Businesses to descend on DC for Ex-Im push
Nearly 700 businesses of all sizes will flood Congress this week to tell Congress to reauthorize the Export-Import Bank.
The coalition spans 41 states that will participate in nearly 400 Hill meetings — including some with House and Senate leadership, according to organizers.
Officials at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) helped organize the meetings.
Congress must reauthorize the bank before June 30 or it will shut down.
The meetings come as Tea Party groups like Heritage Action and American for Prosperity are urging lawmakers to oppose the Bank’s reauthorization.
Conservatives, led by House Financial Services Committee chairman Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas), say the bank is tantamount to corporate welfare and cronyism. But centrist Republicans and Democrats — backed by the business community — say that the bank helps sustain millions of U.S. jobs.
“Contrary to Chairman Hensarling’s continued belief, the Export-Import Bank is working. And because of that fact, so are hundreds of thousands of employees whose companies can compete and win in markets around the world — 15 of which are in the Chairman’s own district, supporting 377 jobs,” said Demetrios Halastaras, president of Mathew Marine in Houston, Texas, who will be part of the group on Capitol Hill this week.
At an August 2014 hearing on the bank, Hensarling criticized big businesses for making taxpayers pay for “foreign corporate welfare that advantages a handful of very successful and powerful politically-connected corporations.”
“Ex-Im doesn’t level the playing field; Ex-Im rigs it in favor of a few powerful Fortune 500 corporations that are the overwhelming beneficiaries of this program — Washington shouldn’t pick winners and losers,” Hensarling said.
Heritage Action delivered messages to offices urging them to ignore the business community’s message during the meetings.
“Americans didn’t give Republicans a historic House majority to hand out favors to K Street lobbyists and well-connected special interests,” the messages read, according to a copy obtained by The Hill. “The bank should be allowed to expire in June and Congress should focus on advancing policies that create opportunity for all.”
Supporters argue that the bank finances projects in emerging markets where the U.S. private sector won’t enter, helping keep U.S. businesses competitive against foreign competition from China.
Rep. Stephen Fincher (R-Tenn.) has introduced legislation with 57 other GOP co-sponsors that would extend the bank’s charter for five years with significant reforms to how its financial disclosures.
Hensarling, whose panel has jurisdiction over Ex-Im, has not said whether he will move the bill through his committee.
Democrats are working on a separate reauthorization bill that they will introduce this week, a source familiar with the bill said.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) will speak at a forum in Washington on Wednesday hosted by Bloomberg calling for reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank. Meanwhile, Sens. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) will have a press conference on Capitol Hill on Wednesday discussing the issue, too. Both have been prominent supporters of Ex-Im’s reauthorization in the past.
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