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CAFTA
The Central America Free Trade Agreement
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| CAFTA passes
by 1 vote –
The Administration’s strong-arming carried the day in
the House of Representatives by a one-vote margin, against those who are
working for peace, justice and sustainable economies in the Americas. As
Witness for Peace comments, today "more people than ever are questioning
the model of ‘free trade’ and looking for more positive alternatives."
Here are brief reflections from Witness
for Peace and Public Citizen's Global Trade
Watch division
[News releases dated July 28, 2005, posted here 8-2-05]
From Witness for Peace
Dear friends,
Many of us sit in front of our computers today reading this with heavy
and/or angered hearts. Our disappointment however, is nothing compared to
the suffering set in motion for Central Americans and workers in the US
because of this past Wednesday's late night passage of CAFTA.
The debate on the Central American Free Trade Agreement in the House of
Representatives lasted two hours with significantly more members speaking
in opposition than in favor. A 15-minute vote started at 11:02. When time
for the vote on the Central American Free Trade Agreement expired at 11:17
p.m., the nays outnumbered the yeas by 180 to 175. But, after
leaving the roll open for another hour the leadership had rounded up
enough votes to win by 217 to 215.
Early analysis is that there were definitely some Democrats who voted
wrong and some special concern for members from both sides of the aisle
who flip-flopped where they stood in the final hours. The good news was
that there really were some courageous Republicans (27 of them in fact)
who voted NO on the agreement. According to Reuters news service, on
Wednesday morning Bush appealed to House Republicans to put aside any
"parochial interests" they might have about CAFTA and look at the broader
benefits of the pact to the United States and the six other countries.
Several other members of the Administration spent the day on the hill
lobbying for CAFTA, a highly unusual practice, but one that did seem to
garner a few key votes.
So, yes, our hearts are heavy today- not in the sense of personal defeat
or disillusion of the countlesshours and hard work of the past two years-
but heavy hearts for the future, for those who will feel the very real
effects of this unjust trade agreement. As for the past, we did good work
and have every reason to be proud of our efforts. The Administration and
House Leadership had to work incredibly hard to un-do our efforts and only
succeeded by the smallest possible margin.
Thank you for being partners in this invaluable struggle for peace,
justice and sustainable economies in the Americas. Thanks in great part to
the work of WFP members and others across the hemisphere more people than
ever are questioning the model of "free trade" and looking for more
positive alternatives.
In the coming days as the sting of defeat dulls, take time to reflect on
the people and communities that inspire you the most- may their wisdom in
times of adversity help to bolster you in the struggle for justice.
See the voting record on CAFTA at
http://www.witnessforpeace.org/072905_CAFTA_results.html
Our work is not done. Every member of Congress will be returning to work
in his or her District for the entire month of August. Meet with them in
person, thank those who voted right and let those who voted wrong know
that you're still paying attention. This next step in holding members
accountable for their votes is a key part in making progress for trade
justice. Thank you for your sustained efforts throughout our CAFTA work.
Witness for Peace
July 28, 2005
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
July 28, 2005
Close CAFTA Vote
Shows Shift in Trade Politics
Statement of Lori Wallach on CAFTA Final Vote in the
House of Representatives
The CAFTA vote became a highly politicized referendum on
whether President Bush would be made a lame duck, but the CAFTA debate
makes clear that a dramatic shift in U.S. trade politics has occurred, and
the NAFTA trade model is dead.
After losing the debate on the merits months ago,
passing CAFTA required last-minute procedural stunts even after weeks of
the president's personal attention, a rare presidential visit to Congress,
months of GOP leadership threats and goodies, and an army of corporate
lobbyists to push the economically modest CAFTA NAFTA expansion through by
a narrow margin after trying for a year.
That CAFTA NAFTA expansion, a trade deal of small
economic significance, barely passed the House of Representatives shows
that any economically significant attempts to expand the NAFTA model, such
as the proposed Free Trade Agreement of the America, would be dead on
arrival.
With only 15 Democrats supporting CAFTA, the Bush
administration and the Republican Party have now officially adopted
NAFTA's record of an unsustainable deficit, downward pressure on wages and
economic instability as their own. How U.S. trade politics has shifted was
demonstrated by the CAFTA no votes of traditional free trade Democrats Jim
Davis (D-Fla.) and Harold Ford (D-Tenn.), who are both seeking statewide
office in their states.
With a 214-211 vote, the GOP leadership held open the
vote because all of the remaining GOP votes (Reps. Jo Ann Davis, Boustany,
Capito, Fitzpatrick, Simmons, LaTourette, Jindal and Taylor) were
committed to opposing CAFTA, which would have brought the opposition to a
winning 219. The promised breaking of arms "into one-thousand pieces," as
Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.) stated, ensued with brokered final vote switching
and threats which ended the vote at 217-215.
###
Lori Wallach is director of Public Citizen's Global
Trade Watch division.
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From FoodFirst Act
Now to Stop CAFTA!
[6-30-05]
Declare independence from corporate trade agreements!
George Bush is asking Congress to vote on the Central American Free Trade
Agreement before the 4th of July. Call your
congressional representative today to tell them to oppose CAFTA.
Please call 1-866-340-9281, a toll-free number sponsored
by the United Steelworkers of America, and urge Congress to vote NO on
CAFTA! CAFTA could be voted on as soon as
Thursday, June 30th.
CAFTA, the Central American Free Trade Agreement that
will include Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and
the Dominican Republic, endangers labor and environmental standards and
will exacerbate poverty at home and abroad.
U.S. corporations stand to profit extraordinarily from
this unpopular agreement which may be why the public knows so little about
it. CAFTA signs away sovereign democratic rights, tramples hard-fought
environmental and labor protections, privatizes public resources, holds
governments hostage to frivolous corporate lawsuits and further
marginalizes working families in Central America and the United States.
Don't let the bad policies of NAFTA get repeated with
CAFTA. Declare independence from corporate trade agreements. Tell your
congressional representative why CAFTA is bad for working families, bad
for the environment, and bad for democracy. Go ahead; get on the phone!
1-866-340-9281.
For more information on CAFTA, read Food First's
CAFTA fact sheet
and our News and Views article
It's Time to Defeat CAFTA. |
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Guatemalans protest against CAFTA
[3-18-05] Karla Koll, a
Presbyterian mission co-worker in Guatemala, sends an on-the-scene report
of demonstrations against the legislature's approval of the Central
American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). At least one demonstrator has been
killed, apparently by police. |
CAFTA is a live
issue in Congress
[7-23-04]
The recent Presbyterian
General Assembly voted to oppose the Central American Free Trade
Agreement. Here's some helpful information for any who want to urge
their members of Congress to support the PCUSA view.
This material comes from the Campaign for
Labor Rights, prepared with information from CISPES and the Nicaragua
Network.
Congress will be in recess and members
will again be in their home districts from July 26th to September 3rd.
This is another opportunity to meet with your Representative and Senators
about the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA). We have been
hearing a lot of the same statements from representatives lately -
especially related to the delay of the vote in the US Congress and Kerry's
possible renegotiation of CAFTA. Below are some talking points that will
help you better respond to these issues in lobby meetings with your
senators and representatives. It also includes suggestions about what we
can be asking sympathetic representatives for right now beyond a
commitment to vote against CAFTA.
**News Update**
The Dominican Republic is expected to
sign on to this Free Trade Agreement today, July 23rd. The Dominican
Republic and the five Central American countries just concluded their own
negotiations, in order to modify a current agreement between those
partners to take into account the Dominican Republic's entry into CAFTA.
The Central American countries are being encouraged to ratify the
agreement in their own national assemblies so as to put pressure on the
U.S. Congress. Bush has declared that he will not put CAFTA before
Congress before the November elections, but Robert Zoellick, the U.S.
Trade Representative, has openly acknowledged the possibility of passing
CAFTA during the lame duck congress after the elections. We cannot let
this happen! The Stop CAFTA movement has come far; don't let them sneak
CAFTA through!
Ministers in Central America have warned
that they would be opposed to the renegotiation of CAFTA should Democratic
candidate John Kerry win November's presidential election and hold to his
promise to improve CAFTA's worker and environmental conditions. While this
would be an opportunity to improve some aspects of the actual agreement,
there are many reasons why a renegotiation might not be satisfactory. For
example, Kerry has not proposed looking into the Intellectual Property
rules, which will turn necessary medicines into hard to find commodities
after CAFTA. Also, the renegotiation of CAFTA would not address the
investor rights which benefit only the transnational companies, doing
little for the citizens or the development of these countries.
If you would like more background on
CAFTA, go to the web page of the
Stop CAFTA Coalition, which has worked since March of 2003 in
partnership with organizations in Central America to stop this damaging
trade agreement.
TALKING POINTS
1.
What Members of Congress
are saying:
CAFTA won't be voted on until after the
elections, so what's the point in talking about it now?
**Response:
There is always a chance that CAFTA could
be voted on before the elections; regardless, it's important to make
public statements NOW to show the administration how broad the opposition
is.
This is doubly important because the
administration is negotiating agreements with other countries in Latin
America. Congress needs to send a message that the CAFTA model is not
adequate.
While unlikely, Zoellick has been pushing
for a possible lame-duck vote. Members must make opposition public now to
ensure that a lame-duck vote doesn't happen.
** You may want to ask your members of
Congress:
Release a public statement stating firm
opposition to CAFTA
2. What Members of
Congress are saying:
The labor and environment provisions are
most concerning
**Response:
In fact, labor and environment are just
two of many problems with CAFTA. Others are agriculture, privatization and
intellectual property. People in Central America and the U.S. reject CAFTA
for many reasons, as it is based on a fundamentally flawed model of trade.
Furthermore, the labor and environmental
provisions deal solely with enforcement -- the entire agreement is bad for
labor and the environment, by giving free range to corporations.
** You may want to ask your Members of
Congress:
Help organize a Congressional Fact
Finding Mission to Central America to research the potential effects of
CAFTA beyond labor and environment
3. What Members of
Congress are saying:
CAFTA is indeed flawed, but I'm hoping
that Kerry will win and renegotiate a better deal
**Response:
The renegotiated CAFTA that John Kerry is
talking about is not at all acceptable. Kerry's record (voting for NAFTA,
Chile, Fast-Track) shows that he's not an advocate for "fair" trade, and
thus those that oppose CAFTA should push him to go further.
** You may want to ask your Members of
Congress:
Tell Kerry, as well as other members of
Congress, that the problems with CAFTA cannot be solved through
renegotiating certain parts of the deal.
4. What Members of
Congress are saying:
I haven't heard much from my constituents
about CAFTA; it's not really an issue that people in my district care
about
**Response:
You haven't heard anything because the
process has been complicated and secretive, without any sort of popular
consultation. In fact, people are concerned about issues related to trade
(such as off-shoring of jobs, secret tribunals that overturn judicial
decisions in the United States, access to generic medicines, etc), but the
government and the media have failed to make the connection to CAFTA
** You may want to ask your Members of
Congress:
Organize a public forum in your district
that draws on a variety of social/economic sectors and opinions. Encourage
education and dialogue about trade issues.
5. What Members of
Congress are saying:
I'm against CAFTA; what else to you want
from me?
**Response:
Its time for Congress to start putting
forward alternatives to the Administrations current trade policy. Make
opposition to CAFTA an issue by discussing and investigating alternatives.
** You may want to ask your Members of
Congress:
Become a co-sponsor of the Fair Trade for
Our Future Resolution, a proactive piece of legislation that establishes
minimum standards for responsible trade policies. To find this document go
to:
http://citizenstrade.org/resources.php
Support efforts to repeal fast track
and/or vote against expansion of fast track when that comes up next year.
6. What Members of
Congress are saying:
Free trade works. I support CAFTA. It is
the best thing we can do for Central America.
**Response:
There is tremendous opposition to CAFTA
in Central America. We can give you extensive information about the
horrific impacts of NAFTA in Mexico, and provide statements against CAFTA
from groups in Central America.
** You may want to ask your Members of
Congress:
Ask them to consider the broad spectrum
of evidence concerning the potential impact of the agreement.
If they say no, increase pressure tactics
(see CAFTA Lobby Kit at www.stopcafta.org for ideas)
7. What Members of
Congress are saying:
Free trade works. It is time for us to
break down barriers for our products in Central America. CAFTA provides
opportunities for our farmers and our businesses.
**Response:
The National Family Farm Coalition and
National Farmers Union oppose CAFTA. This agreement is a lose/lose
proposition for small farmers in Central America and the United States.
** You may want to ask your Members of
Congress:
Ask them to consider the broad spectrum
of evidence concerning the potential impact of the agreement. |
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Central American Free Trade Agreement coming up in Congress
[4-28-04] An action alert from Sojourners
Congress is expected to vote on the Central American
Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) in the coming weeks. Your voice is needed to
speak out in solidarity with all people of Central America -especially
poor farmers and women - who will be hardest hit. Changes in economic
policy, especially free trade policies, have the greatest and most
devastating effects on women and the poor. CAFTA would primarily benefit
corporations and their stockholders, rather than ensuring labor and human
rights.
As people of conscience, we must urge our Members of
Congress to vote NO on this bill, and to speak out for economic equality
for women and the poor. Contact your congressperson today and tell them to
oppose CAFTA.
Click here
to send a letter to Congress. |
| Another
bump in the road toward globalization:
In a blow to corporate-driven agenda, U.S.
forced to complete a scaled-down CAFTA without Costa Rica
Agreement remains a
threat to workers, environment, public health, faces uphill battle in
Congress
from Citizens Trade Campaign
[12-20-03]
WASHINGTON - December 17, 2003 - U.S.
negotiators announced the completion of Central America Free Trade Agreement
(CAFTA) talks today, but with only four nations after Costa Rica walked out
yesterday, objecting to U.S. demands that it open its telecommunications and
insurance industries to privatization. CAFTA, if passed by Congress, would
in effect create a NAFTA-style relationship between the U.S. and the Central
American countries of El Salvador, Nicaragua, Honduras, and Guatemala. The
Dominican Republic would also be annexed to the agreement, as well as Costa
Rica, potentially. CAFTA would have to be approved by the U.S. Congress and
by the governments of the Central American nations next year before it could
take effect.
Because of concerns over workers rights,
investment, access to medicines, the anticipated impact on the sugar and
textile industries, strong Congressional opposition to the agreement is
expected. A recent U.S. Zogby poll found that the majority of respondents
opposed extending NAFTA to other Latin American countries. At a news
conference earlier this month, Rep. Sander Levin (D-MI) suggested that CAFTA
would fail in Congress due to contentious issues.
"You have Costa Rica walking out of CAFTA
talks because it refuses to adopt the Worldcom-Arthur Anderson model of
telecom and financial services deregulation, the FTAA nearly imploding in
Miami over U.S. demands for expansive investor and intellectual property
protections, and the WTO melting down in Cancun," said Lori Wallach,
Director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch. "What will it take before
the Bush Administration stops desperately pushing the same old NAFTA model
that has so clearly failed?" "CAFTA would further undermine workers' rights
in Central America and in the U.S.," said Bill Klinefelter, Legislative and
Political Director of the United Steelworkers of America. "Moving forward
with this agreement without ensuring safeguards for workers shows clearly
that CAFTA is designed to benefit huge multinational corporations at the
expense of the workers who make their products. CAFTA would strike a blow
against working families in Central America and in the U.S."
Another controversial aspect of the
agreement are the new rules it would impose on countries over pharmaceutical
patents for life-saving drugs. "CAFTA as completed would deny vital
medicines to AIDS and HIV patients," says Gretchen Gordon, Director of
Citizens Trade Campaign. "The Bush Administration is going to bat for big
drug companies' patent profits while people with AIDS are literally dying
for their medicines."
***************************************
The Citizens Trade Campaign (CTC) is a
national coalition of environmental, labor, consumer, family farm,
religious, and other civil society groups founded in 1992 during the fight
over the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). CTC members include
the National Family Farm Coalition; United Methodist Church General Board of
Church and Society; Public Citizen; International Brotherhood of Teamsters;
UNITE!; Friends of the Earth; the United Steelworkers of America; United
Students Against Sweatshops; Communications Workers of America; Western
Organization of Resource Councils; American Lands Alliance; Institute for
Agriculture and Trade Policy; Alliance for Sustainable Jobs and the
Environment; and Defenders of Wildlife, as well as regional, state, and
city-based coalitions, organizations, and individual activists throughout
the United States.
***************************************
Citizens Trade Campaign
P.O. Box 77077
Washington, D.C. 20013
(202) 778-3320 ph
(202) 293-5308 fx
www.citizenstrade.org
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Some blogs worth visiting |
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PVJ's
Facebook page
Mitch Trigger, PVJ's
Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where
Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and
views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both
personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!
You can post your own news and views,
or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you. |
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Voices of Sophia blog
Heather Reichgott, who has created
this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:
After fifteen years of scholarship
and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the
voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy,
students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers
and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God
in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God
through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through
articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and
thoughtful community. |
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John Harris’ Summit to
Shore blogspot
Theological and philosophical
reflections on everything between summit to shore, including
kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology,
politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New
York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive
New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the
Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian
Church in Flushing, NY. |
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John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive
A Presbyterian minister, currently
serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton,
Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized
and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and
lightening up. |
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Got more blogs to recommend?
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