[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 149 (2003), Part 23]
[Senate]
[Pages 32293-32295]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                        THE TVPA REAUTHORIZATION

  Mr. BROWNBACK. Mr. President, I am pleased to report the success of a 
bipartisan effort in which Senators, Members of the House, their key 
staff aides and a broad variety of religious and human rights groups 
have engaged.
  This effort has produced a greatly strengthened Trafficking Victims 
Protection Reauthorization Act which has passed the House, and which it 
is my honor to bring to the Senate floor. I am pleased to note that my 
colleague, the distinguished Senator from New York, Mr. Schumer, has 
joined me in cosponsoring this important legislation. The act will 
greatly strengthen America's hand in combating the slavery issue and 
the women's issue of our time--the annual trafficking of as many as 2 
million women and children into sex and slave bondage. As such, this 
act will give needed tools to President Bush, and to all future 
Presidents, to take on the world's trafficking mafias and to protect 
the traffickers' victims. It will thus also greatly facilitate the 
pledge made by President Bush in his United Nations speech of September 
23 to make the war against trafficking a major commitment of his 
administration.
  But I am pleased and deeply honored to bring this bill before my 
colleagues for yet another reason--one that I know will resonate with 
every Member of this body. Both in spirit and substance, the measure 
now before the Senate captures the hopes and the ideals of Paul and 
Sheila Wellstone, without whose passion and commitment no U.S. anti-
trafficking initiative against worldwide sex and slave trafficking 
would have been possible. It is one of my greatest sources of 
satisfaction and fulfillment as a member of this body to have worked 
with Paul and with Sheila to sponsor the Trafficking Victims Protection 
Act of 2000. In doing so, I and others were regularly inspired by these 
two friends to go the extra mile for the bill. After our first Foreign 
Relations Committee hearing on the bill, Paul remarked that the victims 
who testified on behalf of the bill had produced his most moving 
experience as a Senator. This says much about the man Paul was, and 
about the manner in which his and Sheila's priorities were always 
directed on behalf of abused, vulnerable, and powerless victims.
  We honor Paul and Shelia today by taking up this bill. As pleased as 
they would be by that gesture, it would be a much more meaningful 
tribute if we are able to pass the Trafficking Victims Protection 
Reauthorization Act, for there are a number of vital, strengthening 
provisions in the act that will greatly improve the fight against 
trafficking.
  First, the Director of the State Department Office to Combat and 
Monitor Trafficking in Persons has been raised to ambassadorial rank. 
This step will elevate the status of the office precisely as it will 
befit its present incumbent. John Miller, a former House Member known 
to many of us, is an able, respected, committed, and moral man who is 
now the Federal Government's chief antislavery and antitrafficking 
official. He has served as head of the TIP Office with great 
effectiveness and skill, and I am confident that, as Ambassador Miller, 
he will continue to do so.
  Next, the reauthorization act resolves one of the original act's 
greatest operational failings by ensuring that ``Tier II'' 
designations--given to counties that neither satisfy the act's high 
standards for anti-trafficking performance nor clearly merit the act's 
automatic sanctions--will not become an overbroad catchill category. 
Under the act, countries on the cusp of Tier III designations will be 
placed in a Tier II Special Watch List category and their performance 
in eliminating trafficking will be subject to special scrutiny, and the 
issuance of a special February 1 progress report and designation 
evaluation. Thus, the Special Watch List category will maintain strong 
pressure on countries that may ``almost but not quite'' merit a 
sanctions-bearing Tier III designation, and will permit clear 
differentiation between those countries and others placed on Tier II 
because they have not met the very high standards required for Tier I 
designations.
  Three points should be made in connection with the act's Special 
Watch List category. First, countries otherwise meriting Tier III 
designation but placed on the Tier II Special Watch List because they 
have made section (e)(3)(A)(iii)(III) ``commitments . . . to take 
additional future steps over the

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next year'' should only avoid Tier III designation under extraordinary 
circumstances, and only where they are engaged in implementing 
important and curative steps likely to be rapidly completed. Next, the 
provisions of section (e)(3)(A)(iii)(II) that authorize Special Watch 
List treatment of countries that have failed to engage in increased 
efforts to limit trafficking, prosecute traffickers and protect 
trafficking victims should not be construed to automatically bar Tier 
II designations when such efforts have not been made. Finally, to 
address a matter of legitimate concern to the State Department, the 
act's mandate that special Feburary 1 reports are to be issued for all 
Special Watch List countries needs to be understood in terms of our 
intention that only countries on the Tier II-Tier III cusp are to be 
the subjects of full and complete reports. Finally, as an overall 
matter, it should be made clear that failure to be placed on the Tier 
II Special Watch List will not bar a country from being placed on Tier 
II in the following year.
  A third major category of change established by the act involves the 
establishment of additional ``minimum standards'' criteria for 
determining appropriate tier designations. First, the reauthorization 
makes clear that countries may not escape more severe tier designations 
if they fail to keep meaningful records of what they have done to 
investigate, prosecute, convict and otherwise monitor their performance 
in the war against trafficking. Next, the reauthorization establishes 
an ``appreciable progress'' standard evaluating a country's 
performance--a standard not intended to exculpate countries still 
significantly complicit in trafficking activities, but to ensure that 
countries failing to make measurable progress on a year-to-year basis 
will be negatively affected. In other words, the reauthorization 
establishes a bottom-line ``performance standard'' to supplement the 
original act's ``effort standards.'' Next, and critically, the 
reauthorization adds a standard based on the percentage of noncitizen 
trafficking victims. This provision was added to permit the Trafficking 
Office to employ critical and needed standards to evaluate the 
antitrafficking performance of countries that have legitimized 
prostitution. Simply put, this provision both allows and mandates the 
Trafficking Office to cut through dubious claims by legalizing 
countries that they are providing meaningful protections to their so-
called ``sex workers.''
  A final point with regard to the act's minimum standards criteria for 
determining countries' tier status: It is the clear intent of the 
Congress, and there should be no mistake about this, that compliance 
with one or a few of the criteria does not, must not, lead to automatic 
designation as a Tier I country. Likewise, compliance with one or a few 
of the criteria shall not, must not, in and of inself shield countries 
from Tier III designation. The designation process is intended to be 
one of judgment and balance; and is not formulaic except to the intent 
of creating a presumption that Tier I status should only be granted to 
countries that comply with all of the minimum standards criteria. 
Countries that deliberately and grossly violate ``only some'' of the 
act's minimum standards criteria may be designated as Tier III 
countries if this be the judgment of the Trafficking Office--a judgment 
that should be exercised where there are gross and flagrant failures to 
comply with other minimum standards criteria. And, as noted, compliance 
with most of the statute's minimum standards criteria, combined with 
even modes noncompliance with a remaining few, is not intended to 
produce automatic Tier I designations.
  Finally, a few words are in order regarding the Senior Policy 
Operating Group created by this spring's Omnibus Appropriations Act, 
which today's reauthorization bill both incorporates and strengthens. 
While what I am about to say should be clear from the act's language, 
and will be made explicit in the omnibus appropriations bill which the 
Senate was unfortunately not able to enact today. While the omnibus 
bill will take care of some of the issues related to the Senior Policy 
Operating Group with explicit statutory language, I nonetheless believe 
it important to make Congress's unmistakable intention clear in today's 
floor statement.
  First, it should be clear that Congress established the Senior Policy 
Operating Group as the body it intended to coordinate all of the 
Government's antitrafficing grants, policies and grant policies. The 
Senior Policy Operating Group is comprised of senior political 
appointees of each of the agencies with trafficking policy 
responsibilities, and is thus perfectly structured to perform a vital 
function of monitoring government-wide policy consistency. As presently 
constituted, the Senior Policy Operating Group is made up of such 
members as TIP Office Director John Miller, Deputy HHS Secretary Claude 
Allen, Assistant Attorney General for Legal Policy Dan Bryant, 
Assistant AID Administrator for Eastern Europe and Russia Kent Hill. 
The committee meets on a regular basis and has produced an 
extraordinary consensus, government-wide grant policy directive. Thus, 
the Senior Policy Operating Group, including its chairman, John Miller, 
can and must perform the function intended for it by Congress: to be 
the sole and accountable body responsible for coordinating Federal 
anti-trafficking policies, grants and grant policies. Having said this, 
it should be noted that the coordinating responsibilities of the Senior 
Policy Operating Group are not intended to supercede the decisionmaking 
authority of the constituent members of the Task Force to Monitor and 
Combat Trafficking in Persons, to whom operating group members continue 
to report.
  Finally, as should be clear from the language of the act, but as is 
also worth unmistakably establishing, Congress did not intend that the 
designation of grants and/or policies as being for ``public health'' or 
like purposes should in any way remove such policies or grants from 
Senior Policy Operating Group coordinating jurisdiction when those 
policies or grants deal with the activities of traffickers, brothel 
owners, pimps or the women and children from whose activities they 
profit. It is vital for the Federal Government to make consistent and 
otherwise harmonize its activities to stop the spread of communicable 
disease and AIDS and its activities designed to prosecute traffickers 
and eliminate trafficking. Both are vital objectives, and as recent 
letters form the Moscow Duma have clearly shown, such harmonization is 
imperatively pressing. Some persons may believe that forming 
partnerships with traffickers, pimps, and brothel owners in order to 
ensure use of clean needles and condoms, and doing so in a manner which 
legitimizes the abusers and enslavers of women and children and shields 
them from prosecution, is the way to go. They are wrong. Others may 
believe that public health measurers to protect prostitutes from AIDS 
always stand in the way of prosecuting the traffickers, pimps and 
brothel owners who exploit them. They too are wrong. What Congress 
intends is that a Senior Policy Operating Group comprised of political 
appointees of all involved agencies is the body responsible for 
harmonizing the above objectives into a single set of government-wide 
policies.
  All this said, I reiterate my belief that the memory and spirit of 
Paul and Sheila Wellstone are alive in the bill before us, as are the 
spirits of such activists as the great English Parliamentarian and 
evangelist William Wilberforce, and the abolitionist leaders of my home 
State of Kansas who led the 19th century war against the chattel 
enslavement of African men and women. If we do it right, the 
Trafficking Victims Protection Act will be seen by generations to come 
to have met the high standards of William Wilberforce and the Free 
Kansas activists. If we do it right, we will have created a true 
monument to the memory of Paul and Sheila Wellstone. This act makes 
this possible. I urge my colleagues to pass it.

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