Author Topic: Sen. Corker Credited With Asserting Congressional Power  (Read 485 times)

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Sen. Corker Credited With Asserting Congressional Power
« on: April 16, 2015, 01:29:48 am »
http://www.newsmax.com/PrintTemplate.aspx/?nodeid=638792


Newsmax
Sen. Corker Credited With Asserting Congressional Power
Wednesday, April 15, 2015 07:08 PM

By: Cathy Burke

Tennessee Republican Sen. Bob Corker is being credited with finessing one of the biggest congressional assertions of foreign policy power in years.

The Foreign Relations Committee chairman, helped by Democrats, steered legislation through his panel Tuesday to give Congress a major role in any final U.S.-Iran nuclear deal.

He did it old-school style, Defense One reports.

Just hours before the vote — as strong bipartisan support for the bill and a potential veto-proof majority became evident — the White House dropped its opposition to the bill when Democrats and Corker made several changes, declaring that what was once unacceptable was now a harmless procedural step.

Corker knew better.

"In spite of what may be being said by buildings down the street on the other end of Pennsylvania [Avenue], this legislation is exactly the congressional review we have been working on since Day One," Corker said.

The White House couldn't stop the bill's momentum, Defense One notes, and Corker conceded he didn't mind the administration's sudden embrace.

"Of course it was saving face. But listen: I’m glad they saved face and came on board," he said after the vote, Defense One reports.  The larger point was that it was "the beginning of a United States Congress, certainly a United States Senate, reasserting itself appropriately in foreign policy," he said.

Defense One notes that Corker's approach stands in sharp contrast to the brash tack taken by freshman Arkansas GOP Sen. Tom Cotton, who worked up a controversial letter to Iran’s leaders warning that a future president or Congress could junk a nuclear pact with Tehran.

Coker wouldn't sign the letter.

The Corker bill, in contrast, would give Congress the power to formally review the deal and thwart the suspension of congressionally imposed sanctions against Iran.

Senate GOP leaders plan to bring the bill to the floor, and the House will take it up after that, Defense One notes.
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