Dynamite deal : environmental, labor groups make their voices heard
Dynamite deal : environmental, labor groups make their voices heard"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
MEXICO CITY — The North American free trade agreement, which could be signed as early as today, may not specifically address environmental and labor concerns, but the U.S. Congress has
clearly signaled its intent to include such issues in any agreement it approves. A congressional vote is also expected today on a resolution that calls for the pact to protect jobs and the
environment. It is in many ways a tribute to the tenacity of environmental and labor groups that have battled to place their issues on the negotiating agenda. When talks began last year for
an agreement to allow the free flow of goods throughout North America, trade officials said only commercial issues would be considered. Now, everyone from resolution co-sponsors Rep. Henry
A. Waxman (D-Los Angeles) and Rep. Richard A. Gephardt (D-Mo.) to Canadian Commerce Minister Michael Wilson is talking about the environment in connection with free trade. The mere fact of
the discussions is a triumph for the coalition of more than 50 U.S., Mexican and Canadian environmental and labor groups that have been pushing the subject to the forefront. “While they were
seen as irrelevant, unsophisticated actors, they have succeeded in placing issues of interest to them squarely on the table,” said Cathryn Thorup, director of UC San Diego’s Center for
U.S.-Mexico Studies. “Even though they are not part of the (negotiating) team, they are part of the discussion.” The environmental and labor coalitions succeeded in broadening the discussion
because they would not let the issues be ignored, she said. A coalition of environmental and labor groups dogged the trail of top officials from the United States, Mexico and Canada each of
the seven times they have met to advance negotiations of the proposed North American free trade agreement. While negotiators sealed off complete floors or even an entire hotel to keep their
talks secret, the coalition organized public seminars and frequent press conferences to get their message out to media and other observers bored with hanging around in lobbies for tidbits
of information. Those “shadow meetings” are only the most obvious of the tactics that environmental and labor groups have used to force their issues onto the free trade agenda. Before
today’s House vote, members of Congress received fake deeds to the Brooklyn Bridge with the warning: “If you believe President Bush’s promises on trade, jobs and the environment, there’s a
bridge he’d like to sell you.” In the past, free trade agreement opponents have distributed drain plungers--alluding to the Washington meeting site at the Watergate Hotel and the 1972
Watergate scandal--and messages attached to stalks of broccoli, the President’s least favorite vegetable and a top U.S. import from Mexico. “We’ve been trying to keep a sense of humor about
this,” said Laurie Wallach, a staff attorney for Public Citizen, an environmental and consumer group that is part of the Fair Trade Campaign, the umbrella group coordinating U.S.
participation in the coalition. Such efforts have succeeded in moving the focus of the public debate on free trade from commerce to the environment and jobs. “The resolution includes many of
the points we have been trying to make,” said Bertha Lujan, a member of the coordinating council for the Mexican groups in the coalition. “This is a result of the work that has been done,
above all by the U.S. coalition members.” Still, even those most closely connected to the environmental and labor effort worry that the agreement coming out of the closed-door talks will be
strictly a corporate accord. “The three governments decided that this is the kind of agreement they wanted: strictly commercial,” said Mexican political scientist Jorge Castaneda, a vocal
critic of the talks. “It is a Reagan-Bush accord that reflects the thinking of a very narrow strata in one of the (participating) countries.” The implication of such an agreement, said Steve
Hellinger, a member of the Development Group for Alternative Policies that is part of the labor and environment coalition, is that “the benefits of an agreement will not be spread evenly
among people in each country.” Indeed, members of the governments’ business advisory committees have said that they in large measure negotiated the sections of the agreement related to their
industries. In contrast, the only members of organized labor included in the talks are Mexicans whose unions are closely aligned to the government and have promised to support the
agreement. Environmental officials, but not activists, also have advised the negotiators. Because business people and government officials in the three countries already knew each other and
have similar interests, confining the talks to those groups as originally planned would have been simpler, said Thorup. But that is no longer possible, she added. “The discussions about fast
track (U.S. congressional authorization to negotiate the agreement) galvanized grass roots groups,” she said. “That ensures recognition that the agreement has impacts on other areas.” In
the long run, the coalitions formed by groups opposed to the free trade agreement may have even broader effects, she said. “It will be impossible for government policy-makers to manage the
U.S.-Mexico relationship on a government-to-government basis,” she said. “Now, citizen groups are interested.” MORE TO READ
Trending News
Garena free fire max redeem codes for april 30, 2022: redeem latest ff reward using codesGarena Free Fire Max is the enhanced version of Garena Free Fire, the adventure-driven battle royale game. Free Fire Max...
Pane & olio, sicilian chef giuseppe messina’s new restaurantSicilian chef Giuseppe Messina opens his third restaurant in the 16th arrondissement, Pane & Olio, where he offers S...
New Character Report Cards Rate Students on 'Grit'Share article Remove Save to favorites Save to favorites Print Email Facebook LinkedIn Twitter Copy URL Most school repo...
186 kilograms of cocaine seized in TasmaniaAdNewsLocal NewsNewsLocal NewsNews HomeNewsSportCommunityTributes & FuneralsClassifiedsExplore TravelEntertainmentLifest...
Accused denies tying, hitting in West Launceston attackAdNewsLocal NewsNewsLocal NewsNews HomeNewsSportCommunityTributes & FuneralsClassifiedsExplore TravelEntertainmentLifest...
Latests News
Dynamite deal : environmental, labor groups make their voices heardMEXICO CITY — The North American free trade agreement, which could be signed as early as today, may not specifically add...
Club issues call for community support“The event is primarily about raising money for Edmund Rice Camps, which one of our members is heavily involved with and...
Uk weather maps show date england will ‘disappear’ under 400-mile wall of rainMAPS SHOW THE UK IS SET FOR MORE HEAVY SHOWERS WHICH WILL COVER MOST PARTS OF ENGLAND AND OTHER AREAS OF THE UK AS ANOTH...
Macdonald shows his stuff in germany - newport beach newsRecent CdM High grad Tyler Macdonald and Willie McBride from Santa Barbara finished fourth overall out of 44 teams in th...
Bath could be about to take one of london irish best players again - ruckRUCK SOURCES SUGGEST THAT BATH ARE AT THE FRONT OF THE QUEUE TO SIGN SENSATIONAL LONDON IRISH SPEEDSTER HENRY ARUNDELL I...