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Foreign Relations Committee Overwhelmingly Approves Law of the Sea; Coleman Flips and Flops10/31/07Foreign Relations Committee Overwhelmingly Approves Law of the Sea; Coleman Flips and Flops
Posted by Scott Paul
I just got back from the Senate Foreign Relations Committee business meeting on the Law of the Sea. The final vote was 17-4 in favor of consideration by the full Senate. The New York Times editorialized on the subject this morning: Today, the treaty will face yet another critical moment in its long and troubled life when the Foreign Relations Committee votes on whether to send it to the floor. The vote is expected to favor the treaty. But the task facing the Democratic chairman, Joseph Biden of Delaware, and the ranking Republican member, Richard Lugar of Indiana, is to produce not just a favorable vote but an overwhelming vote sufficient to persuade the Senate majority leader, Harry Reid of Nevada, to finally move on ratification.Ask, and ye shall receive. Senators Jim DeMint and David Vitter are the treaty's hard-core opponents; they were certain "no" votes. According to Michelle Malkin, they targeted four more: Senators Voinovich, Sununu, Murkowski, and Isakson. They've also lobbied Senators Bob Corker and Norm Coleman very hard. That means they were shooting for a 13-8 vote. While not all of those votes were ever in play, this is a major defeat for the black-helicopter opposition. With a vote this strong, Senator Reid now must devote floor time to the Law of the Sea. The Washington Post and the Orlando Sentinel got in a word, too. Both are worth a read, as is Senator Biden's statement supporting the convention, now up at Taylor Marsh's site. Of the "no" votes, the biggest surprise was Coleman, who voted in favor of the treaty in 2004. What's more, during today's business meeting, Coleman acknowledged that there "have not been any significant changes since 2004 [to the treaty]." But substance means little to Coleman, who was John Bolton's strongest supporter in confirmation hearings during the last Congress. What has changed since 2004 are the politics. In an election year, the judgments of Bolton and Frank Gaffney apparently hold more sway than those of the Navy, Coast Guard, President, Joint Chiefs, and State Department -- not to mention his own politically independent judgment three years ago. Interestingly, Coleman raised points specifically debunked yesterday by treaty opponent numero uno, Senator Jim Inhofe. And the one opponent Coleman quoted during his brief remarks is Jeremy Rabkin, the George Mason University professor who said earlier this year: "The Senate won't ratify the Convention if it is controversial, and I'm doing everything I can to make a controversy." Those running against Coleman for Senate could have a field day with this. For now, it's time supporters of responsible global engagement to celebrate a little. Below is the full roll call vote. Update: Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer is the first of Coleman's challengers out of the gate to point out this massive and as-yet-unexplained flip flop. He may not be the last. Nelson-Pallmeyer Condemns Coleman's Caving to the Far
Yes: Biden (D-DE) No: Coleman (R-MN)
10/31/07 02:32:49 pm •
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Categories: International Institutions, General, Treaties
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