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Global Justice [globaljustice] On Behalf Of

Deborah James

Thursday, July 28, 2005 11:32 AM

Global Justice

CAFTA Passed

 

 

 

Democracy Sold Out - CAFTA Approved by Pork and a Hill of Beans

 

Razor Thin Vote Seals Fate Against More Expansion of NAFTA

 

 

Published on Thursday, July 28, 2005 by CommonDreams.org

 

 

by Deborah James

 

 

At 12:03 am on July 28th, the House of Representatives approved the Central

America-Dominican Republic-United States Free Trade Agreement, CAFTA. CAFTA,

which would expand NAFTA to Central America and the Dominican Republic, would

devastate farmers, privatize essential public services, and accelerate the

race to the bottom on wages in the US and all over Central America.

 

At the end of the allotted 15 minutes of voting time the count was 180 to

175 against CAFTA, so the Republican leadership kept the vote open over an

hour, in order to bully legislators into approving the bill. In the final

tally,

which was 217 to 215, a full 15 Democrats voted in favor of big business by

supporting CAFTA, while 25 Republicans defied the Bush Administration and

voted against it. Democrats deserving of punishment include Representatives

Bean

(D-IL), Cooper (D-TN), Dicks (D-WA), Cuellar (D-WA), Hinojosa (D-TX),

Jefferson (D-LA), Matheson (D-UT), Meeks (D-NY), Moore (D-KS), Moran (D-VA),

Ortiz

(D-TX), Skelton (D-MO), Snyder (D-AR), Tanner (D-TN), and Towns (D-NY). The

full roll call vote is available at

http://clerk.house.gov/cgi-bin/vote.asp?year=2005 & rollnumber=443.

 

The Republicans who refrained from voting were known CAFTA opponents who

evidently caved into hard-core bullying from their leadership. Yet stiff

criticism also goes to the Democrats who could have prevented handing Bush a

win on

a silver platter by sticking to labor and their environment rather than

corporate interests.

 

It seems that some Representatives have not reviewed the record of the

massive failure of NAFTA, the agreement that cost a million US jobs and

increased

poverty in Mexico. NAFTA also caused the loss of 38,000 US family farms,

while pushing 1.5 million Mexican farmers off their land. Yet others, like

Hilda

Solis (D-CA), the only Representative from Nicaragua, gave a passionate and

compelling argument against CAFTA.

 

CAFTA was approved, and that will be the bottom line for communities in

Central America and the US who will face years of decreasing living standards,

falling wages, eroding environmental protection, and losing family farms

because of CAFTA - not to mention the 275,000 HIV positive Central Americans

who

will be cut off from life-saving generic medicines because of the extremist

patent monopolies embodied in the treaty.

 

In tonight’s vote, money values of big corporate interests trumped human

values of worker’s rights, fair trade, and environmental protection. Once

again,

the people of the US – and the Democratic Party – lost an opportunity to

deliver a crushing blow to the Bush Administration. Yet House Majority Leader

Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) predicted that Bush's win on CAFTA " will be a Pyrrhic

victory for him, because we will take our message to the American people that

we

are the ones looking out for them. "

 

Twisting Arms Until They Break into a Thousand Pieces

 

Since CAFTA was so damaging to American workers, the environment, and

Central Americans, it wasn’t able to pass on its own merits. CAFTA’s passage

was

bought by an outrageous amount of pork barrel politics, and fake side deals

that don’t amount to a hill of beans. Earlier this month, Republican leaders

–

in no secret maneuver – casually linked transportation and energy bill

giveaways to support for CAFTA.

 

A report issued earlier this month by Public Citizens demonstrated that 89%

of side deals negotiated to gain votes for previous trade deals have been

broken. The side deals on sugar, labor, and textiles have all been exposed as

band-aids that hardly cover the festering wounds of job loss that CAFTA will

cause. And the China-punishing legislation hastily approved to buy another

couple of votes was shown by the AFL-CIO to contain less protections for

American

jobs that other China legislation already in committee.

 

Unpacking the Rhetoric

 

A central tenet of Republican arguments rests on a projected theory that

free trade delivers economic prosperity, ergo CAFTA will deliver development.

Had the situation not been so tragic, it would have been comic to view

Republicans repeatedly claiming that CAFTA would help poor Central Americans

develop

because they would have increased access to US imports. The problem with the

theory, is, well, the results of the theory when applied.

 

After 25 years of following free-trade doctrine (opening markets,

privatizing basic services, deregulating industry, lowering tariffs, orienting

their

production for export, and consecrating intellectual property) Latin Americans

have achieved the lowest rate of economic growth in their history – less than

..5% a year in the last 25 years, compared with a total of 80% during the

previous 20 years. The main issue here is that so-called “free tradeâ€

doesn’t

actual deliver the promised benefits – because it really has little to do

with

free trade, but much to do with transferring wealth and decision making

power from the public to private, unaccountable elites known as multinational

corporations. Until we have a sea change in what the US public understands by

the phrase “free trade†we will continue to see our democracy turned into a

political system of corporate rule.

 

Specter of 9/11

 

The US Trade Representative Robert Portman was joined by Vice President Dick

Cheney in working the House floor tonight to secure votes. President Bush

made a highly rare appearance in the House, mostly framing CAFTA as a security

issue. As Bush's polling numbers fall, support for the war in Iraq recedes,

and his top advisor Karl Rove is embroiled in a political scandal, Bush pushed

hard for a “policy win†to attempt to demonstrate that he wasn’t a lame

duck.

 

Bush’s primary argument centered around the outrageous argument that CAFTA

would increase our national security. The phrase “fledgling democracy†was

used so many times to refer to Central American countries that you’d think

they

had hatched last month, with the help of mother hen USA. Tom Delay has

evidently taken up permanent residence in never-never land to be able to make

arguments like, “It is good for our national security in supporting these

fledgling democracies at our back door. It is good for our effort against

illegal

immigration. It is good for our economy.â€

 

House Majority leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) pushed back hard against the

ridiculous Bush hypothesis that CAFTA would increase national security. " Trade

alone, devoid of basic living and working standards, has not, and will not,

promote security, nor will it lift developing nations out of poverty, " she

said.

" Our national security will not be improved by exploiting workers in Central

America. "

 

Republicans have been much more adept than progressives at linking issues of

security with trade. We in the global economic justice movement must learn

adapt our rhetoric and strategies to the political changes our country has

undergone post-9/11, and make the argument that fair trade, not corporate

globalization, will increase security. But we also need more collaboration with

the

movements for civil liberties and peace to link the issues, including from

our progressive media, who barely covered CAFTA before it passed.

 

Vision for the Hemisphere

 

Republicans actually acknowledged that poverty – and a lack of hope for

future economic opportunity – breed insecurity. But they have the math

backwards.

CAFTA will not eradicate poverty, but will greatly increase it The biggest

impact of CAFTA, according to the think tank the Center for Economic and

Policy Research, will be to push down wages. And the Administration continue to

frame the issue of free trade and democracy as two sides of the same coin,

rather than acknowledging that one is an economic platform that a

well-functioning democracy may choose not to pursue.

 

CAFTA proponents repeatedly baited voters with the specter of an imminent

takeover of Central America by alleged communist forces, harkening back to the

wars and instability of the 1980s. “We can send free trade to Central America

today, or we will be sending troops tomorrow†was a frequent refrain.

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Cuba’s Castro were constantly invoked as

being

ready to “fill the ideological void†if the Congress “turned their backs

on

Central America.†It was as if Central America was an empty vessel, waiting

for US leadership to fill. It was the first time the subject of ALBA, the

Venezuelan’s Bolivarian Alternative for the Americas, was raised on the House

floor – yet it was portrayed as a radical attack on America rather than a

political and economic program that embodies a different vision for the future

of

the Americas based on a better vision of economic integration among the

peoples of Latin America.

 

Stepping Stone to the FTAA Crumbles

 

The passage of CAFTA is a serious blow to our movement for global justice.

But the vote also seals the fate of the future of NAFTA expansion. If CAFTA, a

deal with the tiniest economies in the region and the least economic impact

on the US possible, squeaked by with only a razor-thin 2-vote margin, the

possibility that the Administration could get a deal approved with economies

that would actually impact the US doesn’t pass the laugh test. The Bush dream

of

a Free Trade Area of the Americas is even farther away than before the CAFTA

vote. The “stepping stone to the FTAA†has crumbled under their feet.

 

Meanwhile, Back at the Ranch

 

This week, in addition to bribing CAFTA into existence, the Bush

Administration has also been negotiating the expansion of NAFTA to Colombia,

Peru,

Ecuador, and Bolivia through the Andean Free Trade Agreement (AFTA – it, too,

rhymes with NAFTA.) AFTA negotiations have stumbled over crucial chapters on

agriculture and intellectual property. They have also been difficult to

continue

amidst the popular overthrow of governments in Ecuador and Bolivia in the

midst of negotiations. A recent round of negotiations in Miami this month ended

inconclusively. But most governments have been waiting to see if CAFTA was

going to be approved by the US Congress. Now that the margin was so

razor-thin, negotiators will likely take the hint that “free-tradeâ€

agreements under

the same model are highly unpopular with the US public.

 

Day of Reckoning

 

Now that the fight is over, we pass into the stage of reward and

retribution. We can, and must, display the political power to not walk of the

playing

field now, but to spend the extra effort necessary to back up our elected

officials when they fought for us, and punish those who sold out their

constituents

’ interests by voting them out of office.

 

This may be difficult during the week when the labor movement has

experienced its biggest split in 50 years. It should not go unnoticed that Bush

picked

the moment when the labor movement, those in the US who will be most clearly

affected by CAFTA, was fighting each other as much as fighting against CAFTA,

notwithstanding the Herculean efforts of the rank and file – and the AFL’s

trade program – to organize hard to against the bill.

 

Where To Go From Here

 

There are two main agenda items for the next few days. The first is to call

your legislator and reward or punish them for your vote. Let them know about

the deep knot in your gut from witnessing the CAFTA defeat, and the emptiness

on the tables of many workers that will follow. Check out the link above to

find out how your legislator voted, and call the switchboard 866-340-9281 or

877-762-8762 with your response.

 

But then, we must pick ourselves up, and fight even harder next time. That

means the current negotiations on the World Trade Organization, which has a

key General Council meeting this week in Geneva, Switzerland. And it means

stopping the expansion of NAFTA to the Andes through AFTA.

 

But most importantly it means getting involved more than we were this time.

Bush won because they are fighting to win – whatever it takes, including

unethical and undemocratic pork barrel and arm-twisting. Our side fought very,

very hard to win, but we lack control of both chambers of the legislative

branch, and the executive. (That makes the fight to keep the judiciary balance

all

the more essential, by the way.) To win on that unlevel playing field, we

have to be more strategic, better funded, more organized, and get millions more

people involved.

 

Highly strategic, savvy grassroots organizing was carried out by groups like

the Citizens Trade Campaign and Public Citizen, along with key unions,

environmental groups, faith communities, solidarity activists, and human rights

organizations including Global Exchange. These groups are only as strong as

their membership base is active. But they also need your support. So right

after

you get off the phone with your legislator, be sure to check out the groups

listed below, and others that have supported the fight against CAFTA. Become

a member, get on their email lists, and make a donation.

 

That way, we’ll all build a stronger Fair Trade movement, and convert this

legislative defeat into a long term opportunity to build a movement that will

lead us to true victory against AFTA, the FTAA and the WTO the next time

around.

 

Deborah James is the Global Economy Director at Global Exchange and is

reachable at deborah.

For more information, to get involved, and to make a contribution:

www.citizen.org/trade

www.citizenstrade.org

www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/cafta

www.stopcafta.org

 

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