United States-China Commissioners

MICHAEL R. WESSEL

Commissioner Michael R. Wessel was appointed to the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission by House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi on April 29, 2003 for a two-year term expiring December 31, 2004.

Commissioner Wessel is a Senior Vice President at the Downey McGrath Group, Inc., a public affairs consulting firm offering expertise in government, politics, and international affairs. He served on the staff of House Democratic Leader Richard A. Gephardt for more than twenty years, leaving his position as General Counsel in March 1998. In addition to his duties as General Counsel, Commissioner Wessel was Mr. Gephardt's chief policy advisor, strategist, and negotiator. He was responsible for the development, coordination, management, and implementation of the Democratic Leader's overall policy and political objectives, with specific responsibility for international trade, finance, economics, labor, and taxation.

During his more than twenty years on Capitol Hill, Commissioner Wessel served in a number of positions: He was Mr. Gephardt's principal Ways and Means aide, where he developed and implemented numerous tax and trade policy initiatives. He participated in the enactment of every major trade policy initiative from 1978 to his departure in 1998. In the late 1980s, he was the Executive Director of the House Trade and Competitiveness Task Force, where he was responsible for the Democrats’ trade and competitiveness agenda as well as overall coordination of the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988. The National Journal wrote: Commissioner Wessel is "generally credited in Washington trade circles with having helped to keep Gephardt ahead of the curve on major issues."

He was intimately involved in the development of comprehensive tax reform legislation in the early 1980s and every major tax bill during his tenure. Beginning in 1989, he became the principal advisor to the Democratic Leadership on economic policy matters and served as tax policy coordinator to the 1990 budget summit. In 1995, he developed the 10 percent Tax Plan, a comprehensive tax reform initiative that would enable roughly four out of five taxpayers to pay no more than a ten percent rate in federal income taxes. It became the principal Democratic tax reform alternative. In 1988, he served as National Issues Director to Gephardt's Presidential campaign. During the 1992 Clinton/Gore campaign, he assisted on a broad range of issues and served as a Senior Policy Advisor to the Clinton/Gore transition office. After leaving Mr. Gephardt's staff, Commissioner Wessel opened his own consulting firm, where he provided strategic advice to a number of business, political, and labor organizations. He also served as a Visiting Fellow at the Washington, DC-based Economic Policy Institute and currently maintains an affiliation with the Institute.

He has coauthored a number of articles with Democratic Leader Gephardt and a book, An Even Better Place: America in the 21st Century (Public Affairs, 1999). Commissioner Wessel served as a Commissioner of the congressional U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission from April 2001 to January 7, 2003, and was reappointed for a two-year term by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi on April 29, 2003. Commissioner Wessel served as a member of the U.S. Trade Deficit Review Commission in 1999-2000, a congressionally created commission charged with studying the nature, causes and consequences of the U. S. merchandise trade and current account deficits.

Commissioner Wessel holds a B.A. and a J.D. from George Washington University. He is a member of the bar of the District of Columbia and Pennsylvania. He and his wife Andrea have four children.


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