Although it’s dubious whether legislation expanding travel opportunities for Americans to go to Cuba will get through the Congress this year, Kathy Castor is pushing even further.
The Tampa Bay area Democrat said Tuesday that along with Minnesota Republican Tom Emmer, she is introducing the Cuba Trade Act of 2015 (HR3238). The bill would end the 54-year-old Cuba embargo and allow for private sector businesses to trade freely with Cuba, while prohibiting taxpayer money to be used on promotion or development of these new markets.
“The United States and Cuba have taken historic actions this year to set our countries on a more productive path forward for citizens of both nations and turn the page on the outdated 50-year policy of isolation,” Castor said in a prepared statement. “Today, I urge my colleagues to join me and Rep. Emmer in taking the next step to lift the embargo. This important step forward will advance human rights and lift the fortunes of families and entrepreneurs on both sides of the Florida straits. Lifting the embargo and reestablishing historic trade ties with Cuba will be a boost to our port and local small businesses in Florida. I look forward to working with my colleagues on both sides of the aisle to advance this policy of engagement that will not only provide an economic boost here at home, but will also help the Cuban economy and its people flourish.”
The legislation will no doubt be considered Dead On Arrival, but that’s not the point here. It’s to begin the conversation in Congress toward lifting the sanctions, which even Castor herself has admitted will take years to come. Most observers think it certainly won’t happen until Raul Castro is no longer in power. In fact, the Helms-Burton Act of 1996 requires a transitional government culminating in a democratically elected one, before the embargo is actually lifted.
What a democratically elected government looks like is not defined, but the law says that this includes releasing all political prisoners, dissolving the Cuban Department of State Security, and taking “appropriate” steps to return assets to U.S. citizens that the Cuban government confiscated after Jan. 1, 1959.
The conversation in Washington has already changed dramatically in the past few years, and while some don’t like that change in direction, it’s moving forward, and Castor has led the way,
In other news …
The Florida Legislature shrugged their shoulders Tuesday and said, essentially, screw it, the Supreme Court is going to rule against us later this year on redistricting Senate districts — let’s just go ahead and do it ourselves and get it done. Get ready for Special Session III starting in October.
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And former Florida U.S. Sen. Mel Martinez tells us why it would be awful for the GOP if Donald Trump decided to go third-party in next year’s presidential contest.
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Florida progressives are psyched that they’ve got an array of choices in Pam Keith and Alan Grayson for U.S. Senate.
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GOP Senate candidate Ron DeSantis wants the current IRS Commissioner fired, or he’ll lead the fight to impeach him.
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A Mason-Dixon poll released Tuesday shows the people who have been working all year to get a constitutional amendment passed on solar power are losing, while a group formed just two weeks ago is kicking butt. Huh?