Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Dear Colleague Letter to President Biden with "final" signer list

If your Representative did not sign, ask why not.  See methods suggested by LAWG below.


Sending Office: Honorable James P. McGovern
Sent By: Cindy.Buhl@mail.house.gov


FINAL: Signatures on Cuba Letter (114):

 

James P. McGovern (MA) co-lead, Rules Committee Chair

Barbara Lee (CA)  co-lead, SFOPS SC Approppriations Chair

Gregory W. Meeks (NY)  co-lead, HFAC Chair

Bobby L. Rush (IL)  co--lead, Energy SC Chair, E&C

Nydia M. Velázquez (NY)

Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC)

André Carson (IN)

Steve Cohen (TN)

Peter Welch (VT)

Dwight Evans (PA)

Andy Levin (MI)

Jake Auchincloss (MA)

Henry C. “Hank” Johnson, Jr. (GA-04)

Rashida Tlaib (MI)

Mike Doyle (PA)

Raúl M. Grijalva (AZ)

Jared Huffman (CA)

Jan Schakowsky (IL)

Alan B. Lowenthal (CA)

Donald M. Payne, Jr. (NJ)

Anna G. Eshoo (CA)

Adriano Espaillat (NY)

Grace Meng (NY)

Ayanna Pressley (MA)

Dina Titus (NV)

Mark DeSaulnier (CA)

Betty McCollum (MN)

Bennie G. Thompson (MS)

Carolyn B. Maloney (NY-12)

Maxine Waters (CA)

Dean Phillips (MN)

Mondaire Jones (NY)

Ron Kind (WI)

Chellie Pingree (ME)

Joaquin Castro (TX)

David Trone (MD)

John Garamendi (CA)

Earl Blumenauer (OR)

Donald S. Beyer, Jr. (VA)

John A. Yarmuth (KY)

Stephen F. Lynch (MA)

Jim Himes (CT)

Mark Pocan (WI)

Danny K. Davis (IL)

Peter A. DeFazio (OR)

David N. Cicilline (RI)

Suzanne Bonamici (OR)

Karen Bass (CA)

David E. Price (NC)

Jamie Raskin (MD)

Robin L. Kelly (IL)

Gwen Moore (WI)

Brenda L. Lawrence (MI)

Zoe Lofgren (CA)

Ro Khanna (CA)

Ilhan Omar (MN)

Ted Lieu (CA)

Pramila Jayapal (WA)

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (NY)

Sara Jacobs (CA)

Jamaal Bowman (NY)

Jerry McNerney (CA)

Melanie Stansbury (NM)

Anthony G. Brown (MD)

Mark Takano (CA)

Jerrold Nadler (NY)

Emanuel Cleaver, II (MO)

Paul D. Tonko (NY)

Daniel T. Kildee (MI)

John B. Larson (CT)

Diana DeGette (CO)

Rosa L. DeLauro (CT)

Sheila Jackson-Lee (TX)

Cori Bush (MO)

Jesús G. “Chuy” García (IL)

Ed Perlmutter (CO)

Deborah K. Ross (NC)

David Scott (GA)

Mike Thompson (CA)

Doris O. Matsui (CA)

Eddie Bernice Johnson (TX)

Rick Larsen (WA)

Bonnie Watson Coleman (NJ)

Adam Smith (WA)

Jackie Speier (CA)

Ami Bera, M.D. (CA)

Al Green (TX)

Linda T. Sánchez (CA)

Debbie Dingell (MI)

Ann Kirkpatrick (AZ)

Teresa Leger Fernández (NM)

Judy Chu (CA)

Lori Trahan (MA)

Sanford D. Bishop, Jr. (GA)

Nikema Williams (GA)

Marilyn Strickland (WA)

Marie Newman (IL)

Kweisi Mfume (MD)

Juan Vargas (CA)

Lucille Roybal-Allard (CA)

Jahana Hayes (CT)

Katie Porter (CA)

Grace F. Napolitano (CA)

Nanette Diaz Barragán (CA)

Jimmy Panetta (CA)

Colin Z. Allred (TX)

Veronica Escobar (TX)

Alma S. Adams, Ph.D. (NC)

Jimmy Gomez (CA)

Marc A. Veasey (TX)

Eric Swalwell (CA)

G. K. Butterfield (NC)

Sean Casten (IL)

Robert C. “Bobby” Scott (VA)

(114)




Sending Office: Honorable James P. McGovern
Sent By: Cindy.Buhl@mail.house.gov

Address Humanitarian Needs, 

Restore Engagement with Cuba

Dear Colleague,

            We invite you to join us on a letter to President Biden on advancing a U.S. policy towards Cuba that addresses the humanitarian and economic crisis and restores a policy of engagement on areas of mutual concern.

It is important to pay close attention to developments in Cuba and uphold the rights of the Cuban people. It is also important for the U.S. to provide constructive solutions that concretely address the current crisis. Congress can support the right to peaceful protest, condemn excessive use of force, and call for a policy that addresses the basic needs of the Cuban people. 

            We hope you will join us on this timely initiative. If you require additional information or would like to join this letter, please contact Cindy Buhl (Rep. McGovern) at cindy.buhl@mail.house.gov; Gregory Adams (Rep. Lee) at gregory.adams@mail.house.gov; or Zakiya Carr Johnson (Rep. Meeks) at zakiya.carr@mail.house.govDeadline to sign the letter is COB, Friday, December 10th

Sincerely

James P. McGovern                                                    Barbara Lee                                       

Member of Congress                                                  Member of Congress

 

Gregory W. Meeks                                                     Bobby L. Rush

Member of Congress                                                  Member of Congress 

                                               

Dear President Biden:

We are writing to ask you to prioritize the well-being of the Cuban people, who are experiencing the worst economic and humanitarian crisis in recent history. The current humanitarian situation in Cuba is growing ever more dire, with shortages of food and goods and decreasing access to medical supplies amid the COVID-19 pandemic. We urge you to take immediate humanitarian actions, as the United Nations has urged repeatedly, to so suspend U.S. regulations that prevent food, medicine, and other humanitarian assistance from reaching the Cuban people. We also support a more comprehensive shift to deepen engagement with Cuba and move towards normalization of U.S.-Cuba relations.

We urge your administration to remove the specific licenses required to send medical supplies, such as testing kits and respiratory devices, to Cuba. We also ask that the administration lift all restrictions on banking and financial transactions related to humanitarian aid and suspend end-use verification. While the embargo allows for the shipment of humanitarian aid, in practice, licensing requirements, end-use verification, restrictions on the banking sector, and fear of unknowingly running afoul of U.S. law severely complicate sending humanitarian aid to Cuba, from other countries as well as from the United States.  

We ask you to remove all restrictions on family remittances, allowing Cuban Americans to help their families and improve their standard of living, and the restrictions on non-family (donative) remittances, allowing nonprofits and faith groups to provide humanitarian assistance and start-up capital for Cuban entrepreneurs and civil society.  We are still waiting for action based on the recommendations from the Remittance Working Group you established in the wake of the July 11th protests, tasked with expediting a review within 30 days of how to send remittances directly to the Cuban people. Despite concerns over Cuba’s government obtaining revenue from remittances, the government captures less revenue from remittances than in the past due to changes initiated in July 2020 and much of the government’s revenue from remittances is channeled to essential food, fuel, and goods imports for Cubans who do not have family abroad, many of them in marginalized communities. Moreover, the U.S. government does not restrict remittances to most of the countries targeted by U.S. sanctions, and just last month, your administration restarted the flow of remittances through Western Union to Afghanistan, showing you are aware of the importance that remittance channels have for countries facing humanitarian and economic crises.

We also urge you to roll back the Trump Administration’s restrictions on travel to Cuba, since they make it more difficult for Cuban Americans to visit and reunite with family on the island, particularly for those with families outside of Havana. These restrictions limit mutually beneficial dialogue and exchange between the U.S. and Cuban people. Travel restrictions have also harmed small private businesses, which have been unable to access needed goods and products and have struggled since tourism began to slow after such restrictions were put in place. Allowing travel to Cuba would increase the flow of necessary humanitarian supplies to the island and the amount and distribution of money and goods sent directly into the hands of Cubans.

Cuba was removed from the State Sponsor of Terrorism list in 2015 after an exhaustive review by experts at the State Department and in the intelligence community.  The Trump Administration did not cite any new facts to justify its decision to relist Cuba during the last days of its term. Therefore, we ask you to recommend that the State Department conduct a new review and remove Cuba from the list.   This designation places another roadblock in the path towards improved relations and creates further obstacles for purchasing or receiving humanitarian goods.  

In addition to these immediate steps, we believe that a policy of engagement with Cuba serves U.S. interests and those of the Cuban people.  It should lead to a more comprehensive effort to deepen engagement and normalization, including restarting diplomatic engagement at senior levels as well as through the re-staffing of each country’s respective embassies. This act would not only be a gesture of good faith but is in the best interests of the United States, assisting Cubans interested in migrating via legal means instead of contributing to conditions forcing Cubans to migrate under dangerous conditions, arriving in increased numbers at our southern border. Because the U.S. Embassy’s consular section has been closed to Cubans, the United States is in violation of the 1994 migration agreement signed with Cuba to end the last migration crisis. 

Engagement on key areas of mutual interest that were pursued by the Obama-Biden Administration should be resumed, including bilateral groups on migration, disaster response, environment, and law enforcement issues such as counter-narcotics and money laundering. Cooperation on COVID-19 response and addressing future pandemics are also essential.

Finally, protecting human rights in Cuba, including the right to protest, is better served by principled engagement, rather than unilateral isolation, which has proven to be a failed policy. In fact, today, following almost five years of tightened U.S. sanctions, Cuba’s nascent social movements that emerged during the rapprochement years find their space for public debate and free expression more constrained than in 2016. Yet increased channels of communication and access to information via the internet and social media platforms in recent years, in large measure due to the policy of engagement pursued by the Obama-Biden Administration, have dramatically influenced how Cubans communicate and their levels of activism to influence decision making and mobilize and advocate for social causes. Engagement is more likely to enable the political, economic, and social openings that Cubans may desire, and to ease the hardships that Cubans face today.

We are eager to work with you to advance U.S.-Cuban relations and human rights and prosperity on the island. We look forward to your rapid implementation of these recommendations.

 



Adapted from suggestions by the Latin America Working Group  (FRD alterations in italics)

What's Going On?

Representatives James P. McGovern (D-MA), Barbara Lee (D-CA), Gregory W. Meeks (D-NY), and Bobby L. Rush (D-IL) circulated a Dear Colleague letter to President Biden regarding changing U.S. policy towards Cuba to address the humanitarian and economic crisis and restore engagement with our Caribbean neighbor. The letter has received 114 signers calling for the suspension of U.S. regulations that prevent food, medical supplies, and other humanitarian aid from reaching the Cuban people and for the lifting all restrictions on Cuban Americans sending remittances to their families and on non-family donations, allowing nonprofits and faith groups to provide humanitarian assistance and start-up capital for Cuban small businesses and civil society. It also urges a rollback of the Trump Administration’s travel restrictions to Cuba and calls for a return to a policy of dialogue and engagement.   

What You Can Do

We need you to get in touch with your representative if they did not sign and ask why not.  Urge her or him to become an additional endorser NOW! The deadline for original sign-ons has passed but the need for support has not. Find your representative here. Then, here’s what you do:

 

Call!

  • Call the number for your representative’s DC office.
  • Ask to speak to the office’s foreign policy aide.
  • Once connected, read (or adapt) the script below.
  • You might be asked to just leave a message, either with the front desk or on voicemail. Should that happen, read the same script.

Sample script:

 

“My name is [FIRST AND LAST NAME] and I’m a constituent calling from [CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE]. Cuba is currently facing the worst economic and humanitarian crisis the island has seen in recent history. Food shortages, long lines, and a lack of medical supplies to combat the COVID-19 pandemic have exacerbated the suffering of Cubans on the island and of their families in the United States who are desperate to help but often unable to. 

 

I’m calling you to urge Rep. [YOUR REP’S LAST NAME] to join the 114 signers of Rep. Jim McGovern’s dear colleague letter to President Biden, urging him to advance a U.S. policy towards Cuba that addresses the humanitarian and economic crisis and restores a policy of engagement. The letter calls for immediate and concrete actions to alleviate the crisis, such as lifting specific licenses required to send medical supplies and ending restrictions on sending family remittances and lifting restrictions on travel. These are just a few actions President Biden can take to improve the quality of life in Cuba. These actions will also guide us down a path of engagement with Cuba in areas such as migration, disaster response, and climate change. Protecting human rights in Cuba, including the right to protest, can only be achieved through engagement, rather than unilateral isolation, which has proven time and time again to be a failed policy.

 

Is this something Representative [YOUR REP’S LAST NAME] can support? I hope you will consider my request, and thank you for your time.”

 

How much longer will we repeat the failed Cuba policies of the past? Time is of the essence, and we cannot keep bargaining with Cuban lives. 

 

With determination, 

Antonio for the LAWG team: Lisa, Daniella, Lauri, and Antonio

 

P.S. - Please forward this alert to at least three friends! This is an important opportunity to tell President Biden to come through on his promises to establish dialogue with Cuba. 

 

Latin America Working Group
2029 P Street NW
Suite 301
Washington, DC 20005
United States

6 comments:

  1. President Biden and Rep. Lee, Rep. McGovern, Rep. Meeks:

    I have traveled to Cuba at least 8 times since 2001. The Cuban people are in need of additional resources, not more sanctions. You will build more good will and change faster if you stop the draconian restrictions that are currently in place.

    I am ashamed as a US citizen AND someone who voted for your, President Biden, to know you are continuing to follow the destructive policies implemented by the Trump Administration. Instead of following the lead of President Obama (when you were VP). You should know better than anyone that this is not the way forward to sway the improvement toward democracy in Cuba.

    Lift the travel ban.
    Lift the restrictions on hotels.
    Lift the ban on family remitances.
    Please enact Democrat values and stop following in the footsteps of Trump.

    Jacqueline Pokorney
    Saint Paul, MN

    ReplyDelete
  2. Please allow us in the US to help our families in Cuba.
    During the Obama administration, The private sector in Cuba thrived,, the private sector grew by 87% ,, The Cuban gov. reacted by expanding licenses for private buss,

    Our families are suffering Not from a communist gov, but because of these cruel sanctions..
    We are the only people living in the greatest nation in the world, where our own government does not allow us to send our families, much needed food and medicine..

    ReplyDelete
  3. The Obama administration opened tourism channels, and Cuban people upgraded their house into BNBs or paradors, family based restaurants. They invested their meager savings to do so. Then Trump shut down American tours to Cuba, and Covid did even more. These people are hurting: limited food and medical supplies, enormous debt, and no way to pay it. If we can supply humanitarian aid to Gaza and Afghanistan, we should do so for Cuba.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I just came back from a 9 month visit to Cuba. Conditions are not good and mainly due to the lack of remittances and virtually no possibility of Cubans attaining VISAS to travel to the US without visiting another country like Guyana. The US needs to open the US Embassy in Cuba and normalize activity. This is the biggest travesty of all.

    ReplyDelete
  5. My husband and I had the pleasure of visiting Cuba with James McGovern and George McGovern in 2003 with the Massachusetts College of Public Health and Pharmacy. Since them I have visited Cuba four times on a Religious visa with the Presbyterian Church (USA). I fully support the statements and requests outlined in the letter to President Biden regarding prioritizing the well being of the Cuban people. Kathleen McCloskey

    ReplyDelete
  6. Seems like Biden suffers from Stockholm Syndrome, he allies himself with anti Cuban people haters.
    The same crowd that won't give him a vote no matter anything he does.
    Begs to question, is any of his "advisors" really work for him or for the Republicans?
    I'm a Cuban-American sick and tired of the failed policy of this hypocrite joker.....

    ReplyDelete