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Overturning Cuba Travel Ban May Pass House This Year
By Fabiola Moura
Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) Legislation to end a ban on Americans traveling to Cuba has enough support in the U.S. House of Representatives to win approval by year-end, said Representative Sam Farr, a California Democrat.
The bill to let U.S. citizens resume travel to the Caribbean island except in times of war or cases in which they face imminent danger has 181 votes in the House and needs 218 to pass, said Farr, a co-sponsor of the legislation. The plan is backed by travel groups such as the United States Tour Operators Association and the National Tour Association and human rights groups such as the Washington Office on Latin America and has been helped by President Barack Obamas election, he said.
It is believed we can get to this before the end of the year, Farr, 68, said in an interview in New York. We havent had a policy about Cuba. Weve had policies about getting votes in Florida and Obama changed that by getting those votes.
The U.S. ended restrictions on Sept. 3 on Cuban-Americans travel and money transfers to relatives in Cuba. The new rules also allow U.S. telecommunications companies to provide service in Cuba for mobile telephone, satellite radio and television. Exceptions to the 1962 trade embargo on communist Cuba include $500 million per year in agricultural exports, Farr said.
If you are a potato, you can get to Cuba very easily, he said. But if you are a person, you cant, and that is our problem.
The rest of the article
By Fabiola Moura
Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) Legislation to end a ban on Americans traveling to Cuba has enough support in the U.S. House of Representatives to win approval by year-end, said Representative Sam Farr, a California Democrat.
The bill to let U.S. citizens resume travel to the Caribbean island except in times of war or cases in which they face imminent danger has 181 votes in the House and needs 218 to pass, said Farr, a co-sponsor of the legislation. The plan is backed by travel groups such as the United States Tour Operators Association and the National Tour Association and human rights groups such as the Washington Office on Latin America and has been helped by President Barack Obamas election, he said.
It is believed we can get to this before the end of the year, Farr, 68, said in an interview in New York. We havent had a policy about Cuba. Weve had policies about getting votes in Florida and Obama changed that by getting those votes.
The U.S. ended restrictions on Sept. 3 on Cuban-Americans travel and money transfers to relatives in Cuba. The new rules also allow U.S. telecommunications companies to provide service in Cuba for mobile telephone, satellite radio and television. Exceptions to the 1962 trade embargo on communist Cuba include $500 million per year in agricultural exports, Farr said.
If you are a potato, you can get to Cuba very easily, he said. But if you are a person, you cant, and that is our problem.
The rest of the article