fbpx
Wikipedia

Ron Kirk

Ronald Kirk (born June 27, 1954) is an American lawyer and politician who served as the United States Trade Representative from 2009 to 2013, as the 97th Secretary of State of Texas, and as the 57th Mayor of Dallas from 1995 to 2002. He is a member of the Democratic Party.

Ron Kirk
16th United States Trade Representative
In office
March 18, 2009 – March 15, 2013
PresidentBarack Obama
DeputyDemetrios Marantis
Preceded bySusan Schwab
Succeeded byMichael Froman
57th Mayor of Dallas
In office
June 5, 1995 – February 20, 2002
Preceded bySteve Bartlett
Succeeded byLaura Miller
97th Secretary of State of Texas
In office
April 4, 1994 – January 17, 1995
GovernorAnn Richards
Preceded byJohn Hannah
Succeeded byTony Garza
Personal details
Born
Ronald Kirk

(1954-06-27) June 27, 1954 (age 68)
Austin, Texas, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMatrice Ellis
Children2 daughters
EducationAustin College (BA)
University of Texas, Austin (JD)

Born in Austin, Texas, Kirk is a graduate of Austin's John H. Reagan High School, Austin College, and the University of Texas School of Law. From 1994 to 1995, Kirk worked as the Secretary of State of Texas, until he was elected as the Mayor of Dallas, where he served from 1995 to 2002 and was the first African-American to hold either of those positions. He ran for the United States Senate in 2002, but was defeated by Republican opponent John Cornyn. After his defeat, Kirk worked as a partner at the Houston-based law firm Vinson & Elkins and worked as a lobbyist for Energy Future Holdings and Merrill Lynch.[1][2]

Kirk was nominated by President Barack Obama to serve as U.S. Trade Representative and on March 18, 2009, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in a 92–5 confirmation vote.[3] On January 22, 2013, Kirk announced that he would be stepping down as U.S. Trade Representative[4][5]

Early life and career

Born in Austin, Texas, Kirk is the youngest of four children; his father was a U.S. postal worker and the family was politically active.[6] He grew up in a predominantly black community, and attended Austin's public schools.[6] He was a leader in high school, and was elected student council president in his senior year at John H. Reagan High School.[6]

Kirk attended Austin College, graduating with a degree in both political science and sociology in 1976.[6] He then went to the University of Texas School of Law. Upon receiving his Juris Doctor in 1979,[6] he practiced law until 1981 when he left to work in the office of then-Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen. In 1983, Kirk returned to Texas to lobby the state legislature in Austin, first as an attorney with the city of Dallas, and later with a law firm.

Kirk is the nephew of civil rights leader William Astor Kirk.[7]

Texas political career

In 1994, Kirk worked for then-Texas Governor Ann Richards as Secretary of State of Texas. The following year, Kirk ran for mayor of Dallas. With support of Dallas' business community and influential members of the city's African American community, Kirk was successful in his bid and became the first African American mayor of Dallas, Texas, while winning 62 percent of the total vote in 1995.

During his tenure as mayor, Kirk earned the reputation of being a coalition-builder[citation needed], managing to keep the always-tumultuous Dallas City Council and Dallas School Board together. Under his leadership, he proposed the "Dallas Plan", a vision for the next 25 years, which included the controversial Trinity River Project, a $246 million plan that called for constructing a network of parks and privately owned toll roads in the flood plain of the Trinity River. He also pushed the construction of the American Airlines Center, whose opening he oversaw in 2002.

In 1999, Kirk was re-elected as mayor of Dallas in a landslide with 74 percent of the vote. The only incident in the campaign was a radio campaign ad that used music from Star Trek and described Kirk as the "captain of the Dallas Enterprise", citing the city's bond program, the new sports arena and new roads. The ad was pulled after Paramount's lawyers sent a cease-and-desist letter.[8]

In 2002, Kirk resigned as mayor of Dallas in order to run for the Senate seat vacated by retiring Republican Phil Gramm. Facing then-Texas Attorney General John Cornyn; Kirk lost with 43 percent of the vote to Cornyn's 55 percent.

Post-mayoral career

Following his failed bid for Senate, Kirk returned to the law firm of Gardere Wynne Sewell in Dallas. He was briefly a candidate for chairman of the Democratic National Committee after the 2004 election. Later he was a partner with the Houston-based law firm Vinson and Elkins, where, according to Texans for Public Justice, he was, as of March 2007, one of the four highest paid lobbyists for Energy Future Holdings Corporation.[9]

During the Democratic National Convention, Kirk came out in favor of establishing the U.S. Public Service Academy as a civilian counterpart to the military service academies.[10]

U.S. Trade Representative

Although there was speculation that Kirk would be appointed Secretary of Transportation by President Barack Obama, he was given the position of Trade Representative.[11]

Nomination

As a supporter of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), his selection drew criticism from opponents of free trade policies.[12] His nomination ran into further controversy when it was revealed that he owed $9,975 in back taxes.[13] As compensation for speeches he gave from 2004 to the present, he had $37,750 of payments made directly to a scholarship fund at Austin College.[14] Kirk should have included the $37,750 payments with his gross income and then claimed a charitable deduction for the same amount.[14] Kirk also claimed deductions for three years of season tickets to the Dallas Mavericks as qualifying entertainment expenses.[14] In order to claim a qualifying entertainment expense, the Internal Revenue Service requires written documentation of the time, place, business purpose, name, and business relationship of the person being entertained, records that Kirk did not keep for almost half of the basketball games.[14] Kirk's deductions for tax and accounting fees were also too large.[14]

The U.S. Senate confirmed Kirk as United States Trade Representative on March 18, 2009, with a vote of 92 in favor and five opposed and he was sworn in the same day.[15] Kirk was formally sworn in by Vice President Joe Biden on March 20, 2009.[15] Kirk is the first person of African American descent to hold the position of United States Trade Representative.[16]

Work as U.S. Trade Representative

 
Kirk speaking at a press conference at the end of the 7th WTO Ministerial Conference

As the U.S. Trade Representative, Kirk received the formal title of Ambassador and was a member of the President's Cabinet.[clarification needed]

Much of his work, at least as publicly reported, focuses on issues relating to the development and enforcement of intellectual property law in the United States and abroad, especially as they relate to trade policy. This work includes the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) and Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) treaties.

China

Kirk has repeatedly raised concerns of American businesses that China is not properly enforcing intellectual property rights of American companies doing business there. It has been alleged that the Chinese government takes IT secrets of international companies operating there and passes them on to local companies to boost their competitiveness[17][18] Kirk has also been critical of China's internet censorship policies, and he is reported to be considering whether to challenge such censorship regulations in the WTO as an unfair barrier to trade; it would be the first case of its kind.[19][20][21]

ACTA in South Korea

 
Kirk meeting with President Obama before bilateral meetings in South Korea.

Kirk has been cited as the U.S. agent who convinced South Korea to adopt and enforce an early draft of the secretly negotiated Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA).[citation needed] The impacts in South Korea have been dramatic; tens of thousands of citizens have had their websites taken off of the Internet because of copyright infringement.[citation needed]

Trans-Pacific Partnership

In May 2012, a group of 30 legal scholars, critical of the USTR's "biased and closed" Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) treaty negotiation process and proposed intellectual property-related provisions, publicly called upon Kirk to uphold democratic ideals by reversing the "dialing back" of stakeholder participation and to release negotiating texts for public scrutiny. The law professors claimed that leaked documents show that the USTR is "pushing numerous standards that [...] could require changes in current U.S. statutory law" and that the proposal is "manifestly unbalanced—it predominantly proposes increases in proprietor rights, with no effort to expand the limitations and exceptions to such rights that are needed in the U.S. and abroad to serve the public interest". The group claimed that the negotiations excluded stakeholders such as "consumers, libraries, students, health advocacy or patient groups, or others users of intellectual property" and that it only offered "minimal representation of other affected businesses, such as generic drug manufacturers or Internet service providers".[22]

Kirk initially responded that he was "strongly offended by the assertion that our process has been non-transparent and lacked public participation" and that it was actually far more transparent than the negotiations for prior free trade agreements.[23]

This prompted further criticism from the academic group that free-trade agreement negotiations, notorious for their secrecy, are "the wrong standard for assessing the legitimacy of the TPP intellectual property chapter negotiations. This is because the IP chapter in the TPP, like ACTA, is not a trade agreement. It does not adjust tariffs and quotas—it sets new international limits on domestic regulation, regardless of whether such regulation discriminates against, or even affects, trade".[23] The group further reiterated its claim that the secretive process is antithetical to the ideals of democracy, and is "no way to engender trust and faith in international law making with such a broad impact".[23] One critic pointed out that despite Kirk's claim of transparency in the process, public-interest stakeholders have been completely excluded.[24] Another accused Kirk of sidestepping the issue of transparency, and pointed out that transparency is less about the degree of public input, and more about "the flow of information the other way—information about the workings of government being visible to the people it is supposed to represent".[25]

In a subsequent interview with Reuters, Kirk defended the secrecy, saying he believes the USTR has conducted "the most engaged and transparent process as we possibly could", but that "some measure of discretion and confidentiality" are needed "to preserve negotiating strength and to encourage our partners to be willing to put issues on the table they may not otherwise".[26] He dismissed the "tension" as natural and noted that when the Free Trade Area of the Americas drafts were released, negotiators were subsequently unable to reach a final agreement.[26]

On January 22, 2013, Kirk announced that he would be stepping down as the U.S. Trade Representative.[27]

See also

References

  1. ^ "President's Nominee for Trade Rep, a Lobbyist in 2008, to Take Advantage of Loophole in Anti-Lobbyist Regs". abcnews.com. Feb 21, 2009. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  2. ^ "Kirk cutting close on lobbying". politico.com. January 28, 2009. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  3. ^ "Senate Votes 92-5 to Confirm Kirk as U.S. Trade Representative". Wall Street Journal. March 18, 2009. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  4. ^ Jackson, David (January 22, 2013). "U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk to leave post". usatoday.com. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  5. ^ Kamen, Al (January 22, 2013). "U.S. Trade Rep Ron Kirk is leaving administration". washingtonpost.com. Retrieved January 22, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d e Harper, Liz (2002). "Former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk (Democrat)". PBS. Retrieved 2009-01-16.
  7. ^ Barnes, Michael (January 11, 2019). "Lauding Austin civil rights leader William Astor Kirk". Austin American-Statesman.
  8. ^ Vaidhyanathan, Siva (2003). Copyrights and copywrongs: the rise of intellectual property and how it threatens creativity. NYU Press. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-8147-8807-3. Retrieved 13 August 2010.
  9. ^ . WFAA.com. WFAA-TV, Inc. 12 December 2008. Archived from the original on December 14, 2008. Retrieved 2008-12-18.
  10. ^ http://uspublicserviceacademy.org/endorsements/. Retrieved 2012-09-05. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  11. ^ Recio, Maria (2008-12-12). "Former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk a finalist to be transportation secretary". McClatchy Company. Retrieved 2009-01-02.[dead link]
  12. ^ Wu, Brandon (2008-12-19). "Ron Kirk tapped as next USTR". Retrieved 2009-01-20.
  13. ^ Shear, Michael D. (March 2, 2009). "Tax Problems Surface for Trade Rep. Nominee Kirk". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-03-02.
  14. ^ a b c d e Gillman, Todd J. (2009-03-03). "Cabinet-pick Kirk owes $10,000 in back taxes". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  15. ^ a b Gillman, Todd J. (2009-03-21). "Former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk sworn in as trade ambassador". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  16. ^ Tate, Deborah (March 18, 2009). . Voice of America News. Archived from the original on March 21, 2009. Retrieved 2009-03-23.
  17. ^ Drajem, Mark (May 25, 2010). . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on May 28, 2010.
  18. ^ "US to pressure China on market access". China Economic Review. July 29, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ "U.S. weighing China Internet censorship case". Reuters. 2010-03-10.
  20. ^ Drajem, Mark (March 2, 2010). . Bloomberg Businessweek. Archived from the original on March 5, 2010.
  21. ^ (Press release). Office of the United States Trade Representative. June 24, 2009. Archived from the original on December 2, 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-22.
  22. ^ Flynn, Sean (May 9, 2012). "Law Professors Call for Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) Transparency". infojustice.org, a project of the Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property at American University Washington College of Law.
  23. ^ a b c Flynn, Sean (May 10, 2012). "Kirk Responds to TPP Transparency Demands". infojustice.org.
  24. ^ Masnick, Mike (May 9, 2012). "USTR Insults The Intelligence Of Legal Scholars After They Challenge Him On Lack Of TPP Transparency". TechDirt.
  25. ^ Siy, Sherwin (May 14, 2012). "TPP and a Very Basic Point About Transparency". Public Knowledge.
  26. ^ a b Palmer, Doug (May 13, 2012). "Some secrecy needed in trade talks: Ron Kirk". Reuters.
  27. ^ "U.S. Trade Chief Kirk to Quit Obama Administration". bloomberg.com. Retrieved January 22, 2013.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by Secretary of State of Texas
1994–1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mayor of Dallas
1995–2002
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Trade Representative
2009–2013
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for U.S. Senator from Texas
(Class 2)

2002
Succeeded by

kirk, ronald, kirk, born, june, 1954, american, lawyer, politician, served, united, states, trade, representative, from, 2009, 2013, 97th, secretary, state, texas, 57th, mayor, dallas, from, 1995, 2002, member, democratic, party, 16th, united, states, trade, r. Ronald Kirk born June 27 1954 is an American lawyer and politician who served as the United States Trade Representative from 2009 to 2013 as the 97th Secretary of State of Texas and as the 57th Mayor of Dallas from 1995 to 2002 He is a member of the Democratic Party Ron Kirk16th United States Trade RepresentativeIn office March 18 2009 March 15 2013PresidentBarack ObamaDeputyDemetrios MarantisPreceded bySusan SchwabSucceeded byMichael Froman57th Mayor of DallasIn office June 5 1995 February 20 2002Preceded bySteve BartlettSucceeded byLaura Miller97th Secretary of State of TexasIn office April 4 1994 January 17 1995GovernorAnn RichardsPreceded byJohn HannahSucceeded byTony GarzaPersonal detailsBornRonald Kirk 1954 06 27 June 27 1954 age 68 Austin Texas U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseMatrice EllisChildren2 daughtersEducationAustin College BA University of Texas Austin JD Born in Austin Texas Kirk is a graduate of Austin s John H Reagan High School Austin College and the University of Texas School of Law From 1994 to 1995 Kirk worked as the Secretary of State of Texas until he was elected as the Mayor of Dallas where he served from 1995 to 2002 and was the first African American to hold either of those positions He ran for the United States Senate in 2002 but was defeated by Republican opponent John Cornyn After his defeat Kirk worked as a partner at the Houston based law firm Vinson amp Elkins and worked as a lobbyist for Energy Future Holdings and Merrill Lynch 1 2 Kirk was nominated by President Barack Obama to serve as U S Trade Representative and on March 18 2009 and was confirmed by the U S Senate in a 92 5 confirmation vote 3 On January 22 2013 Kirk announced that he would be stepping down as U S Trade Representative 4 5 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Texas political career 3 Post mayoral career 4 U S Trade Representative 4 1 Nomination 4 2 Work as U S Trade Representative 4 2 1 China 4 2 2 ACTA in South Korea 4 2 3 Trans Pacific Partnership 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and career EditBorn in Austin Texas Kirk is the youngest of four children his father was a U S postal worker and the family was politically active 6 He grew up in a predominantly black community and attended Austin s public schools 6 He was a leader in high school and was elected student council president in his senior year at John H Reagan High School 6 Kirk attended Austin College graduating with a degree in both political science and sociology in 1976 6 He then went to the University of Texas School of Law Upon receiving his Juris Doctor in 1979 6 he practiced law until 1981 when he left to work in the office of then Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen In 1983 Kirk returned to Texas to lobby the state legislature in Austin first as an attorney with the city of Dallas and later with a law firm Kirk is the nephew of civil rights leader William Astor Kirk 7 Texas political career EditIn 1994 Kirk worked for then Texas Governor Ann Richards as Secretary of State of Texas The following year Kirk ran for mayor of Dallas With support of Dallas business community and influential members of the city s African American community Kirk was successful in his bid and became the first African American mayor of Dallas Texas while winning 62 percent of the total vote in 1995 During his tenure as mayor Kirk earned the reputation of being a coalition builder citation needed managing to keep the always tumultuous Dallas City Council and Dallas School Board together Under his leadership he proposed the Dallas Plan a vision for the next 25 years which included the controversial Trinity River Project a 246 million plan that called for constructing a network of parks and privately owned toll roads in the flood plain of the Trinity River He also pushed the construction of the American Airlines Center whose opening he oversaw in 2002 In 1999 Kirk was re elected as mayor of Dallas in a landslide with 74 percent of the vote The only incident in the campaign was a radio campaign ad that used music from Star Trek and described Kirk as the captain of the Dallas Enterprise citing the city s bond program the new sports arena and new roads The ad was pulled after Paramount s lawyers sent a cease and desist letter 8 In 2002 Kirk resigned as mayor of Dallas in order to run for the Senate seat vacated by retiring Republican Phil Gramm Facing then Texas Attorney General John Cornyn Kirk lost with 43 percent of the vote to Cornyn s 55 percent Post mayoral career EditFollowing his failed bid for Senate Kirk returned to the law firm of Gardere Wynne Sewell in Dallas He was briefly a candidate for chairman of the Democratic National Committee after the 2004 election Later he was a partner with the Houston based law firm Vinson and Elkins where according to Texans for Public Justice he was as of March 2007 one of the four highest paid lobbyists for Energy Future Holdings Corporation 9 During the Democratic National Convention Kirk came out in favor of establishing the U S Public Service Academy as a civilian counterpart to the military service academies 10 U S Trade Representative EditAlthough there was speculation that Kirk would be appointed Secretary of Transportation by President Barack Obama he was given the position of Trade Representative 11 Nomination Edit As a supporter of the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA his selection drew criticism from opponents of free trade policies 12 His nomination ran into further controversy when it was revealed that he owed 9 975 in back taxes 13 As compensation for speeches he gave from 2004 to the present he had 37 750 of payments made directly to a scholarship fund at Austin College 14 Kirk should have included the 37 750 payments with his gross income and then claimed a charitable deduction for the same amount 14 Kirk also claimed deductions for three years of season tickets to the Dallas Mavericks as qualifying entertainment expenses 14 In order to claim a qualifying entertainment expense the Internal Revenue Service requires written documentation of the time place business purpose name and business relationship of the person being entertained records that Kirk did not keep for almost half of the basketball games 14 Kirk s deductions for tax and accounting fees were also too large 14 The U S Senate confirmed Kirk as United States Trade Representative on March 18 2009 with a vote of 92 in favor and five opposed and he was sworn in the same day 15 Kirk was formally sworn in by Vice President Joe Biden on March 20 2009 15 Kirk is the first person of African American descent to hold the position of United States Trade Representative 16 Work as U S Trade Representative Edit Kirk speaking at a press conference at the end of the 7th WTO Ministerial Conference As the U S Trade Representative Kirk received the formal title of Ambassador and was a member of the President s Cabinet clarification needed Much of his work at least as publicly reported focuses on issues relating to the development and enforcement of intellectual property law in the United States and abroad especially as they relate to trade policy This work includes the Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement ACTA and Trans Pacific Partnership TPP treaties China Edit Kirk has repeatedly raised concerns of American businesses that China is not properly enforcing intellectual property rights of American companies doing business there It has been alleged that the Chinese government takes IT secrets of international companies operating there and passes them on to local companies to boost their competitiveness 17 18 Kirk has also been critical of China s internet censorship policies and he is reported to be considering whether to challenge such censorship regulations in the WTO as an unfair barrier to trade it would be the first case of its kind 19 20 21 ACTA in South Korea Edit Kirk meeting with President Obama before bilateral meetings in South Korea Kirk has been cited as the U S agent who convinced South Korea to adopt and enforce an early draft of the secretly negotiated Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement ACTA citation needed The impacts in South Korea have been dramatic tens of thousands of citizens have had their websites taken off of the Internet because of copyright infringement citation needed Trans Pacific Partnership Edit In May 2012 a group of 30 legal scholars critical of the USTR s biased and closed Trans Pacific Partnership TPP treaty negotiation process and proposed intellectual property related provisions publicly called upon Kirk to uphold democratic ideals by reversing the dialing back of stakeholder participation and to release negotiating texts for public scrutiny The law professors claimed that leaked documents show that the USTR is pushing numerous standards that could require changes in current U S statutory law and that the proposal is manifestly unbalanced it predominantly proposes increases in proprietor rights with no effort to expand the limitations and exceptions to such rights that are needed in the U S and abroad to serve the public interest The group claimed that the negotiations excluded stakeholders such as consumers libraries students health advocacy or patient groups or others users of intellectual property and that it only offered minimal representation of other affected businesses such as generic drug manufacturers or Internet service providers 22 Kirk initially responded that he was strongly offended by the assertion that our process has been non transparent and lacked public participation and that it was actually far more transparent than the negotiations for prior free trade agreements 23 This prompted further criticism from the academic group that free trade agreement negotiations notorious for their secrecy are the wrong standard for assessing the legitimacy of the TPP intellectual property chapter negotiations This is because the IP chapter in the TPP like ACTA is not a trade agreement It does not adjust tariffs and quotas it sets new international limits on domestic regulation regardless of whether such regulation discriminates against or even affects trade 23 The group further reiterated its claim that the secretive process is antithetical to the ideals of democracy and is no way to engender trust and faith in international law making with such a broad impact 23 One critic pointed out that despite Kirk s claim of transparency in the process public interest stakeholders have been completely excluded 24 Another accused Kirk of sidestepping the issue of transparency and pointed out that transparency is less about the degree of public input and more about the flow of information the other way information about the workings of government being visible to the people it is supposed to represent 25 In a subsequent interview with Reuters Kirk defended the secrecy saying he believes the USTR has conducted the most engaged and transparent process as we possibly could but that some measure of discretion and confidentiality are needed to preserve negotiating strength and to encourage our partners to be willing to put issues on the table they may not otherwise 26 He dismissed the tension as natural and noted that when the Free Trade Area of the Americas drafts were released negotiators were subsequently unable to reach a final agreement 26 On January 22 2013 Kirk announced that he would be stepping down as the U S Trade Representative 27 See also EditHistory of African Americans in Dallas Fort WorthReferences Edit President s Nominee for Trade Rep a Lobbyist in 2008 to Take Advantage of Loophole in Anti Lobbyist Regs abcnews com Feb 21 2009 Retrieved January 22 2013 Kirk cutting close on lobbying politico com January 28 2009 Retrieved January 22 2013 Senate Votes 92 5 to Confirm Kirk as U S Trade Representative Wall Street Journal March 18 2009 Retrieved January 22 2013 Jackson David January 22 2013 U S Trade Representative Ron Kirk to leave post usatoday com Retrieved January 22 2013 Kamen Al January 22 2013 U S Trade Rep Ron Kirk is leaving administration washingtonpost com Retrieved January 22 2013 a b c d e Harper Liz 2002 Former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk Democrat PBS Retrieved 2009 01 16 Barnes Michael January 11 2019 Lauding Austin civil rights leader William Astor Kirk Austin American Statesman Vaidhyanathan Siva 2003 Copyrights and copywrongs the rise of intellectual property and how it threatens creativity NYU Press p 187 ISBN 978 0 8147 8807 3 Retrieved 13 August 2010 Ex Dallas mayor and Cabinet hopeful Ron Kirk faces hurdles as former lobbyist WFAA com WFAA TV Inc 12 December 2008 Archived from the original on December 14 2008 Retrieved 2008 12 18 http uspublicserviceacademy org endorsements Retrieved 2012 09 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Recio Maria 2008 12 12 Former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk a finalist to be transportation secretary McClatchy Company Retrieved 2009 01 02 dead link Wu Brandon 2008 12 19 Ron Kirk tapped as next USTR Retrieved 2009 01 20 Shear Michael D March 2 2009 Tax Problems Surface for Trade Rep Nominee Kirk The Washington Post Retrieved 2009 03 02 a b c d e Gillman Todd J 2009 03 03 Cabinet pick Kirk owes 10 000 in back taxes The Dallas Morning News Retrieved 2009 03 21 a b Gillman Todd J 2009 03 21 Former Dallas Mayor Ron Kirk sworn in as trade ambassador The Dallas Morning News Retrieved 2009 03 21 Tate Deborah March 18 2009 US Senate Confirms Trade Representative Voice of America News Archived from the original on March 21 2009 Retrieved 2009 03 23 Drajem Mark May 25 2010 Kirk Says U S Businesses Plead for China to Protect Patents Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on May 28 2010 US to pressure China on market access China Economic Review July 29 2010 permanent dead link U S weighing China Internet censorship case Reuters 2010 03 10 Drajem Mark March 2 2010 Google Wants U S to Weigh WTO Challenge to China Censorship Bloomberg Businessweek Archived from the original on March 5 2010 Secretary Gary Locke and USTR Ron Kirk Call on China To Revoke Mandatory Internet Filtering Software Press release Office of the United States Trade Representative June 24 2009 Archived from the original on December 2 2010 Retrieved 2010 11 22 Flynn Sean May 9 2012 Law Professors Call for Trans Pacific Partnership TPP Transparency infojustice org a project of the Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property at American University Washington College of Law a b c Flynn Sean May 10 2012 Kirk Responds to TPP Transparency Demands infojustice org Masnick Mike May 9 2012 USTR Insults The Intelligence Of Legal Scholars After They Challenge Him On Lack Of TPP Transparency TechDirt Siy Sherwin May 14 2012 TPP and a Very Basic Point About Transparency Public Knowledge a b Palmer Doug May 13 2012 Some secrecy needed in trade talks Ron Kirk Reuters U S Trade Chief Kirk to Quit Obama Administration bloomberg com Retrieved January 22 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ron Kirk Profile at the Office of the United States Trade Representative Appearances on C SPAN Ron Kirk collected news and commentary at The New York Times The Dynamic U S Trade Relationship with Asia Presentation by USTR Ron Kirk at Engaging Asia 2011 March 30 2011 Political officesPreceded byJohn Hannah Secretary of State of Texas1994 1995 Succeeded byTony GarzaPreceded bySteve Bartlett Mayor of Dallas1995 2002 Succeeded byLaura MillerPreceded bySusan Schwab United States Trade Representative2009 2013 Succeeded byMichael FromanParty political officesPreceded byVictor Morales Democratic nominee for U S Senator from Texas Class 2 2002 Succeeded byRick Noriega Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ron Kirk amp oldid 1152192943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.