<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/06/11/AR2005061100575.html>

CAFTA in Peril on Capitol Hill
One Business Leader Gives Lawmakers an Ultimatum

By Thomas B. Edsall
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, June 12, 2005; A06

With the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) in serious
trouble, a prominent business leader recently laid it on the line:
Business groups are prepared to cut off campaign contributions to
House members who oppose the pact.

"If you [lawmakers] are going to vote against it, it's going to cost
you," Thomas J. Donohue, president and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, warned recently during a meeting on Capitol Hill of leaders
of a 500-plus business-trade association coalition.

President Bush has declared ratification of CAFTA his top trade
priority of the year. The pact would create a NAFTA-like free-trade
zone between the United States and five Central American countries
plus the Caribbean's Dominican Republic.

But both sides agree that without a major push from the White House
and the GOP leadership, CAFTA is likely to become the first major
trade deal to be defeated in more than 40 years and a major
embarrassment for the administration.

The administration recently dispatched high profile officials --
including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld, Secretary of Commerce Carlos M. Gutierrez,
Agriculture Secretary Mike Johanns and U.S. Trade Representative Rob
Portman -- to enlist support from House and Senate members.

Rep. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), who is coordinating the opposition among
House Democrats, said the percentage voting against trade agreements
has steadily grown from the 60 to 65 percent range in the early 1990s,
and predicted 90 percent will oppose CAFTA.

"If the vote was held today, we would get 190 Democrats and somewhere
in the vicinity of 40-plus Republicans," more than enough to defeat
the measure, Brown said. Republican opponents of CAFTA are more
cautious in their estimates.

The administration and GOP leaders are pushing for ratification of
CAFTA before the July 4 recess. Matthew Niemeyer, assistant U.S. trade
representative for congressional affairs, said that "we are in
excellent position to successfully mark up this agreement" in the
Senate Finance Committee this week. The major threat in the committee
is that all the Democrats could line up with two Republicans, Michael
D. Crapo (Idaho) and Craig Thomas (Wyo.), to pass a nonbinding but
politically damaging amendment eliminating sugar provisions.

Some of the biggest winners if the pact is approved would include the
pharmaceutical industry, which would get protection from producers of
generics; the high-tech and telecommunications industries, which would
get intellectual property protections and access to the Caribbean
Internet, cellular and land-line phone systems; and exporters
including the National Pork Producers and Procter & Gamble, which
would see tariff barriers lowered or eliminated.

But they are up against formidable opponents, including organized
labor, the sugar industry, most House Democrats and some conflicted
southern Republicans, who want to support Bush and the GOP's free
trade policies but are under pressure to protect producers in their
districts from overseas competition.

House Democrats overwhelmingly oppose the agreement, largely because
of concerns of labor unions that the agreement would not adequately
protect the rights of low-paid workers in Central America who would be
competing more directly with U.S. workers.

Many pro-trade, centrist Democrats also are declaring their opposition
in order to voice their broader disagreement with Bush administration
tax and domestic spending policies that they argue are not doing
enough to equip the workforce to deal with a changing global economy.
"CAFTA is a 'place holder' " for those concerns, said Rep. Adam Smith
(D-Wash.).

A number of Republicans who represent once-Democratic southern
congressional districts heavily dependent on agricultural subsidies
and tariff and quota protections for textiles also object to the
treaty.

The leaders of the Republican opposition to CAFTA are Reps. Walter B.
Jones Jr. (N.C.) and Virgil H. Goode Jr. (Va.), both former Democrats.
A substantial number of Republicans have declared they will defect
from the White House agenda. Others are under intense pressure to cast
"no" votes from the sugar industry and segments of the beef and
textile industries concerned about increased competition from Central
America.

House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) predicted last Wednesday
that wavering Republican lawmakers who are forced by the
administration and GOP leaders to vote for CAFTA will be highly
vulnerable in the 2006 election.

Under CAFTA, the United States would make permanent the temporary
suspension of tariffs set by the Caribbean Basin Initiative. In
return, the Dominican Republic, Honduras, Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala and Nicaragua would reduce or eliminate tariffs on most
imports, open state monopolies to foreign competition, and remove
legal barriers to foreign investment.

The pact gets strong backing from business groups that see new export
and import opportunities. Organized labor, however, sees a threat from
low wage production competing with American goods, and many Democrats
have voiced concerns that not enough is done to protect Caribbean
workers from exploitation, and to educate and train displaced U.S.
workers.

The possibility of defeat has pro-CAFTA leaders of U.S. business --
who see the treaty as a test vote for future, much broader, free trade
negotiations -- deeply worried. "If we walk away from this deal, we
walk away from years of investment and we walk away from extraordinary
trade opportunities," Donahue said.

Teams of corporate executives and lobbyists are meeting regularly with
undecided House members here and in their home districts. Officials of
the Distilled Sprits Council, Procter & Gamble and the Farm Bureau
have, for example, met with Rep. John S. Tanner (D-Tenn.) to press the
case for CAFTA. In addition to boosted agricultural exports, the
treaty would open markets for Procter & Gamble's shampoo factory in
Tanner's district and the pact would guarantee that bourbon and
Tennessee whiskeys sold in the CAFTA countries would have to be
produced in the United States, according to lobbyists for these
interests.

In a recent speech on behalf of the treaty, House Majority Whip Roy
Blunt (R-Mo.) said, "Frankly, this is the model for a global economy."

Jones, who has seen his state's textile factories and workforce
devastated by foreign competition, rejected that analysis. "Enough is
enough; we are losing the manufacturing base of this country," he
said.

Brown and Jones predicted the administration will begin offering
special favors to wavering lawmakers. "They are going to open the bank
for these guys," said Brown, citing past offers of bridges and other
public works projects to win votes on controversial trade bills.

Public Citizen, in a bid to weaken the administration's bargaining
position, this week is to issue a report showing that 83 promises have
been made to win trade votes over the past 15 years and only 13 of
them were kept: three of 53 commitments to change policies and 10 of
30 pork barrel commitments.
-- 
"Life sure is weird but what else am I to know?" [Jason Pierce]

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