Rubio-Led Initiatives Pass Senate Foreign Relations Committee

Source: United States Senator for Florida Marco Rubio

During a Senate Committee on Foreign Relations business meeting, two bills authored or co-led by U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) were favorably reported and now head to the full Senate.

  • “It’s in our national and regional security interests to firmly support Taiwan, a valued ally of the United States. Congress must continue to closely monitor the CCP’s hostile acts against our democratic ally and remain firm in our strategy to deter any aggression against Taiwan.”

  • As the Committee on Foreign Relations favorably reported the bipartisan International Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act, we are reminded of the urgent global crisis that human trafficking represents. This bill will provide important tools to better combat this crime and hold perpetrators accountable. I urge my Senate colleagues to swiftly pass this legislation.”— Senator Rubio

  • Taiwan Protection and National Resilience Act of 2023: The bill would require the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), the Department of Commerce, the Department of State, and other federal agencies to report to Congress on the United States’ non-kinetic options to both prepare for, and respond to, a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) attack on Taiwan, including opportunities to sanction the CCP and preempt Beijing’s retaliatory measures. Senator Gary Peters (D-MI) is an original cosponsor. Representatives Chris Smith (R-NJ) and Brad Schneider (D-IL) led the House companion.

ICYMI: Rubio Slams Bureaucrats Bullying Colleges to Go Woke

Source: United States Senator for Florida Marco Rubio

Education Bureaucrats Are Trying To Bully Schools Into Going Woke
U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL)
June 8, 2023
Daily Caller

Wokeness has penetrated virtually every institution in America. School accrediting agencies are no exception. Increasingly, they are demanding that schools incorporate DEIA into their policies and curricula—or else….
 
This poses obvious threats to free speech. Conservatives are already close to 100 percent underrepresented in the academy. When DEIA is forced on every college, liberals will feel all the more justified in censoring their political opponents on campus….
 
But censorship isn’t all we have to fear from DEIA. The more accreditors force leftist ideology on colleges, the more those colleges will stray from their academic mission. Because every dollar, every second spent on political indoctrination ultimately detracts from real education…. America is in the midst of a conflict with the Chinese Communist Party that will define the 21st century. We need educated citizens to counter Beijing’s ambitions, not armchair ideologues.
 
To be frank, the challenges of the 21st century also require less emphasis on college in general and greater investment in alternative pathways, such as apprenticeships and vocational training…. But college will remain an important part of our education system, and it needs protecting. 

That’s why Senators Rick Scott (R-FL), Mike Lee (R-UT), and I have introduced the Fairness in Higher Education Accreditation Act, a measure to prevent accreditors from using the presence of a DEIA office, or the lack thereof, as a criterion for school accreditation….
 
[I]n the end, this isn’t about politics. It’s about preserving free speech and ensuring quality education for future generations. That’s something all Americans should support—and it’s vital to the national interest.

Read the rest here.

English/ Spanish: Rubio, Kaine Introduce Groundbreaking Legislation to Confront Nicaraguan Crisis

Source: United States Senator for Florida Marco Rubio

U.S. Senators Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Tim Kaine (D-VA) introduced bipartisan legislation which would extend the U.S. government’s authority to impose sanctions on the Nicaraguan regime through December 31, 2028. The bill would also expand sanctions to include Nicaraguan officials responsible for violations of the human rights of religious believers, direct the U.S. State Department to enforce sectoral sanctions, and direct State to work with allies and partners to stop providing investment to Nicaragua through the Central American Bank for Economic Integration (CABEI).

The bill builds upon the Nicaragua Human Rights and Anticorruption (NICA) Act of 2018 and the Reinforcing Nicaragua’s Adherence to Conditions for Electoral Reform (RENACER) Act of 2021 which authorize sanctions and other international pressures against the criminal and oppressive Ortega-Murillo dictatorship. 

Following Ortega’s wave of violence, repression, arbitrary arrests, and forceful exiles after the 2022 sham elections, the U.S. must develop a cohesive plan to address the criminal nature of the Ortega-Murillo regime.  

  • “The decision made by the criminal Ortega-Murillo regime to completely undermine the presidential election process in 2022, as well as their decision to force into exile nearly all of Nicaragua’s opposition and actively repress members of the Catholic Church, indicates that the regime’s vile nature continues to grow. U.S. policy towards Nicaragua should no longer be the same, we must implement policies that respond to the current reality.” – Senator Rubio

  • “The decline of democracy in Nicaragua under President Ortega drives irregular migration and harms the stability of our hemisphere. This bill addresses the corruption and human rights abuses of the Ortega regime by imposing tougher sanctions on individuals and institutions that have cracked down on civil society organizations, targeted the Catholic Church, and silenced Nicaraguans who have spoken out against these abuses, including individuals like Bishop Rolando Álvarez, who was stripped of his Nicaraguan citizenship, sentenced 26 years in jail, and labeled by the Ortega regime a ‘traitor to the homeland’ for rightly criticizing the regime’s crackdown.” – Senator Kaine

RUBIO Y KAINE PRESENTAN LEGISLACIÓN PARA ENFRENTAR CRISIS EN NICARAGUA

Los senadores estadounidenses Marco Rubio (R-FL) y Tim Kaine (D-VA) presentaron una legislación bipartidista que extendería la autoridad del gobierno de EE.UU. para imponer sanciones en contra del régimen de Nicaragua hasta el 31 de diciembre del 2028. El proyecto de ley también ampliará las sanciones para incluir a los funcionarios nicaragüenses responsables de violaciones a los DD.HH. de los creyentes religiosos. La ley también instruye al Departamento de Estado a implementar sanciones sectoriales y ordena al Departamento de Estado a que trabaje con aliados y socios para dejar de proporcionar inversiones a Nicaragua a través del Banco Centroamericano de Integración Económica (BCIE).

El proyecto de ley se basa en la ley NICA Act del 2018 y la ley RENACER del 2021 que autorizan sanciones y otras presiones internacionales en contra de la dictadura criminal y opresiva de Ortega-Murillo.

Tras la ola de violencia, represión, arrestos arbitrarios y exilios forzosos por parte de Ortega y Murillo después de las elecciones falsas de 2022, EE.UU. debe desarrollar un plan cohesivo para abordar la naturaleza criminal del régimen Ortega-Murillo.

  • “La decisión tomada por el régimen criminal de Ortega-Murillo de socavar por completo el proceso de elección presidencial en el 2022, así como su decisión de forzar al exilio a casi toda la oposición de Nicaragua y reprimir activamente a miembros de la Iglesia Católica, indica que la naturaleza vil de este régimen sigue creciendo. La política de EE.UU. hacia Nicaragua ya no debe ser la misma, debemos implementar políticas que respondan a la realidad actual”. – Senador Rubio

  • “El deterioro de la democracia en Nicaragua bajo el Presidente Ortega conduce a la migración irregular y perjudica la estabilidad de nuestro hemisferio. Este proyecto de ley aborda la corrupción y los abusos a los derechos humanos del régimen de Ortega al imponer sanciones más fuertes a los individuos e instituciones que le han puesto mano dura a organizaciones de la sociedad civil, que hacen de la Iglesia Católica un blanco, y que silencian a los nicaragüenses que han se han expresado en contra de estos abusos, incluyendo a individuos como el Obispo Rolando Álvarez, quien fue privado de su ciudadanía nicaragüense, sentenciado a 26 años en cárcel, y marcado por el régimen de Ortega como “traidor a la patria” por criticar justamente las medidas severas del régimen.” – Senador Kaine

Rubio Warns Colleagues of Shein Crimes

Source: United States Senator for Florida Marco Rubio

Shein, a fast fashion apparel company founded in China, exploits U.S. trade law and uses cotton linked to Uyghur slave labor in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region. In an attempt to protect its business and repair its disastrous reputation, the company has recently hired lobbyists in the U.S. to advocate on its behalf to Congress.

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), author of the bipartisan Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, sent a letter to his Senate colleagues urging them to join him in holding Shein accountable for their profits from Uyghur slave labor. 

  • “Shein is able to offer this array of products at rock-bottom prices not because of any particular competitive advantage, but because it steals intellectual property, infringes copyrights, exploits U.S. trade law, and uses fabric linked to Uyghur slave labor.

The full text of the letter is below.  

Dear Colleague:

I write to make you aware of actions by Shein, an apparel company founded in China that profits from Uyghur slave labor. Shein is hiring D.C. lobbyists to protect the trade loopholes that allow it to avoid accountability. No one should be fooled by Shein’s efforts to cover its tracks. Action is still needed to ensure that the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA; P.L. 117- 78) is fully implemented and enforced and that Shein’s trade tricks are eliminated.

Shein is one of largest “fast fashion” retailers in the world, valued at $66 billion. The “fast fashion” company is known for its vast, constantly changing inventory of cheap apparel, reportedly listing 6,000 new items for sale per day, on average.  Shein is able to offer this array of products at rock-bottom prices not because of any particular competitive advantage, but because it steals intellectual property, infringes copyrights, exploits U.S. trade law, and uses fabric linked to Uyghur slave labor.

Independent laboratory testing of Shein products has found that some are made with cotton from the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (XUAR), where the Chinese Communist Party is conducting an ongoing genocide of Uyghurs and other predominantly Muslim groups, which includes the use of forced labor. The UFLPA empowers U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to block products originating in the XUAR, or made under “labor transfer” programs that send Uyghurs to other parts of China. Yet, Shein products have so far avoided punishment and scrutiny. In part, that is because Shein ships small packages direct-to-consumer using a trade loophole known as de minimis entry. Shein abuses this entry category to avoid customs duties and inspections on its unethically produced products. Shein’s exploitation of de minimis entry prevents scrutiny under UFLPA, cheats taxpayers of customs revenue, and undercuts American competitors that play by the rules.

Shein knows its reputation is toxic, so now it is taking steps to clean up its image ahead of a potential initial public offering in the United States. It hired lobbyists from the firms Akin Gump and Hobart Hallaway and Quayle to protect its tax and trade loopholes. It relocated its headquarters from China to Singapore to escape scrutiny as a Chinese company, although its fabrics and garments are still made in China. Shein is even touting its own “third-party analyses,” which found that only some of its cotton comes from Xinjiang. This study amounts to an admission of guilt, yet incredibly, Shein presents it as evidence of good corporate citizenship.

Shein’s spin and legal maneuvering cannot hide its crimes. I will continue to work to enforce UFLPA, and to close the trade loopholes that allow Chinese firms to undercut American producers and escape accountability. I invite you to join me in these urgent efforts to hold accountable Shein and other companies that are complicit in genocide.

Sincerely,

Young, Colleagues Introduce Bill to Strengthen U.S. Technology Competitiveness

Source: United States Senator for Indiana Todd Young

June 08, 2023

WASHINGTON – Today, U.S. Senators Todd Young (R-Ind.), Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), and Mark Warner (D-Va.) introduced the Global Technology Leadership Act. This bipartisan legislation would establish an Office of Global Competition Analysis to assess how the United States fares in key emerging technologies – such as artificial intelligence (AI) – relative to other countries to inform U.S. policy and strengthen American competitiveness.

“This legislation will better synchronize our national security community to ensure America wins the technological race against the Chinese Communist Party. There is no single federal agency evaluating American leadership in critical technologies like artificial intelligence and quantum computing, despite their significance to our national security and economic prosperity. Our bill will help fill this gap,” said Senator Young.

“We cannot afford to lose our competitive edge in strategic technologies like semiconductors, quantum computing, and artificial intelligence to competitors like China. To defend our economic and national security and protect U.S. leadership in critical emerging technologies, we need to be able to take into account both classified and commercial information to fully assess where we stand. With that information, Congress can make smart decisions about where to invest and how to strengthen our competitiveness,” said Senator Bennet.

“Over the last few years the U.S. has made significant investments in key sectors like semiconductor manufacturing. But as the U.S. works to out-innovate our global competitors, it’s crucial that we have a meaningful way to track how our progress stacks up against near-peers like China. I’m proud to join this bipartisan effort to create a centralized hub that’s responsible for keeping tabs on these developments, which are critical to our economic and national security,”said Senator Warner.

The bipartisan Global Technology Leadership Act would establish an Office of Global Competition Analysis to bolster competitiveness by analyzing how the United States fares in critical technologies relative to other countries, informing policymakers and strengthening U.S. leadership in strategic innovation. 

The Office of Global Competition Analysis would assess U.S. technology competitiveness based on a fusion of intelligence and commercial data, which today are too often siloed in intelligence and civilian agencies, respectively. This has often left the United States blind to its relative capacity in critical technologies compared to other nations, like in the cases of 5G and semiconductors. Analysis that interrogates the entire U.S. ecosystem, including private sector dynamics, is critical to understanding threats and opportunities in strategic emerging technology, such as AI.

“The United States has a strong history of organizing to lead through challenging periods. To address post-World War II security concerns, the U.S. Government created the National Security Council. To address post-Cold War economic challenges, the U.S. Government created the National Economic Council. Today, the United States faces a new era of global technology competition and to remain the world’s leading technological power, we need to organize our government for this new competition. The United States must meet this challenge by creating an office to conduct critical technology analysis and provide the President and Congress with recommendations to act,” said Ylli Bajraktari, President and CEO of the SCSP Action Program and the Special Competitive Studies Project, and the former Executive Director, National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence.

“Effective monitoring of the global and domestic science and technology landscape is critical to our long term economic competitiveness. To my knowledge, no part of the U.S. government currently possesses a scalable approach for doing so. Sustained investment in data-backed analysis is critical to our national interest and continued global leadership in emerging technologies,” said Dewey Murdick, Center for Security and Emerging Technology, Georgetown University.

The legislative text of the bill is available here.



Cassidy Leads Bipartisan Call to Reauthorize PEPFAR, Address Mother-to-Child HIV Transmission

Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy

06.08.23

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), and Angus King (I-ME) led 18 colleagues in urging U.S. Department of State to reauthorize the U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and address mother-to-child HIV transmission in a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator and Special Representative for Health Diplomacy Ambassador Dr. John N. Nkengasong. The senators outlined the impact that PEPFAR has had over the last 20 years and the importance of maintaining the program for maternal and child health in Africa. PEPFAR has saved 25 million lives and been responsible for 5 million childhood HIV infections being averted.

“[W]e want to draw attention to one of the most significant remaining challenges to pandemic control: the continued high rate of HIV amongst pregnant women, and the attendant high rates of vertical transmission of the virus from mother to child,” wrote the senators. “The numbers are staggering, tragic – and reversible. In 2021, approximately 130,000 newborns were infected with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa.”

“The available maternal care is generally so poor and inaccessible that pregnant women in Africa make the usually rational decision not to seek it,” continued the senators. “The lack of quality maternal care in Africa can be fixed – and these mothers and their babies can be saved… [T]he tactical way to help them has also been established – through the Saving Mothers, Giving Life (SMGL) program.”

Through the SMGL program, maternal mortality was cut by 40% – and there was a 71% increase in treatment to prevent vertical HIV transmission. 

“The success that PEPFAR should have with implementing such a maternal care program will extend beyond the lives saved and pain ameliorated among African women and children. It will be strategically important to the United States. 40% of the world’s population will be African by the end of the century and our strategic competitors are investing comprehensively in the region. We know that the PEPFAR program remains one of our most potent soft power assets on this front,” concluded the senators. 

Read the full letter here or below.

This letter is supported by the African Mission Healthcare (AMH).

“On behalf of African Mission Healthcare, and as a doctor who has worked in HIV care and education for two decades in Sub-Saharan Africa, I want to thank the amazing bipartisan Senate coalition that made this advocacy effort possible. Despite PEPFAR’s many successes, far too many newborns in Africa are still being born with HIV—one million over the next decade if no changes are made to business as usual. We know how to bend the curve toward the elimination of maternal-to-child transmission, and this bipartisan call will help show the Biden Administration that there is support to do so. We must improve maternal health services to attract and retain pregnant women in antenatal care, thereby enhancing early HIV diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of transmission to babies,” said Dr. Jon Fielder, Chief Executive and Co-Founder of AMH. “This model—which the US government and its partners have already proven in Zambia and Uganda—will protect newborns from HIV and will save the lives of their mothers, both HIV-infected and -uninfected. The bipartisan group of Senators who endorsed this approach are helping to extend and expand the impact of PEPFAR, which is a triumph of United States moral leadership and American compassion.”

“This is America at its best. These Senators have shown their unwavering bipartisan support for PEPFAR, a program that has alleviated the suffering and saved the lives of so many while building lasting relationships for the United States. Now, with the same bipartisan consensus led by Senator Bill Cassidy, these Senators have committed to building upon the success of this life-saving program by advocating that pregnant women and their babies be provided quality maternal care that will allow them to become part of the healthcare system, providing them the services to both deliver their babies safely and HIV-free,” said Mark Gerson, Chairman and Co-Founder of AMH and Rabbi Erica, Board Member of AMH. These signatories have done so much to bring life and health to our most vulnerable; a contribution that will garner gratitude to the United States from millions abroad.  We at African Mission Healthcare are gratified to have been able to contribute the knowledge and insights we have garnered by working with so many doctors at Christian hospitals throughout Africa towards making this dream — of ensuring that women and their babies have a safe and healthy pregnancy and birth — a reality.”

Dear Secretary of State Blinken and Ambasador Nkengasong,

On the 20th anniversary of PEPFAR, we celebrate the program’s many successes, including 25 million lives saved and 5 million childhood infections averted. This effort, an example of American generosity and leadership, came at a time when Africa was reeling from the AIDS epidemic. Rising life expectancy over the past two decades can be traced to HIV treatment.

We enthusiastically endorse PEPFAR reauthorization, which benefits from strong bipartisan support. We also support the Administration’s commitment to ending HIV/AIDS as a public health threat by 2030. Accordingly, we want to draw attention to one of the most significant remaining challenges to pandemic control: the continued high rate of HIV amongst pregnant women, and the attendant high rates of vertical transmission of the virus from mother to child.

The numbers are staggering, tragic – and reversible. In 2021, approximately 130,000 newborns were infected with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa. Many of these newborns will die in the first years of life. The rest must endure a lifetime of care, which is expensive and difficult to execute. Nearly 1,000 adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) are infected every day. Only half of infected adolescent girls are on treatment. HIV-infected mothers are five times as likely to die of pregnancy-related causes as their uninfected peers.

The available maternal care is generally so poor and inaccessible that pregnant women in Africa make the usually rational decision not to seek it. Consequently, they do not receive genuine maternal care – and many go through pregnancy with HIV, and transmit the virus to their babies. The Principal Deputy AIDS Coordinator for PEPFAR Deborah von Zinkernagel was correct when she observed in 2014, “It’s no secret that maternal health and HIV are closely linked.” 

Despite 20 years of remarkable vision and execution by PEPFAR, these numbers remain stubbornly high. Unless something genuinely different is done, these women will continue to suffer with, die from, and transmit to their babies AIDS.

The lack of quality maternal care in Africa can be fixed – and these mothers and their babies can be saved. The framework is in the Administration’s recently published: “Reimagining PEPFAR’s Strategic Direction” – which identifies AGYW and children as top priority groups. And the tactical way to help them has also been established – through the Saving Mothers, Giving Life (SMGL) program.

SMGL, a successful five-year pilot program implemented during the Obama Administration with PEPFAR funding and infrastructure, offered a package of clinical interventions to address the “three-delays” that prevent pregnant women from receiving quality services: delay in the decision to seek care; delay in reaching care; and delay in receiving quality care. 

The impact was so profound and so immediate that Deborah von Zinkernagel remarked in 2014: “…the tremendous strides made through “Saving Mothers, Giving Life” in just one year give me — and all those who work with and support PEPFAR — great hope for our collective ability to improve maternal health as a critical component of achieving an AIDS-free generation.”

And the impact continued. Maternal mortality was cut by 40% – and there was a 71% increase in treatment to prevent vertical HIV transmission. These interventions cost less than $200 per year of life gained – less than the cost of HIV treatment for one year. 

A revived program based on the successes of SGML would include accessible and dependable antenatal care, interventions to address the four leading causes of maternal mortality (port-partum hemorrhage, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, obstructed labor and infection) and comprehensive emergency obstetric and newborn care. PEPFAR support would include medical supplies and consumables, equipment and the training of health workers. PEPFAR, uniquely and fortunately, has the clinical orientation, medical relationships, and reporting and accountability systems to deliver these critical services for these mothers and babies. 

The success that PEPFAR should have with implementing such a maternal care program will extend beyond the lives saved and pain ameliorated among African women and children. It will be strategically important to the United States. 40% of the world’s population will be African by the end of the century and our strategic competitors are investing comprehensively in the region. We know that the PEPFAR program remains one of our most potent soft power assets on this front. In a 2021 analysis in the US Army War College Journal, Chief Nursing Officer Michael Wissemann wrote: “Countries in sub-Saharan Africa with a PEPFAR program, compared with those countries that do not have the program, demonstrated three times the growth in UN human development index scores. They also showed a significant increase in opinion of the United States and a 40 percent reduction in political instability and violence. These effects are tied directly to the aid provided to 7.7 million Africans, through antiretroviral treatments.”

We thank you for your resolute commitment to the PEPFAR program and your consideration. We are confident that the clinical approach as outlined above will result in enormous numbers of pregnant women being treated for HIV and in their babies being born healthy – with humanitarian and strategic benefits for decades to come.

We look forward to your response. 

###

Cassidy Announces $2 Million in Hurricane Ida Relief

Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy

06.08.23

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA) announced that the Ochsner Clinic Foundation will receive $2,006,963.87 from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in hurricane relief. This grant will provide federal funding for damages to the Leonard Chabert Medical Center (LCMC) as a result of Hurricane Ida. 

“Our medical facilities are on the front lines providing much-needed care to our communities, especially during hurricanes,” said Dr. Cassidy. “This funding will help repair damages and prepare for future storms.” 

###



Cassidy, Coons, Colleagues Reintroduce Legislation to Provide Public with Transparency of Social Media Platforms

Source: United States Senator for Louisiana Bill Cassidy

06.08.23

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), Chris Coons (D-DE), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), John Cornyn (R-TX), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), and Mitt Romney (R-UT) introduced the Platform Accountability and Transparency Act (PATA), a bipartisan bill to increase transparency around social media companies. 

“It’s clear Big Tech companies will abuse their power when allowed to operate in the dark,” said Dr. Cassidy. “Congress needs the tools to hold these companies accountable. Our bill gives us transparency into data collection by social media companies.”

“Social media platforms shape the information that billions of people across the globe consume, but we still know far too little about how they operate and the impact they have on each of us and our society. Right now, Congress and the public have no way to verify whether or how safe these products really are,” said Senator Coons. “We cannot continue to let platforms grade their own homework. That’s why I’m introducing the Platform Accountability and Transparency Act, which will give the public a data-driven understanding of the effects that these platforms have on our children, families, democracy, and national security. This bipartisan bill is a crucial step that will help ensure social media regulation addresses the problems facing our communities today.”

“Social media companies have said: ‘just trust us,’ while putting profits ahead of users’ safety, privacy, and well-being for too long. It’s time to start holding these platforms accountable for the dangerous lack of transparency behind their algorithms,” said Senator Klobuchar. “Our bipartisan legislation will do just that, ensuring independent researchers can access platform data and better understand how their algorithms operate.”

“Social media platforms have given rise to new threats to our national security, our mental health, and our children, and we must better understand how these companies operate and their effect on society,” said Senator Cornyn. “This legislation would strengthen independent researchers’ access to data from social media companies, and I urge my colleagues in the House and Senate to support it.”  

“Social media platforms and their black box algorithms have fueled a mental health crisis in our country. By operating under a cloak of secrecy, Big Tech has been able to profit off the toxic content and addictive features it drives at users,” said Senator Blumenthal. “Sunlight is the best disinfectant, which is why the public and independent researchers deserve access to companies’ data and practices. I’m proud to join my colleagues in this effort to strengthen transparency online.” 

“The threat social media has on the well-being of our young people and our national security is becoming more and more evident,” said Senator Romney. “By increasing data access and transparency, this legislation will help parents, policymakers, and researchers better understand the impacts social media has on society, and allow Congress to craft policies that create a healthier online experience for children and all Americans.”

Background:

PATA is a multipronged bill that creates new mechanisms to increase transparency around social media companies’ internal data: 

  • Under PATA, independent researchers would be able to submit proposals to the National Science Foundation, an independent agency that approves research and development proposals across the sciences. If the requests are approved, social media companies would be required to provide the necessary data to the researchers subject to strict privacy protections. 
  • Additionally, the bill would require that platforms proactively make certain information available to researchers and the public on an ongoing basis, such as:
    • A comprehensive ad library;
    • Statistics about content moderation;
    • Real-time data about viral content; and
    • Descriptions of a platform’s ranking and recommendation algorithms.
  • The proposal would also protect researchers from legal liability that may arise from automatically collecting public-facing platform information if they comply with various privacy safeguards. 

This bill has been endorsed by the Council for Responsible Social Media, American Psychological Association, Mozilla, Children and Screens: Institute of Digital Media and Child Development, Fairplay, and Common Sense Media.  

“Transparency is a crucial goal in the push for responsible and accountable social media,” said Dick Gephardt, former U.S. House Majority Leader (D-MO) and Co-Chair of the Council for Responsible Social Media. “How can we truly address the challenges posed by social media without knowing the nature, scope, and scale of these problems? How can we safeguard our children, our communities, and our national security from online harms without fully knowing what we’re up against? PATA is the key to unlocking the black box of social media, and a necessary component of any social media reform.”

“Every day, Big Tech companies make decisions that affect our children, our communities, and ultimately, our democracy,” said Kerry Healey, former Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts (R) and Co-Chair of the Council for Responsible Social Media. “Social media is deeply embedded in our society, and yet, we know almost nothing about the policies and design choices of these platforms. The American public deserves to know how their personal data is being used and what impacts it has on their lives. PATA will ensure that these companies can no longer operate in secrecy.”

“The Platform and Accountability Act takes important steps to increase the ability of psychological scientists studying the impact of social media to gain access to data held by social media platforms,” said Mitch Prinstein, Ph.D., Chief Science Officer of the American Psychological Association. “This bipartisan legislation will increase our scientific understanding of this complex issue and enable caregivers, young people, and policymakers to mitigate the harmful impacts of social media use.” 

In January 2022, The Washington Post editorial board endorsed PATA – then in a discussion draft form – as a “step toward solving our social media woes” that would provide “safe harbor not only to participating academics but also compliant companies and [mandate] the creation of privacy and cybersecurity standards for the process.”

###

Schatz, Murkowski Lead Committee Passage Of Federal Indian Boarding Schools Bill

Source: United States Senator for Alaska Lisa Murkowski

06.08.23

WASHINGTON – U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-Hawai‘i), chairman of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, and U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), vice chairman of the Committee, led Committee passage of S.1723, a bill to establish the Truth and Healing Commission on Indian Boarding School Policies in the United States, and for other purposes. The Committee held a legislative hearing on an identical bill last year.

“For over a century, the federal government knowingly perpetuated violence and trauma with the goal of assimilating Native children by destroying family and communal bonds, their languages, their cultures, and their very identities. The impacts of this shameful history are felt by survivors and their descendants to this day,” said Chairman Schatz. “Without the guidance and support of Native communities across the country on this important bill, a culturally respectful and meaningful path to truth and healing would not be possible.”

“Today the Indian Affairs Committee took a monumental step towards addressing the dark legacy of the United States federal Indian boarding school policies and their impact on Native peoples and communities,” said Vice Chairman Murkowski. “This commission will help document what happened and then develop recommendations on how to heal from these harms. I commend the work of the committee staff and members for their efforts to address the calls for justice by advocates while making bipartisan improvements to the bill.  I look forward to advancing it through the Senate.”

“The federal government’s Indian Boarding School Policies caused unimaginable suffering and trauma that linger on in tribal communities today, and it is long overdue that the federal government fully reckon with this history and its legacy,” said Senator Warren. “I am glad that my Truth and Healing Commission on Indian Boarding School Policies Act was unanimously reported out of the Senate Indian Affairs Committee today – I look forward to the Senate further advancing this important bill.”

“We are grateful to Senator Warren for reintroducing this bill and to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs for working with us to make it even stronger,” said Deborah Parker (CEO), CEO of the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition. “The leadership from Senator Schatz and Senator Murkowski has been crucial in making this historic bill bipartisan.”

The Committee passed the bill with amendments reflecting feedback from over 100 survivors, descendants, Tribal leaders, advocates, churches, local governments, and experts, who provided testimony for the record following last year’s hearing.

Full bill text for S.1723, as introduced, is available here. Adopted amendments are available below.

The full video of the business meeting is available here.


Manchin, Graham, Blumenthal, Rounds Introduce Bipartisan Legislation to Transfer Illicit Assets to Aid Ukraine

Source: United States Senator for West Virginia Joe Manchin

June 08, 2023

Washington, DC – Today, U.S. Senators Joe Manchin (D-WV), Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) and Mike Rounds (R-SD) introduced the Transferring Illicit Assets to Ukraine Act to allow the Department of Justice (DOJ) to transfer more forfeited Russian assets to Ukraine.

“Defeating Putin and supporting the Ukrainian people against this ruthless and unjust war must remain our top priority,” said Senator Manchin. “This bipartisan legislation will authorize the DOJ to expand its ability to seize Russian assets and send them directly to Ukraine for defense and rebuilding. I am committed to bringing this legislation across the finish line to reaffirm our long-term commitment to the Ukrainian people and our leading role in the fight to defend democracy.”

“This is a crucial time for Ukraine. Our efforts to assist Ukraine in liberating their country from the Russian invasion and Senator Manchin’s asset forfeiture bill will allow us to transfer more forfeited assets from Putin’s cronies to Ukraine for them to apply to the war effort,” said Senator Graham. “A win-win for all.”

“Transferring assets seized from those aiding and abetting Putin’s barbaric invasion will help Ukraine defend and rebuild their homeland,” said Senator Blumenthal. “Our measure – targeting the ill-gotten profits of oligarchs, sanctioned companies, and others supporting Russia’s war machine – gives DOJ the tools it needs to embolden our allies. This is a critical time for Ukraine’s fight for freedom. I’m proud to join my colleagues in this bipartisan effort.”

“It is critical Ukraine is able to protect their country against Russia’s unjustified and illegal invasion,” said Senator Rounds. “By providing Ukraine with the necessary tools to defend themselves, we are helping to defend democracy. This bipartisan legislation paves an effective and efficient way for Ukraine to receive seized assets, which further strengthens their ability to fight back against Russian aggression.”

Under current authority, DOJ can only transfer to Ukraine assets forfeited from violations of select Russia-related sanctions. The first and only use of this authority occurred in February 2023, when Attorney General Merrick Garland authorized a transfer of $5.4 million forfeited from a sanctioned Russian oligarch. With expanded authority from Congress, DOJ could transfer far more assets from bad actors to support the Ukrainian people in their fight for freedom. This bipartisan legislation would allow the DOJ to transfer assets forfeited from violations of a wider range of economic countermeasures, such as export controls.

The Transferring Illicit Assets to Ukraine Act would:

  • Expand DOJ’s existing authority to apply to the proceeds of forfeited assets from any sanction or export control involving Russia or Belarus related to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine (including the 2014 invasion of Crimea);
  • Require a report from the Attorney General, Secretary of the Treasury, and Secretary of State outlining a plan for using this new authority; and
  • Require semiannual reports from these same entities on the use of this authority for the benefit of Ukraine.

The full text of the bill is available here.