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OpEdNews Op Eds    H2'ed 5/9/16

Clinton Commits: No TPP, Fundamentally Rethink Trade Policies

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Now A Clear Commitment

In her most recent statement, Clinton not only committed to opposing TPP after the election but gave a very strong statement about our trade agreements in general, saying, "I'm not interested in tinkering around the margins of our trade policy. I think we need a fundamental rethink of how we approach trade deals going forward." From the questionnaire:

"Across all of our policies, American workers and American jobs have to come first. And one area where we've gotten this balance wrong over the years is trade. Looking back over the past decades, as globalization picked up steam, there's no doubt that the benefits of trade have not been as widely enjoyed as many predicted. Corporations may have won, but many workers lost. They lost their jobs, and they lost their sense of purpose. Cheaper goods are no substitute for that. So America has to do better.

"I've laid out a three-part test for any trade agreement to earn my support: it must (1) create American jobs, (2) raise wages, and (3) improve our national security. My approach to trade would be to establish and enforce fair rules so that our workers compete on a level playing field and countries don't race to the bottom on labor, the environment, and so much else. And we can bring others along in having higher labor, environmental, and other standards."

Clinton's statement that "we need a fundamental rethink of how we approach trade deals" is a strong statement, going beyond simply opposing TPP. "It is critical that we address labor protections and ensure that human rights are protected, as well as health, environmental, and consumer safety issues in any new trade agreements," her response said.

These are important distinctions that show her position is now clearly on the side of those opposing not just TPP but the way our trade agreements have been used to move jobs out of the country, drive down wages and break what power working people once had in the economy. She has not left herself wiggle room on a TPP vote, and she did not hedge herself between the interests of workers and those of the "donor class" and trade policies have not worked for working people.

Sanders Driving The Issue

This clear statement of position shows the value of the Sanders campaign. His clear opposition to TPP and our current trade regime finally forced Clinton to go on the record with a clear commitment opposing TPP and a solid criticism of our country's trade policies.

This demonstrates the value of contested primaries. It also shows that Sanders has been able to drive the national discussion in a way that benefits working people. His discussion of student debt and proposals for extending public education by four years so public colleges and universities will be tuition-free has brought record support from younger voters.

Sanders forced the issue and Clinton has committed to opposing TPP along with her strong statement on the need to rethink our trade policies in general. Whether Clinton is secretly a "free-trader" and is as some suspect only making these statements for votes, or personally really believes that the trade agreements and overall policy has hurt working people and the economy and only hedged in order to appeal to the donor class does not matter. The commitment locks her into the policy, so it will be the same either way.

Democratic Platform Needs A Strong Anti-TPP Plank

One would think that blocking TPP should be a slam dunk now that all three remaining presidential candidates -- Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders -- have come out strongly against the agreement. Unfortunately, the unaccountable post-election "lame duck" session is not a normal session, and the will of the public may not prevail.

The Democratic convention can pass a strong platform plank expressing the will of the party, and adding enforcement provisions against any Democrats who might vote for TPP in the lame duck or after. This could include a resolution to deny party funds and endorsements in coming elections.

A strong statement in the Democratic Party platform will also help Democratic House and Senate candidates compete in their own races this fall. At the top of the Republican ticket, Donald Trump might be opposed to TPP and other one-sided trade deals, but most of the rest of the Republican party is just fine with trade deals that move jobs out of the country so that executives and Wall Street shareholders can pocket the wage differential.

A strong platform plank makes a party-wide statement. It gives all Democrats ammunition against their opponents who might disagree with Trump and favor the TPP and free trade. It allows Democrats at all levels to campaign saying that Democrats, as a party, stand behind working people.

Clinton's statement helps. Asking members of Congress to vote against TPP would help more. A strong Democratic Party platform plank would help, too. We need to stamp TPP out and start fresh with a fair trade process that brings representatives of labor, environmental, consumer, human rights and other "stakeholder" groups to the negotiating table along with representatives of business.

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Dave has more than 20 years of technology industry experience. His earlier career included technical positions, including video game design at Atari and Imagic. He was a pioneer in design and development of productivity and educational (more...)
 

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