Submitted by: BlueIslandBobSue
Wisconsin Lawmakers Propose Iran Business Prohibition
By Todd Richmond
Associated PressNovember 15, 2015
Republican
legislators have introduced a bill that would prohibit the state from
investing in companies that do business in or with Iran, saying the
measure would help blunt President Barack Obama's nuclear accord with
that country.
Under the proposal from Rep. Dale
Kooyenga and Sen. Leah Vukmir, the state investment board could not put
money into any company that owes money to Iran's government, maintains
property, personnel or operations in Iran, contracts with the Iranian
government or contracts with any company owned or controlled by Iranian
officials.
The board also would be prohibited from
investing in companies that provide goods or services in Iran or sell
anything knowing those products will be resold to the Iranian
government, companies controlled by the Iranian government or otherwise
redistributed in that country. The board would have one year to sell off
present holdings that violate the prohibition.
Vukmir,
of Wauwatosa, and Kooyenga, from Brookfield, wrote in a memo to
lawmakers last week seeking co-sponsors that the bill is a response to
Obama's deal with Iran.
The accord calls for Iran to
curb its nuclear program in exchange for relief from international
economic sanctions, which would open the door for companies to step up
operations in that country. Republicans strongly oppose the deal,
arguing the Iranian government can't be trusted. The legislators said
their bill will help limit the accord's effects.
"In the absence of true leadership in Washington, this action is the least we can do," they wrote.
Kooyenga,
an Army veteran who served in Iraq, added in a telephone interview he
hopes the bill will help limit funds for Iran's weapons programs and
ensure western technology doesn't find its way into that country.
"Maybe smaller and mid-size companies would have to think twice about doing business with Iran (if the bill passes)," he said.
More than 1,000 corporations around the world do business in or with Iran,
according to a database kept by United Against Nuclear Iran,
a nonprofit group working to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear
weapons. About two dozen states have adopted legislation barring public
entities from renewing or entering into contracts with companies
operating in Iran or requiring them to divest themselves of holdings in
such companies,
according to UANI.
The
Wisconsin investment board invests about $98.5 billion in companies
around the world, using the vast majority of returns to pay state
employees' retirement benefits. Vicki Hearing, a spokeswoman for the
board, said she didn't have a comprehensive list of companies the board
invests in that operate in or with Iran.
If the bill
passes, she said, the board likely would have to contract with a
consulting firm called Conflict Securities Advisory Group, which
specializes in assessing global security risk for investors, to identify
the companies and monitor when they start or end operations in Iran.
She didn't know how much that might cost.
She warned
that eliminating companies as potential investment partners would shrink
the board's options. What's more, she said, the board's responsible for
making the most prudent investments possible to keep the retirement
fund viable, not using investments to make a statement.
"We don't make a decision to invest based on a social issue," Hearing said.
The
Wisconsin bill's chances are unclear. A spokeswoman for Assembly
Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester, didn't respond to an email seeking
comment. A spokeswoman for Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald,
R-Juneau, said she hadn't had a chance to discuss the bill with him.
Even
if the bill wins leadership's support it can't come to the floor in
either the Senate or Assembly until next year. The Legislature ends its
fall session with an Assembly floor period
on Monday and the calendar for that day doesn't include the measure.
Spokespeople
for Assembly Minority Leader Peter Barca, D-Kenosha, and Senate
Minority Leader Jennifer Shilling declined comment. A spokeswoman for
U.S. Rep. Ron Kind, D-La Crosse, a member of the House trade
subcommittee who supports the Iran accord, declined comment, saying her
office doesn't comment on state legislation.
No comments:
Post a Comment