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Posts Tagged ‘menendez’

Can You Match the Quote to the Senator Behind S.1524?

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
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Test your skills on foreign aid reform and match the below quote with the Senator who gave it after yesterday’s 14-3 vote by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in favor of initial passage of the Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act of 2009 (S.1524).  Leave your answers in the comments section of the blog (and we’ll provide the real answers soon):

The Quotes:

“This bill arises from the conviction that our investments in foreign assistance require much more effective coordination and much more thorough evaluation.  In the absence of reform, we will continue to spend billions each year without confidence that these funds are achieving the greatest development impact possible.”

“This legislation demonstrates Congress’s commitment to strengthening the capacity, accountability and effectiveness of our foreign aid programs.  With the U.S. facing critical foreign policy and development priorities worldwide, it is vital that we update our foreign aid programs to reflect the new challenges of the 21st century.  I look forward to working with the Administration to advance our shared goal of strengthening foreign aid.”

“I’ve been able to see our foreign assistance dollars in action and am proud of the role we are playing in producing positive change in the lives of millions around the world, but at the same time, I share the frustration of many Americans that our foreign assistance efforts have often lacked transparency, coordination, monitoring and evaluation.  This bill begins to reinvigorate USAID to improve the coordination, execution and efficiency of U.S. assistance so we can make each dollar go farther. The bill also establishes a body capable of evaluating the impact of our investments to make sure we are truly meeting our foreign policy objectives.”

“Reducing global poverty through development assistance is a moral imperative that also contributes to our national and economic security.  By providing greater resources to increase transparency and efficiency, the Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act puts us on a glide path toward restoring this vital pillar of our foreign policy.”

“This legislation will position the State Department to make better programming and funding decisions by establishing more rigorous transparency mechanisms and authorizing an independent counsel to examine all of our foreign aid programs.  Accountability is critical to ensure our foreign aid programs are accomplishing the intended purposes for the benefit of the recipient country and U.S. taxpayers.”

“This is one of the most significant pieces of foreign assistance legislation that has passed out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in decades. I am proud that this is truly a bi-partisan bill, developed in a collaborative manner and that it includes input from a wide range of voices. These programs are critical to millions of people around the world, they contribute to our mutual economic health, and are in the direct national security interests of the United States. Furthermore, this legislation implements strong, new accountability and oversight provisions to ensure that foreign assistance is being used as intended and delivering a return on our investment. Today marks an important step, but it is just the beginning. I am committed to continue working with the Committee members and Administration to build up our foreign assistance programs, not just to where they used to be, but to where they need to be.”

The Senators:

john-kerry-newspaper-hearings1. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-MA)

Riga summit - Opening Gala Dinner of the Riga Conference - 27 No2. SFRC Ranking Minority Member Dick Lugar (R-IN)

US Iraq3. Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ)

83985149BS001_SMIALOWSKI4. Senator Bob Corker (R-TN)

BenCardin5. Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD)

jim_risch-0x3006. Senator Jim Risch (R-ID)

Tell us your answers in the comments section.  The winner will receive undying affection from supporters of foreign assistance reform.

MFAN Statement: Initial Bill Passed by SFRC Adds to Aid Reform Momentum

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009
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November 17, 2009 (WASHINGTON)This statement is delivered on behalf of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network (MFAN) by Co-Chairs David Beckmann and George Ingram:

Today, Chairman John Kerry (D-MA), Ranking Minority Member Richard Lugar (R-IN), and a bipartisan group of Senators took a concrete step towards making U.S. foreign assistance more effective by passing the Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act of 2009 (S.1524) out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

Following last week’s nomination of Dr. Raj Shah to be Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the bill proposes important changes that would give the new administrator the necessary tools to lead U.S. development efforts by implementing and coordinating the pieces of President Obama’s ambitious agenda.  Among other things, S.1524 would establish the promotion of global development, good governance, and the reduction of poverty and hunger as U.S. policy; rebuild the policy, strategic planning, and human resources capacity at USAID; and create an independent Council on Research and Evaluation of Foreign Assistance (CORE) to evaluate the impact of all U.S. foreign aid programs.

Building on the visionary leadership they have shown in the movement to reform U.S. foreign assistance, Chairman Kerry and Senator Lugar made a strong statement today about Congress’ firm commitment to elevating development as a core pillar of U.S. foreign policy, distinct from diplomacy and defense.  We hope that leaders in the Obama Administration will take note and work with both the Senate and the House of Representatives on their reform efforts.

CONTACT: Sam Hiersteiner at 202-295-0171 or shiersteiner@gpgdc.com.

New Senate Resolution Calls for USAID Administrator, Strengthened and Empowered Development Agency

Friday, October 16th, 2009
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Chris DoddUSA SENATOR DICK DURBINBen Cardin

Senators Chris Dodd (D-CT), Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Ben Cardin (D-MD) have introduced a resolution (S.Res.312) that calls for the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development to be named expeditiously as well as a strengthened and empowered USAID.

“The United States faces an ever-growing array of foreign policy challenges, and in nearly every instance, international development should be part of the solution,” said Sen. Dodd in a news release.

“Military and civilian leaders both agree: a strong development strategy is critical for our long term success,” added Sen. Durbin.

“We should have a strong USAID Administrator in place quickly to oversee the vital functions of our primary development agency so that it can serve as a constructive partner with other U.S. agencies,” said Sen. Cardin.

In addition to calling for “a highly capable and knowledgeable individual” to serve as USAID Administrator and “as the chief advocate for United States development capacity and strategy in top-level national security deliberations,” the resolution states that USAID “must be empowered to be the primary development agency of the United States and to serve as the principal advisor to the President and national security organs of the United States Government on the capacity and strategy of United States development assistance.”

In a statement for the record, Sen. Dodd said: “This resolution also recognizes the tremendously important role development plays in foreign policy, and puts the Senate on record as supporting an empowered USAID. I believe USAID should be a strong and independent voice in high-level U.S. foreign policy debates. If U.S. development policy and, by extension, U.S. foreign policy is to succeed in the long run, USAID must be an independent body that can advocate for what it knows best—how to effectively deliver and implement US foreign assistance, at the highest level. And it must have a serious seat at the table. Our foreign policy will neither be comprehensive nor sufficient to meet the challenges of the 21st century, without serious and unbiased input from America’s development experts.”

Cosponsors of the resolution thus far include Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-MA) along with Sens. Kit Bond (R-MO), Roland Burris (D-IL), Paul Kirk (D-MA), Bob Menendez (D-NJ), Patty Murray (D-WA), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI).

Read the resolution:  Dodd Durbin Cardin Aid Resolution

White House Joins the Party on Development Policy

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009
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obama-signs-bill

President Obama has called for an interagency review of all U.S. global development policy, a major declaration that the White House is thinking seriously about how the U.S. engages with poor countries to promote development, including foreign aid.

This effort comes on the heels of the State Department’s announcement earlier this summer that it will undertake a Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, the first of its kind. State is already leading on the Global Food Security Initiative, and senior reviews are underway for the White House’s Global Health Initiative.

Not to be outdone, Congress has also weighed in from both sides of the Capitol. In the House, Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Howard Berman (D-CA) introduced the Initiating Foreign Assistance Reform Act (H.R. 2139) in the spring alongside Rep. Mark Kirk (R-IL), a bill calling for the President to craft a National Strategy for Global Development. The legislation has garnered over 100 bipartisan cosponsors so far.

Moreover, Berman has begun putting together a blueprint for a wholesale rewrite of the onerous and outdated Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, the legislation governing most U.S. foreign aid that has not been revisited since 1985.

In the Senate, Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry (D-MA), Ranking Member Dick Lugar (R-IN), along with committee members Sens. Bob Menendez (D-NJ) and Bob Corker (R-TN), have introduced their own bill, the Foreign Assistance Revitalization and Accountability Act (S.1524), to rebuild the U.S. Agency for International Development and strengthen evaluation of foreign aid programs.

Now if an invitation could go out to the next USAID Administrator to come to the party…

Here’s a sampling of what leading development voices had to say in response to news about the Presidential Study Directive on global development:

“Our nation does not now have a clear statement of goals related to world hunger, poverty and disease,” said Rev. David Beckmann, president of Bread for the World and co-chair of MFAN. “Currently our nation’s global development programs and policies are scattered across 12 departments, 25 different agencies, and nearly 60 government offices.”

“This is a tremendous step in the right direction,” said Dr. Reuben Brigety, director of the Sustainable Security Program at the Center for American Progress. “It will fulfill a campaign promise of President Obama’s to change our approach to developing countries, and will help to reassert our moral leadership in the world.”

“The U.S. Global Leadership Coalition applauds President Obama for his Presidential Study Directive on U.S. Global Development Policy as another step toward making our civilian-led tools of development and diplomacy stronger and more effective,” said USGLC Executive Director Liz Schrayer.

White House leadership of the exercise is important given the convening power necessary to secure high-level participation by the more than two dozen government entities currently responsible for portions of U.S. development policy,” said Sheila Herrling, senior policy analyst at the Center for Global Development.

MFAN: New Presidential Study Directive an Unprecedented Step Forward on Development

Monday, August 31st, 2009
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August 31, 2009 (WASHINGTON) – This statement is delivered on behalf of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network (MFAN) by Co-Chairs David Beckmann and George Ingram:

MFAN strongly commends President Obama for signing a landmark Presidential Study Directive on Global Development Policy.  The directive establishes clear White House leadership on modernizing our country’s approach to global development, adding to the tremendous momentum generated by actions taken by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, and the State Department.

This critical step by President Obama means that we are closer than we have ever been to a fresh, whole-of-government approach that will elevate development as a core, independent pillar of U.S. foreign policy and make U.S. efforts to alleviate poverty and hunger, fight disease, and create economic opportunity  in the developing world more efficient and effective.  As the U.S. faces complex global challenges including the economic crisis and conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan-Pakistan, as well as threats emanating from scourges that know no borders – such as poverty, disease, and climate change – we must make sure our efforts to promote development have as much impact as possible.

President Obama’s directive acknowledges this reality and the interconnectedness of the threats we face, and rises to the challenge by taking the unprecedented step of tasking National Security Advisor General James Jones and Larry Summers, Director of the National Economic Council, with leading an interagency review of global development policy.  This process will provide much-needed clarity about how U.S. agencies and departments can work together to develop and implement coordinated and sound policy aimed at achieving our global development goals.  We are optimistic about what this effort can achieve in conjunction with the State Department’s recently announced Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, and we remain ready to support both the White House and State Department teams in any way we can.

For more information, please visit MFAN’s website.

Contact: Sam Hiersteiner at shiersteiner@gpgdc.com or 202-295-0171.