An email circulating about Nancy Pelosi and StarKist Tuna only mentions a rumor about her on Snopes, not the truth that Snopes determined on the website – It says Pelosi is beholden to Starkist/Del Monte. Yet this is not true. Pelosi’s husband does not own 17 million in stock. The actual truth and false email is below. In reality, this is about a bill to give Samoa minimum wage increases was a response in part to giving the Mariana’s islands (Saipan) wage increases, because former speaker Tom Delay had kept any legislation for reform on the Mariana’s employment practices from coming to the floor. This legislation sought to investigate allegations of people paying to leave China, specifically women, being told they were going to America, only to land in the Marianna’s island factories which were prison like – many women had to turn to sex to earn money to try to get off the island. The factories, which Speaker Delay was in support of and Abramoff profitted from, even forced women who got pregnant to terminate their pregnancies through forced abortions.
Abramoff Scandal links to Delay, Forced Abortions on Island
(H.T to John E.)
(With Tom Delay going to Dancing with the Stars, I think we should all think about a Beck style protest of Sponsors, and keep in mind the young women forced into abortions while he is smiling on TV.)
This was documented by CNN, 60 minutes and many other news sources.
The worst is that Delay used every procedural rule to stop any investigative legislation from coming to the house floor and it turned out that he was a major receiver from the Tan family – major donors to his campaign, and owners of garment sweatshops in Saipan (Mariana’s)
But, I know this issue personally, as I interviewed the reporter who has been following this issue for over a decade on my radio show.
(Dengre from Daily Kos)
Dengre on Delay-Abramoff Scandal
Here in Colorado a Republican candidate for Senate and friend of Delay, lost his election due to his “fact finding mission” he went on in the Marianna’s in the 1990s. Turns out he went para sailing and stayed at fancy hotels, never visiting the slave factories.
The forced abortions caused Colorado’s Right to Life groups to withhold their endorsement for a Republican Candidate in the
Colorado Senate Race, something that has not happened in recent history.
Bob Schaffer and Mariana’s Immigration
Overall, this controversy with Pelosi is a red herring. I applaud the Democrats and Republicans who joined them to raise wages on US protectorate Islands and investigate these issues in Marianas last May and I thank out going President Bush for signing the bill into law. (However, it should be noted that many Pro-life groups were pressuring Bush to sign this, not democrats)
(read below)
However, I would encourage you not buy Tuna or Sushi made from Tuna just because the fish stock of Tuna has plummeted due to the Sushi craze that has swept the world in the past 10 years.
Tuna quotas cut as stocks decline BBC
Rumor
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s home district includes San Francisco.Star-Kist Tuna’s headquarters are in San Francisco, Pelosi’s home district.
Star-Kist is owned by Del Monte Foods and is a major contributor to Pelosi.
Star-Kist is the major employer in American Samoa employing 75% of the Samoan workforce.
Paul Pelosi, Nancy’s husband, owns $17 million dollars of Star-Kist stock.
In January, 2007 when the minimum wage was increased from $5.15 to $7.25, Pelosi had American Samoa exempted from the increase so Del Monte would not have to pay the higher wage. This would make Del Monte products less expensive than their competition’s.
Last week when the huge bailout bill was passed, Pelosi added an earmark to the final bill adding $33 million dollars for an ‘economic development credit in American Samoa’.
Pelosi has called the Bush Administration ‘corrupt’.
She should know.
Snopes answer
Origins: Prior to 2007, the U.S. territories of Northern Marianas and American Samoa were exempt from federal minimum wage standards; instead, the minimum wage standards in those territories were established by a committee appointed by the U.S. Department of Labor. The Fair Minimum Wage Act of 2007 (H.R. 2), introduced to Congress in January of that year, sought to revise U.S. federal minimum wage standards, including the gradual raising of the federal minimum wage from $5.15 to $7.25 per hour. When it came to light that the bill extended federal minimum wage standards to the Northern Marianas but exempted American Samoa, Republican critics charged that this circumstance was the doing of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a favor she was granting because the island’s primary employer was headquartered in her district:
Under the minimum-wage increase approved by the House this week, employers on the Northern Marianas would for the first time have to pay their workers the minimum wage, which would rise from $5.15 to $7.25 an hour. For years, Republicans – with the help of convicted lobbyist Jack A. Abramoff – have fended off efforts to bring the islands under federal labor laws.The bill would leave American Samoa as the only territory not covered by the $7.25 rate, and because Samoa is represented by a Democrat, Del. Eni F.H. Faleomavaega, Republicans cried foul.
Faleomavaega’s campaign coffers have been well stocked by the tuna industry that dominates his island economy, but Republicans picked up on another issue: StarKist owns one of the largest canneries on the island, and Del Monte Foods, StarKist’s parent company, is based in San Francisco, which Pelosi represents.
Speaker Pelosi was the Congressional leader of the party that sponsored H.R. 2 (214 of the bill’s 222 cosponsors were Democrats), and it is true that Del Monte Foods’ San Francisco headquarters are located within the boundaries of the California district she represents in Congress. However, we haven’t found any evidence of a direct link between Speaker Pelosi and the decision to exclude American Samoa from the minimum wage legislation: Democrats maintained that Speaker Pelosi did not work on the details of the bill, and that the exemption for American Samoa was created at the behest of the island’s Congressional delegate:
A spokesman for Pelosi said the bill excluded American Samoa at the request of nonvoting Delegate Eni Faleomavaega, a Democrat who represents the Pacific island territories in the House.The minimum-wage bill was drafted by [House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George] Miller’s committee, and Pelosi had little input on the nitty-gritty details of the legislation, House sources said.
Faleomavaega did indeed strongly advocate that American Samoa be allowed to retain its exemption from federal minimum wage standards:
One person who is concerned about enforcing the federal minimum wage in American Samoa is non-voting Rep. Eni Faleomavaega, who echoed the arguments of many conservatives against raising the minimum wage in poorer regions of the U.S. mainland.A “decrease in production or departure of one or both of the two canneries in American Samoa could devastate the local economy, resulting in massive layoffs and insurmountable financial difficulties,” he said in a statement provided to The [Washington] Times.
“The truth is the global tuna industry is so competitive that it is no longer possible for the federal government to demand mainland minimum wage rates for American Samoa without causing the collapse of our economy and making us welfare wards of the federal government.”
As a result of the controversy, Democrats asserted that American Samoa would indeed be covered in the final version of the bill:
Fending off charges of favoritism, congressional Democrats say a just-passed minimum wage bill will be changed to cover all U.S. territories – including American Samoa – before it reaches President George W. Bush’s desk.The House of Representatives’ leader, Nancy Pelosi, told reporters she has instructed the House Education and Labor Committee to help get the bill changed to “make sure that all of the territories have to comply with the U.S. law on minimum wage.”
(The revised minimum wage regulations for American Samoa are detailed here.)Whatever the motivation might have been for the initial exclusion of American Samoa from the minimum wage bill, news accounts do not support the claim that the exemption came about because Del Monte Food was “a major contributor to Pelosi.” The New York Post noted that “Pelosi’s spokeswoman denied receiving any campaign contributions from Del Monte, which federal campaign records confirm,” and even the conservative Washington Times observed that:
Democrats involved in the legislation say that neither Del Monte nor StarKist has lobbied Mrs. Pelosi or the committee on the matter. And records show that while Del Monte political action committees have given $5,300 in the past five years to Republicans, neither they nor Del Monte executives have given to any Democrats.
We also could find no confirmation for the claim that Speaker Pelosi’s husband owns “$17 million dollars of StarKist stock.” StarKist is a subsidiary of Del Monte Foods,* and the H.J. Heinz Company in turn owns nearly 75% of Del Monte’s stock. Various pieces of Internet flotsam alternately claim that Mr. Pelosi owns$17 million dollars worth of “StarKist stock,” “Del Monte stock,” or “H.J. Heinz stock,” but although the Pelosis hold investments in stocks and real estate worth many millions of dollars, we could not find any hard information confirming that they own millions of dollars of stock in either Del Monte Foods or H.J. Heinz (Since the financial disclosure rules that apply to members of Congress contain a number of loopholes that can obscure members’ investment holdings, it is also difficult to definitively rule out that the Pelosis might hold such an investment.)
The $700 billion “bailout bill” (H.R. 1424) that Congress began working on in September 2008 in response to an economic crisis in the U.S. contained hundreds of various tax provisions typically (but not necessarily accurately) described as “earmarks,” most famously an “exemption from excise tax for certain wooden arrows designed for use by children.” One of those provisions modified the Tax Relief and Health Care Act of 2006, which had created an economic development credit for American Samoa, to extend that development credit from applying to the “to the first two taxable years of a corporation” to applying to “the first 4 taxable years.” We have so far not been able to determine, from available public information, which member(s) of Congress initiated the addition of that provision.
Can we get a Dancing with the Stars advertiser boycott started until Delay is off the show? Is there one already started?
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Can someone give me a summary of what the hell we are supposed to be pissed about or whatever?
and Tom DeLay and Del Monte and American Samoa and Bob Schaefer and Bill Ritter (for the Romanoff snub) (still) and Dancing With the Stars advertisers, and spammers and H.J. Heinz (but not John Kerry’s wife), and Faleomavaega and pretty much the whole tuna industry. And sushi.
.
so they can go back to catching tuna
.