Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations Used in the Text
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue
- Archives Consulted
- Congress and the Cold War
- 1 Constructing a Bipartisan Foreign Policy
- 2 Legislative Power and the Congressional Right
- 3 Redefining Congressional Power
- 4 The Consequences of Vietnam
- 5 The Transformation of Stuart Symington
- 6 The New Internationalists' Congress
- 7 The Triumph of the Armed Services Committee
- Appendix A The Foreign Aid Revolt of 1963
- Appendix B The Senate and U.S. Involvement in Southeast Asia, 1970–1974
- Appendix C The Senate of the New Internationalists, 1973–1976
- Appendix D The House and the End of the Cold War, 1980–1985
- Index
Appendix A - The Foreign Aid Revolt of 1963
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations Used in the Text
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue
- Archives Consulted
- Congress and the Cold War
- 1 Constructing a Bipartisan Foreign Policy
- 2 Legislative Power and the Congressional Right
- 3 Redefining Congressional Power
- 4 The Consequences of Vietnam
- 5 The Transformation of Stuart Symington
- 6 The New Internationalists' Congress
- 7 The Triumph of the Armed Services Committee
- Appendix A The Foreign Aid Revolt of 1963
- Appendix B The Senate and U.S. Involvement in Southeast Asia, 1970–1974
- Appendix C The Senate of the New Internationalists, 1973–1976
- Appendix D The House and the End of the Cold War, 1980–1985
- Index
Summary
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Morse amendment to recommit the bill to the Foreign Relations Committee for one week. Rejected 29–46 (R 8–17, D 21–29). November 1, 1963.
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Ellender amendment to lower the amount for development loans in FY 1964 to $900 million instead of $975 million. Rejected 40–43 (R 12–14, D 28–29). November 5, 1963.
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Morse amendment to reduce the amount for development loans in FY 1964 to $950 million and repeal the standing authorizations for FY 1965 and 1966. Accepted 42–40 (R 13–11, D 29–29). November 5, 1963.
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Kuchel amendment prohibiting aid to any country that extends its territorial limits on the high seas beyond the limits recognized by the United States, and penalizes U.S. vessels for fishing within those limits. Accepted 57–29 (R 23–4, D 34–25). November 7, 1963.
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Fulbright amendment to Gruening amendment to give the president more discretion in cutting off aid to aggressor nations and to limit the amendment to foreign aid, and not all forms of U.S. assistance. Rejected 32–46 (R 4–23, D 28–23). November 7, 1963.
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Morse amendment to cut funds for supporting assistance from $400 million to $380 million. Accepted 51–41 (R 17–13, D 34–28). November 13, 1963.
HR 7885. The Foreign Assistance Act of 1963. Morse amendment to allow the President to aid a Latin American military junta only if he declares it in the national interest and Congress does not adopt a disapproving resolution within 30 days. Rejected 11–178 (R 2–29, D 9–49). November 14, 1963.
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- Congress and the Cold War , pp. 287 - 292Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005