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WFTC Press Release:
Congressional
Leaders Launch Bold New Trade Reform Act
The Washington Fair Trade Coalition Urges
Washington State Members of Congress to Co-sponsor Legislation
| Media Release |
Contact: Stephanie Celt |
| Tuesday, June 10th, 2008 |
Phone: (206) 227-3079 |
Seattle -- Over fifty original House and
Senate cosponsors joined twenty leading labor, environmental, family farm
and faith groups in supporting new consensus legislation offering a positive
vision for future U.S. trade policy. Entitled the Trade Reform,
Accountability, Development and Employment (TRADE) Act (H.R. 6180), the bill
was introduced by Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Rep. Mike Michaud
(D-Maine) on June 4th, 2008 in Washington D.C. None of Washington State's
members of Congress were original co-sponsors.
The act triggers a review of all existing
trade agreements, and provides a process to renegotiate them. The bill also
outlines principles of what should be included in future trade agreements,
and expresses the sense of the Congress that their role in trade
policymaking should be strengthened.
Rick Bender, President of the Washington
State Labor Council, supports the TRADE Act. “It is time we get some teeth
in our trade agreements and require real protections for both workers and
the environment,” said Bender. “We must no longer treat these vital concerns
as a sidebar to broader economic interests. Securing the future of workers
and the health of the planet will benefit everyone – business and labor
included.”
No member of the Washington State
Congressional delegation was an original co-sponsor of the bill. However,
many local organizations are already praising it as a bold step forward on
trade policy, and are encouraging state officials to sign on.
"This bill is ground-breaking. It is an
opportunity to restore balance in our trade agenda, between business and
investor interests on one hand, and the interests of communities and the
public on the other hand," comments Cynthia Cole, President of SPEEA, the
union of Boeing engineers and technical workers. "Hopefully, Congress
members from Washington State will be quick to support a new model for trade
that will benefit working people as well as businesses in our state."
Environmental groups see this bill as
important for ensuring trade and environmental concerns are complementary.
Kathleen Ridihalgh of Sierra Club Northwest/Alaska Region says: “This Act
has the potential to set straight the history of NAFTA and the WTO to
encourage truly sustainable development that promises to benefit the
majority of the world’s people, whether farmers or business owners, while
protecting our resources for future generations.”
Kristen Kosidowski of Witness for Peace
Northwest sees this bill as an opportunity to be in favor of trade policy,
since many social justice groups often find themselves opposed to trade
agreements. "The TRADE Act is exactly the step that we need to take. Over
and over we've had to say "No!" to trade policies that set up our local
working communities and our global neighbors for failure, but the TRADE Act
gives us hope for a trade model that we can support - one that is of the
people and for the people."
The TRADE Act was introduced following a
presidential primary season that saw trade policy rise to the top of
American’s concerns. With several Democratic candidates promising to
renegotiate existing agreements (visit
www.citizenstrade.org/positions.php for those commitments), the TRADE
Act provides a blueprint for how to best remedy many of these past problems
in trade agreements.
The current U.S. trade model has had
devastating impacts. Since 1975, when Fast Track (Trade Promotion Authority)
was first enacted, the trade deficit has gone from a slight surplus to an
unsustainable $709 billion deficit in 2007. A net 4.7 million manufacturing
jobs have been lost. In Washington State almost 14,000 workers have applied
for Trade Adjustment Assistance, which indicates that our current trade
model caused them to suffer job loss or reduced income. This represents only
a fraction of the total number of those whose jobs or livelihoods have been
negatively impacted by the NAFTA-style trade model, including thousands of
Mexican farmers who have immigrated to Washington State in search of a
livelihood after the collapse of the Mexican rural economy.
According to Stephanie Celt, Director of the
Washington Fair Trade Coalition, "More and more Americans are realizing that
our current trade model hurts more people than it helps. I hope that
Congress members from Washington State will act on this important
opportunity to support a truly fair trade bill that will benefit our state
as well as the world at large."
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