Word: aca
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...quick passage. That may prove to be easier said than done. A Lou Harris poll in January showed 63% of the public in favor of an Agency for Consumer Advocacy and 17% opposed. But support could well decline as debate intensifies and voters begin to look at how the ACA would function...
...governmental departments for abuses of their powers at the consumers' expense. The agency would not be able to sue private companies, but it could go to court to challenge the decisions of regulatory bodies. For example, if a telephone company were to ask for rate increases that the ACA felt were excessive, the ACA could appear before the Federal Communications Commission to oppose the application. If overruled, the new body would be empowered to appeal to the courts. Says New York Congressman Benjamin Rosenthal, a co-sponsor in the House: "We see it as an advocacy agency, a small...
...bill's critics, notably many corporate executives, see it as a monster in the making. Any company that needs government approval to raise or lower a price, change an interstate route, get an export license or win permission to market a drug, could be subject to ACA'S watchful eye. So too would companies that have to meet Government safety standards for their products. Complains General Foods Chairman James Ferguson, an outspoken critic: "The cost of virtually nonstop litigation would increase enormously the expense of running any business and the price of goods to the consumer, while...
Campaign Pledge. A new layer of bureaucracy is the very thing Carter wants least. On the same day that he endorsed ACA, the President also signed legislation enabling him to follow through on another campaign pledge -to reorganize and reduce the size of the Federal Government. Carter proposed initial funding of only $11 million or $12 million annually for ACA. Said Esther Peterson, the new presidential assistant for consumer affairs, whose task will be to lobby the proposal on Capitol Hill: "I am not for Big Business or Big Bureaucracy. We have to start small." If past experience...
...thought of as a conservative, but in Tennessee I'm thought of as a Bolshevik." He supported fair housing and opposed repeal of the one-man, one-vote principle. He also opposes busing and the Consumer Protection Agency and often votes against Pentagon cutbacks. His ACA ratings in 1975 dropped to 54% from previous ratings in the 70s. But he has never taken pains to ingratiate himself with party stalwarts; he is known as a poor organizer and is not personally close to Ford...