Export-Import Bank Revived Again
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| Kimberly Reed, President, Export-Import Bank |
“The Export-Import Bank is corporate welfare, giving taxpayer subsidies to some of the largest, most politically connected companies in the U.S. and around the world,” Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., said in a statement provided to The Daily Signal beforehand.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., had set up votes this week on the three nominees for the Export-Import Bank’s board of directors. The five-member board has not been able to approve loans exceeding $10 million since 2015 because of three vacancies.
The Senate confirmed President Donald Trump’s nominations of Kimberly Reed as bank president and board chairman and Spencer Bachus and Judith DelZoppo Pryor as board members.
The votes were 79-17 for Reed, 72–22 for Bachus, and 77–19 for Pryor.
Conservatives in the House and Senate have struggled for years to reform or pull the plug on the 85-year-old bank.
Merely confirming more board members to provide a quorum is not enough, Toomey said.
“By voting to confirm three new Ex-Im board members without enacting any reforms, we will get more of the same,” the Pennsylvania Republican said. “However, this fight is not over. Ex-Im will need to be reauthorized later this year, and I am hopeful that will be an opportunity to impose meaningful and pro-taxpayer reforms on the bank.”
But in a tweet Wednesday, Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., praised the Senate’s efforts to revive Ex-Im.
“This is a big deal for US manufacturers who rely on the Ex-Im bank to help them export American-made products around the world,” Coons tweeted.
Jeffrey D. Gerrish, Ex-Im chairman and acting president, praised the Senate action in a press release from the bank.
“This is a great day for U.S. exporters, their workers, and their suppliers across the country,” Gerrish said, adding:
But Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, pushed back on that position in a speech Tuesday on the Senate floor.
“Many Americans might be surprised to learn that some of their tax dollars are going directly to Chinese companies,” Lee said. “And that some of those dollars even go to corporations owned by the Chinese government, like Chinese banks, Chinese development agencies, and Chinese microprocessor factories.”
The Export-Import Bank was founded in 1934 amid the Great Depression to help struggling exporters in the U.S. facilitate international trade, Lee noted, but the agency has become a disservice to Americans and the economy.
“The institution has unfortunately been used as a giant tool for corporate welfare,” Lee said. “Ex-Im has operated to benefit the wealthiest, most politically connected businesses in America, as well as their overseas clients and foreign governments.”
Diane Katz, a research fellow in regulatory policy at The Heritage Foundation who has written extensively on the bank, said in a recent commentary that it has aided only 2% of U.S. exports.
“Restoring full function to the Export-Import Bank would be just another case of Congress sacrificing taxpayers’ interest to benefit enormously profitable multinational corporations,” Katz told The Daily Signal, adding:
“The Export-Import Bank puts big corporations and foreign countries like China ahead of American businesses,” Anderson said. “It’s a prime example of the swampy Washington politics that Americans loathe and elected President Trump to put an end to. The bank should remain shuttered and Congress should let its authorization lapse, sending this wasteful institution to the waste bin.”
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Rachel del Guidice (@LRacheldG)is a reporter for The Daily Signal. She is a graduate of Franciscan University of Steubenville, Forge Leadership Network, and The Heritage Foundation’s Young Leaders Program.
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