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Former Presidents Support Clinton on China WTO Vote (Update1)
By Heidi Przybyla


Washington, May 8 (Bloomberg) -- Former presidents Gerald
Ford, Jimmy Carter and George Bush called on Congress to grant
China permanent access to the U.S. market, backing President Bill
Clinton in one of his biggest remaining legislative battles.

The bipartisan show of support gives a boost to the White
House bid to broaden trade with the world's most populous nation
before a key congressional vote expected the week of May 22.
``In economic terms, the case is clear,'' the three former
chief executives said in a letter released by the White House.
Congressional failure to act ``would cost American jobs and
squander the best opportunity we have had in a generation to
address our long-standing concerns about China's trading
practices.''

The letter to the American public comes during a crucial
period in the China debate. Opponents and supporters of the bill
to grant China permanent ``normal trade relations'' acknowledge
the vote is too close to call in a battle in which Clinton is
aligned with business groups against one of his core
constituencies, labor unions.

Both sides are working to line up high-profile endorsements,
including one by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, who made
the case for greater U.S. trade with China in a letter released
today to House Banking Committee Chairman James Leach.

Opponents countered by releasing letters from three former
Chinese political prisoners attacking a congressional plan to
monitor China's human rights policies, a proposal seen as key to
gaining support from Democrats for the vote.

American Jobs

The former presidents took a swipe at one of labor's chief
criticisms of the vote, which would smooth China's entry to the
World Trade Organization. Unions like the Teamsters have argued
that U.S. companies will shift production facilities to China to
take advantage of lower labor costs.

Yet the presidents said in their letter that U.S. jobs would
be lost if Congress doesn't act. They backed an administration
argument that U.S. companies will be relegated to the sidelines
while foreign companies enjoy the market-opening commitments China
made to become a WTO member.

Another complaint by opponents is the U.S. will lose leverage
over Chinese human rights practices by giving up its annual
practice of pegging access to the U.S. market to human rights
policies.

The former Chinese political prisoners -- Wei Jingsheng,
Harry Wu and Wang Xizhe -- wrote letters to Representative Sander
Levin criticizing his plan to establish a human rights panel while
granting China permanent normal trade relations.

They said the current system was better because it carries
the threat of cutting off commerce.
``The annual review and possible sanctions are effective
tools of restraint to help protect human rights,'' Wei said in his
letter to the Michigan Democrat.
``How many bullies have you met who won't beat you up just
because you have voluntarily unarmed yourself?'' said Wei, who
spent 19 years as a political prisoner.

Gore to Speak

The ex-presidents' letter stresses Democratic and Republican
support for making China's normal trading status permanent. ``The
agreement to bring China into the WTO is the product of more than
13 years of tough negotiations conducted by four administrations,
Democratic and Republican,'' the letter said.

The letter is pegged to a White House event tomorrow in which
Ford and Carter and several former Treasury secretaries,
secretaries of state and national security advisers will urge
support for the trade measure, said White House spokesman Jake
Siewert.

Vice President Al Gore will speak at the event, and will use
his remarks to stress his support for permanent normal trade
relations with China, said his campaign spokesman Chris Lehane.

The event marks the first time Gore and Clinton have appeared
together to press for the China trade accord since Gore signaled
to labor leaders in February that he'd push for a tougher trade
agreement with China if elected president.

Gore has since stressed in public comments that he fully
supports the China accord. While the AFL-CIO union federation last
month organized a rally against expanded trade with China, it also
has endorsed Democrat Gore's presidential bid.




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