[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 126 (Wednesday, July 26, 2017)]
[House]
[Page H6304]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RENEGOTIATION OF TRADE AGREEMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Ohio (Ms. Kaptur) for 5 minutes.
Ms. KAPTUR. Mr. Speaker, last week, the Trump administration released
its NAFTA renegotiating objectives, which laid out its plan for how to
fix that bad trade deal for America's workers, but it lacks specifics.
Yes, America needs a better deal, better jobs, better wages, for a
better future for our people and the people of our continent. As
renegotiations begin in August, let us remember the devil is in the
details. The President's rhetoric alone is not enough. Action is what
creates jobs.
Nearly 30 years ago, NAFTA was sold as the epitome of a modern trade
agreement. Its supporters promised U.S. job growth. They guaranteed
trade balances and even surpluses. They said there would be increased
economic trade flexibility for North American industries and new buyers
of American goods.
But guess what. Those promises didn't materialize. Instead, U.S.
workers faced enormous job loss, declining wages, sublevel wage
competition from desperate millions in Mexico, whose workers have no
rights.
The recent tragedy in San Antonio with all of those desperate workers
in that truck is the tip of an iceberg of labor exploitation on this
continent that was caused by NAFTA, enhanced by NAFTA. It is so ugly.
The cold, critical measure of the job-hemorrhaging truth this country
has passed since NAFTA's passage is our trade balance. That is how many
more products and services our country exports rather than imports from
offshore sweatshops. That translates into jobs.
Since the inception of NAFTA, our trade deficit has ballooned to
unprecedented levels. This chart basically goes through what has been
happening recently. Each month and each year, we go deeper and deeper
into trade deficit, not just with Mexico, but a number of other
countries. But there has not been a single year of trade balance with
Mexico since NAFTA's passage, just more job dissolution and job loss.
Just in May, the United States experienced an overall $46 billion
trade deficit with the world, of which NAFTA is a part. But since
NAFTA's passage--get this--our country has accumulated nearly $2
trillion net negative balance with Mexico and Canada, and that
translates into lost jobs here at home, and the American people know
it.
This import deficit supports millions of jobs abroad, not U.S.
workers. It means less money left in the wallets of hardworking
Americans as consumer dollars feed the greed of rapacious corporate
interests that feed on desperate workers.
Look at NAFTA's job numbers. Between 1997 and 2010, our country bled
over 696,000 manufacturing jobs to Mexico alone. You would recognize
the names of the firms. It is an alphabet soup of companies:
AlliedSignal, Lucent Technologies, Mr. Coffee, Rockwell Automation, UTC
Aerospace Systems, Weyerhaeuser, and so many more.
{time} 1030
Unfortunately, the Midwest has suffered the most from this job
hemorrhage. For Ohio, the trade deficit with Mexico alone resulted in
tens of thousands of lost jobs. Ohio workers have had their net incomes
go down by $7,000 per family since NAFTA's passage. Neighboring
Michigan lost over 300,000 jobs since 2000 alone to Mexico.
There is little doubt the original NAFTA agreement failed to create a
modern opportunity for America's workers. It undercut them.
Today, the Trump administration has a chance to change this.
President Trump campaigned and promised to build high-quality jobs and
bring them back to the United States. How can a renegotiated NAFTA do
this? It must include the most modern and enforceable continental labor
agreements to yield rising standards of living so wages and job
training across borders are equalized. If NAFTA were working, more good
U.S. jobs could be created, outnumbering job losses.
Mr. Trump promised a good deal for Americans as a candidate. Now he
has to deliver on that promise. The old expression, ``Don't tell me
what they say, show me what they do,'' will be the true test of this
administration's renegotiation of NAFTA.
The President must take bold action in renegotiating NAFTA, and it
must resolve in reversing these negative balances and making them
positive. He must stand up for America's workers, for their jobs, not
just for global corporate interests, whose shareholders have been
making a fortune off the backs of desperate labor.
Making America Great Again was more than a slogan to the people in
Ohio and the greater Midwest, looking to shake up what was called the
swamp. We need a better deal for America, better jobs, better wages for
a better future, and we can start by renegotiating NAFTA.
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