[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 156 (2010), Part 11]
[Senate]
[Pages 15247-15248]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                         FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS

  Mr. LeMIEUX. Madam President, I rise to speak this afternoon on the 
floor of the Senate about an issue that is very critically important to 
the people of this country, and that is our relationship with Latin 
America.
  This weekend, the new President of Colombia will be sworn in--Juan 
Manuel Santos--and he follows a great leader in Colombia, President 
Uribe, who, in my mind, is the Abraham Lincoln of that country. He kept 
that country unified at a very difficult time, while it was wracked 
with what was then a civil war. Eight years ago, President Uribe 
brought the country

[[Page 15248]]

back together. He was able to fight the FARC, keep the country from 
falling into a narcoterrorist state, and has brought stability to 
Colombia. They are perhaps our best friend in Latin America.
  Colombia is a vibrant, beautiful country, full of good people, with a 
democracy that now works. This last election is a tribute to President 
Uribe. On behalf of my State of Florida and the Senate, I rise to 
congratulate President Uribe and the great work he did on behalf of 
Colombia, as well as to welcome in President Santos.
  Our relationship with Colombia is very important. They are a key 
trading partner to the United States and a key trading partner to my 
home State of Florida. When you are walking around and perhaps seeing 
some fresh flowers--there are some here in this Congress--but wherever 
you are in this country, there is a very good chance those flowers came 
from Colombia. Seventy percent of the flowers we have in this country 
that are purchased by local florists come from Colombia, and they come 
through Miami on their way to your local florists.
  We have a great trading relationship. That is why, in 2006, we 
entered into a free trade agreement with Colombia. Unfortunately, we 
have not ratified that agreement. Along with the free trade agreements 
for Panama and South Korea, they have languished without approval. The 
President spoke about this in his State of the Union Address--the 
importance of passing these free trade agreements--yet we still don't 
have those agreements before us here in the Congress. For one reason or 
another, they have yet to be ratified.
  There is a lot of talk in this Chamber about the creation of jobs, 
and that that should be our focus. Well, passing these free trade 
agreements would get Americans back to work. Right now those countries 
basically have free trade with us but we don't have free trade with 
them. Ninety percent of all Colombian products sold in the United 
States enter our country duty free. Yet American goods face tariffs of 
up to 35 percent when entering Colombia.
  According to the Latin America Trade Coalition, in 2008, more than 
6,000 small- and medium-sized American businesses exported to Colombia. 
If we were to pass the Colombia Free Trade Agreement, more than 80 
percent of U.S. consumer and manufacturing products and most U.S. farm 
goods would immediately enter Colombia duty free.
  Implementing this treaty could increase our gross domestic product by 
$2.5 billion. I say to my friends in the majority, if they want to 
create jobs in this country--and that certainly should be what we are 
focused most on in this most troubling economy--let's pass these free-
trade agreements. Let's do it when we get back from the break; let's do 
it in September. We should have already done it.
  When I met with President Uribe in January of this year and talked to 
him about a variety of issues, he looked at me painfully and said: Why 
is our friend, the United States of America, not ratifying this 
agreement?
  Our greatest friend in the region, a bright spot of democracy, a 
President who has fought the narcoterrorists, stabilized this country 
as a bulwark against Venezuela and all the threats that posed to our 
region, and we can't ratify this agreement? It is a shame. It is 
something we need to do. We need to do it as well as ratify the 
agreement with Panama, as well as the one with South Korea.

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