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HCONRES 145 112th Congress House International Affairs Arms control and nonproliferation Asia International organizations and cooperation Military assistance, sales, and agreements Military procurement, research, weapons development North Korea Sanctions Trade restrictions United Nations

Calling for universal condemnation of the North Korean missile launch of December 12, 2012.

Introduced: December 17, 2012 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 11 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Jan 2, 2013
Received in the Senate.
Jan 1, 2013
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Jan 1, 2013
On motion to suspend the rules and agree to the resolution, as amended Agreed to by voice vote. (text: CR 12/31/2012 H7498)
Jan 1, 2013
Passed/agreed to in House: On motion to suspend the rules and agree to the resolution, as amended Agreed to by voice vote.(text: CR 12/31/2012 H7498)
Jan 1, 2013
Considered as unfinished business. (consideration: CR H7560)
Dec 31, 2012
At the conclusion of debate, the chair put the question on the motion to suspend the rules. Mr. Berman objected to the vote on the grounds that a quorum was not present. Further proceedings on the motion were postponed. The point of no quorum was considered as withdrawn.
Dec 31, 2012
DEBATE - The House proceeded with forty minutes of debate on H. Con. Res. 145.
Dec 31, 2012
Considered under suspension of the rules. (consideration: CR H7498-7500)
Dec 31, 2012
Ms. Ros-Lehtinen moved to suspend the rules and agree to the resolution, as amended.
Dec 17, 2012
Referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
Dec 17, 2012
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Expresses the sense of Congress that: (1) the North Korean missile launch of December 12, 2012, represents a flagrant violation of specified U.N. Security Council resolutions; (2) North Korea continues to defy the U.N., its Six-Party partners, and the international community; (3) the member nations should immediately impose sanctions covered by such resolutions and censure North Korea; (4) all current restrictions against North Korea, including sanctions that ban the importation into the United States of North Korean goods, should remain in effect until North Korea no longer engages in activities that threaten U.S. interests and global peace; (5) China should cooperate with the United States in a new round of Security Council sanctions, pressure its North Korean partner, redouble its efforts to prevent Chinese companies from transferring military and dual-use technologies to North Korea, and crack down on transshipments through China that relate to North Korean military, missile, and nuclear programs and proliferation activities; and (6) North Korea should dismantle its missile and nuclear weapons programs, cease its proliferation activities, and comply with all relevant international agreements and Security Council resolutions.

What's happening now January 2, 2013

Received in the Senate.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1