[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 115 (Monday, August 2, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S6573-S6574]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
5-YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF CAFTA
Mr. BROWN of Ohio. Madam President, today is a historic day, in some
sense. Five years ago today, President Bush signed the Central American
Free Trade Agreement, on August 2, 2005.
A month earlier--I was a Member of the House of Representatives
then--the majority leader, Tom DeLay, a Republican from Texas, held the
15-minute typical vote--a rollcall vote in the House of Representatives
is normally held open for 15, 20 minutes, at the most--he held the 15-
minute vote open for more than an hour while last-minute deals were
made. The U.S. Trade Representative was camped just off the House
floor. He was a former Member of Congress.
According to news reports, after this hour delay, arms were ``twisted
into a thousand pieces.'' Republicans who were opposed or undecided
were courted during hurried meetings in Capitol hallways, on the House
floor, and at the White House. Republican leaders told rank-and-file,
reluctant Republicans, who really did not want to vote for this deal,
that now is time to ask, that deals could be cut.
Members took advantage of the opportunity by requesting such things
as fundraising appearances by the Vice President and the restoration of
money the White House had tried to cut from agricultural programs. That
is how they passed it.
People, even Republican House Members, who were generally enthralled
to corporate interests, who normally would go with the drug companies,
the insurance companies, the large financial institutions, who would
almost always vote for them, even many of them wanted to vote no, but
because of this, as the paper said, arm twisting ``into a thousand
pieces'' on the House floor, enough of them voted for it to pass the
bill.
When the 15-minutes had expired, the vote was 175 ``yes,'' 180
``no.'' So in order to pass it, they had to keep the rollcall open for
about another hour to twist these arms and finally pass the
legislation, if I recall, by 1 vote.
We know what has happened. The Central American Free Trade Agreement
has not worked any better than other trade agreements. We know that job
loss in the last 10 years--because of PNTR with China, passed by the
Senate 10 years ago this fall--we know, in Ohio alone, we have seen job
loss to the Dominican Republic from the Central American Free Trade
Agreement, the CAFTA. We have seen job loss from a company in
Marysville, a company in Miamisburg, a company in Hudson, OH. We have
seen job loss all over the country. We have seen it with the North
American Free Trade Agreement. We have seen it with the PNTR with
China. And we have seen it with the Central American Free Trade
Agreement.
I was at a plant today in Parma, OH, a suburb of Cleveland, the
corporate headquarters of GraphTech. It is a company that used to be
part of Union Carbide and is actually the plant where the Eveready
battery originated. They specialize in graphite for major industrial
concerns such as the steel industry. They also make graphite for solar,
for all kinds of things, for flat screen TVs, for electronic equipment.
They, as so many other companies, are doing well. They have actually
hired 60 people in the last year. They are looking to hire more. I
spoke to about 150 workers today. Most of them do not do production in
this facility. But they have production in Lakewood, right nearby, a
few miles away in another suburb of Cleveland.
But this company is always under threat from China gaming the system.
When I was talking to workers and management, I was talking about how
China, because of its currency--this competition from China has been so
difficult for American companies because they do not play fair.
I was speaking to an expert who deals a lot with China. I said:
Because of this huge trade deficit we have with China--we buy a lot
more from China than we export to them--do they laugh at us?
He said: No, they don't laugh at us. They just think we are a
declining power.
It breaks my heart to think China thinks that, but it breaks my heart
even more when I see what is happening to our manufacturing base.
This company, GraphTech, is so important for our economic future, but
so is getting these trade agreements right.
The Obama administration, fortunately, has just this week launched an
action to announce that the United States will file a case against
Guatemala under the Dominican Republic-Central America-United States
Free Trade Agreement--the CAFTA--for apparent violations of obligations
on labor rights. It is the first time a President has done that. That
is good news. That salvages some of the damage done by the Central
American Free Trade Agreement, CAFTA, because for decades our
government has negotiated trade agreements which give lipservice to
protecting workers while looking the other way when there were clear
violations of labor rights. We are willing to protect intellectual
property in Hollywood films, but we are not so willing to protect
workers in the environment.
This action by the Obama administration, again, is a good thing, but
we need to do much, much more. We have all kinds of petitions filed,
and requests, from industries and workers in this country who have been
wronged, cheated, gamed by the trade agreements that have passed, and
we clearly need the Obama administration on our side fighting for
American workers, fighting for American jobs. It did not happen in the
previous administration, to the tune of millions of jobs lost, millions
of manufacturing jobs lost in the 8 years of the Bush administration,
with their Trade Representative who always seemed to side with large
corporations in this country that outsourced jobs to China but did not
side with American workers and small manufacturers in places such as
Lima and Zanesville and Mansfield, OH.
So as we commemorate today, the 5-year anniversary of President
Bush's
[[Page S6574]]
signing of the Central American Free Trade Agreement, I hope we have
learned some lessons. I hope, as we observe this 5-year anniversary, as
we observe the 10-year anniversary of allowing China, under permanent
normal trade relations, into the World Trade Organization--and how they
do not play fair as a member of that body, and how we are not willing
to stand up to them as a country and force them to play fair--I hope we
are learning these lessons, as we have lost too many manufacturing
jobs. We were losing manufacturing jobs when our economy was going much
better 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 years ago, in part because the Bush administration
did not enforce any of the trade laws that could benefit us. But we
are, obviously, doing even worse now with this economy. That is why
President Obama's actions on some of the CAFTA enforcement of labor
rights is so very important. But it does not obviate the need for us to
look at these trade laws again to figure out what works and what does
not work.
We know what does not work. We know more trade agreements only dig us
deeper into a hole. That does not serve American workers. It does not
serve those American companies that cannot compete when China games the
system on currency and other things, and it does not serve those
communities where these businesses are located.
Madam President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a
quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
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