From: Rick Kisséll

Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2011 4:18 PM

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/aug/16/obama-free-tr
ade-midwest

  

Obama's midwest bus tour message backfires

 

The president's attempt to cast himself as pro-business won't win 

Voters whose jobs have been killed by free trade deals

 

by Daniel Denvir

The GuardianU.K.: 8/16/11

 

While on a bus tour this week across a midwest ravaged by 

deindustrialisation, President Barack Obama has ironically 

been touting job-killing free trade agreements. 

 

Mitt Romney deemed the road trip, which goes through an archipelago of 

shuttered factories and mills, as Obama's "Magical Misery Tour", though 

the former governor and CEO would undoubtedly promote the same free 

trade policies even more fervently. Obama won Minnesota, Iowa and 

Illinois in 2008, but is set to lose them in 2012 if he remains on the 

free trade bandwagon. Last week, he visited Michigan, the epicentre of 

American manufacturing's decimation.

 

A May report from the liberal Economic Policy Institute

finds that the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta), which was 

primarily touted as a job creator, has cost the US 682,900 jobs, 61% of 

them in manufacturing. Many jobs have moved south to Mexico,

resulting in a switch in the two countries' trade deficit. In 1993, the

US had a $1.6bn trade surplus with Mexico; in 2010, the tides turned 

and Mexico held a trade surplus of $97.2bn over the US. 

 

The consequences of Nafta have not been positive in Mexico, either: the 

US has seen a historic flow of Mexican immigrants across the border,

driven by the closure of plants unable to compete with transnational 

companies, the elimination of peasant agriculture, and rising consumer 

prices have driven a wave of immigrants across the US border. This 

convoy of economic refugees has weakened only recently, mostly due to 

the downturn.

 

It shouldn't be surprising that free trade agreements are unpopular, 

though politicians don't seem to comprehend it. According to the findings 

of an underreported November 2010 poll by the Pew Research Center, only 

35% of Americans say that free trade agreements have benefited the

US, while 44% say the country has been harmed. The study even found 

that Republican support for free trade has plummeted from 44% in 

November 2009, to a rock bottom 28% in 2010.

 

"Support for free trade agreements is now at one of its lowest points 

in 13 years of Pew Research Centre surveys," the report concludes. Indeed, 

63% of Tea Party-leaning Republicans have a negative outlook on NAFTA – 

more than any other group polled.

 

Obama once seemed to understand the deep-seated popular opposition to 

free trade. During the 2008 election, he released a mailer

attacking Hillary Clinton, whose husband signed NAFTA: "Is Hillary 

Clinton running away from her own record on trade deals that have cost 

Ohio nearly 50,000 jobs?" 

 

But once again, Obama's ham-handed efforts to "reach across the aisle" 

alienates the left while failing to appease rank-and-file Republican voters.

We have a service economy with the manufacturing middle hollowed out. Elites


consider financial  services to be our contribution to the new global
economic 

order: Mexico and China make stuff; we package and sell opaque financial 

instruments.

 

The financial crisis was the product of a government more concerned 

with defending this status quo and protecting profits on Wall Street 

than with creating and defending well-paying American manufacturing 

jobs. But Obama's support for free trade and Wall Street consistently 

fails to win over corporate America. Big finance and the Chamber of Commerce


continue to work tirelessly to undermine his presidency, no matter what he 

sacrifices in the way of working people's well-being.

 

It's not clear that the media or anyone else is picking up on the mundane 

details of Obama's new talking points. But if they do, the president's push 

for free trade agreements with South Korea, Panama and Colombia is unlikely 

to be well received: the Minnesota Fair Trade Coalition estimates that
57,000 

Minnesotans are at risk of offshoring or displacement under a Korea deal. 

 

"It's insane for our elected officials to even be considering a trade deal 

right now that the International Trade Commission projects will increase

the overall trade deficit," writes Minnesota Fair Trade Coalition 

director Jessica Lettween. "To claim such a job-killing proposal is a 

'job creation plan' is downright irresponsible, particularly when we're 

trying to get our economy back on its feet."

 

Wall Street and big business call the shots in both parties, so the
bipartisan 

embrace of free trade agreements should be no surprise. But with 2012 around
the 

corner, Obama's political advisers would be wise to consider whether these 

free trade deals make political sense for him. After all, it is the
Republican 

party, which is historically even more business-friendly than the Democratic
party, 

that stands to benefit from them, if Obama loses support at the polls.

 

,___

  _____  

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