defeated, including provisions to prohibit financing
help for countries with large sovereign wealth funds or for U.S.
exporters whose chief executives earn more than 100 times the median
U.S. wage.
A coalition of EXIM users said in a statement: "Any further changes
to Ex-Im would be undermining the will of the super-majority in both
chambers."
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Ryan, who opposes EXIM, hailed the transport bill, which included
votes on more than 100 amendments, as a sign of a "more open
process" that he will foster in the House, giving members more input
into legislation.
"This is a good start. It's a glimpse of how we should be doing the
people's business," Ryan told a news conference.
The biggest issue to be worked out with the Senate, however, is how
to pay for a funding shortfall from federal fuel taxes, which have
been unchanged since 1993.
One amendment passed in the House bill would liquidate the Federal
Reserve's current $29.3 billion capital surplus account and transfer
the money to the Treasury to be used for transportation projects.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Susan Heavey and Ken Wills)
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