Tales from the Trail

Two Bills on the Hill. One mission

Bill Clinton and Bill Gates banded together on one mission Wednesday: deliver a message to Capitol Hill that increasing funding for the U.S. Global Health Initiative would be good foreign policy and the right thing to do.

SENATE/The program administered by the State Department works to improve healthcare in poor nations, with a particular focus on women and children. The Obama administration proposes to invest $63 billion in the program over six years. The State Department’s budget request for FY2011 includes $8.5 billion for GHI.

The former president and the founder of Microsoft have more in common than just their first names — they both head foundations that focus on global health. The two Bills testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that while they were aware of the federal budget challenge, adding to the Global Health Initiative now would pay off in the long run.

“This is an important part of our foreign policy. It makes a world with more friends, and fewer enemies,” Clinton said. “If people think you care whether their children live or die, you don’t have to send our young people off to war as often.”

Gates implored lawmakers to do a better job of telling Americans about how well U.S. investments in global health are working. He cited success in nearly eradicating polio, reducing deaths from malaria, and providing 4 million people with AIDS treatment who would have died years ago. “These investments are the most effective we can make for improving and saving lives.” SENATE/

Kerry to head Senate Foreign Relations Committee

WASHINGTON – Thirty-seven years ago, dressed in old battle fatigues, John Kerry testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee as a young hero and a critic of an unpopular war that divided Americans and radicalized a generation.
 IRAQ/
“We are angry because we feel we have been used in the worst fashion by the administration” of President Richard Nixon, Kerry testified on behalf of Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
 
Now 65 and a senator from Massaschusetts, Kerry will take over next month as chairman of that committee, which raised questions about the war that ultimately helped lead to the end of the decade-old conflict.
 
“I am honored to serve as chairman of a committee which I know from my own experience as a young man can impact the course of our security and help advance our values and interests in the world,” he said in a statement.
 
Kerry’s remarks on Monday came after Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid named him to head the panel.
 
Kerry had been on the short list of potential nominees to be President-elect Barack Obama’s secretary of state.
 
But with Obama deciding instead to go with Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York as his top diplomat, Reid, as anticipated, recommended to a Democratic steering committee that Kerry lead the Foreign Relations panel. Kerry is virtually certain to get the job.
 
He would replace Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware, who is stepping down to be sworn in next month as Obama’s vice president.
 
Kerry will be one of only a few new Senate Committee chairs as recommended by Reid.
 
The others include Sen. Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, who is stepping down as chairman of the Commerce Committee to take over as head of the Appropriation Committee.
 
He will replace Robert Byrd, 91, the longest serving senator, who agreed to move aside as head of Appropriations because of concerns about his health and age. Inouye is 84.
 
Reid recommended that Sen. John Rockefeller of West Virginia take over as chairman of the Commerce Committee, Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California replace Rockefeller as chair of the Intelligence Committee, and Sen. Charles Schumer of New York replace Feinstein as chair of the Rules Committee.

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Photo credit: Reuters/POOL (Kerry meets Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki in Baghdad in 2006)