Obama ‘Going to Bat’ for Unions in Trade Accords (Update3)
By Mark Drajem
July 16 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk
pledged the Obama administration will go “to bat for American
workers” through greater protection of labor rights and more
aggressive monitoring of overseas trade barriers.
Kirk, in a speech at a U.S. Steel Corp. plant in Braddock,
Pennsylvania, today, said the government will force countries
such as Peru and Guatemala to live up to labor commitments they
made in trade accords, and publish new lists of countries’
measures that block farm goods or manufactured products.
“We’ve been more eager in selling the benefits of trade
than we have been vigilant in enforcing trade agreements,” Kirk
told about 60 workers at a plant near Pittsburgh. “Enforcement
cannot be an afterthought; it needs to be the centerpiece of
trade policy.”
Kirk, who has been on the job for four months, has had to
drop plans for a quick congressional vote on the Panama
agreement after union leaders and Democratic lawmakers,
including Representative Michael Michaud of Maine, protested.
Unions led the push to get stiffer labor provisions added
to free-trade accords, and the pledge to step up enforcement is
a prerequisite before the administration can garner support for
stalled deals with Panama, Colombia and South Korea, Kirk said.
Those deals have the backing of companies such as Citigroup
Inc., Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Caterpillar Inc.
“In addition to stronger enforcement, we also need an
aggressive approach to negotiating and passing trade
agreements,” Frank Vargo, vice president of the National
Association of Manufacturers, which represents companies such as
U.S. Steel and Caterpillar, said in an e-mailed statement.
Fair Trade
Kirk, in an interview on Bloomberg Television today, said
the U.S. in the past has let some trade partners “run over
us.” In his speech, he outlined two specific proposals, vowing
to publish annual reports on other countries food-safety
restrictions that keep out U.S. meat products and technical
rules that discriminate against American-made industrial goods.
Hog futures have fallen about 16 percent since April 23, as
Russia, China and other countries barred imports of U.S. pork
because of an outbreak of so-called swine flu.
“That’s cost us the loss of hundreds of millions of
dollars in revenues,” he said.
Kirk said legal action would still be a last resort, with
“vigorous oversight” and negotiation faster ways of resolving
trade disputes.
Actions Speak Louder
On labor rights, the U.S. trade office will review the
labor rules in each of the 14 nations that completed a free-
trade agreement with the U.S. in the past eight years and push
those countries, including Peru and Guatemala, to adhere to
pledges to prevent discrimination and child labor and let
workers organize.
Michaud and Ohio Democratic Senator Sherrod Brown said
enforcing current accords will not sway them to support new
agreements.
“We should not confuse a key part of the USTR’s job --
trade enforcement -- with a new direction in trade policy,”
Brown said in a statement. “Our trade strategy is broken.”
A Better Job
Michaud, Brown and representatives of steelworkers also say
they want the administration to do a better job of guarding
against cheap imports. Obama faces a September deadline to
decide if he will put tariffs or quotas on $1.7 billion of
Chinese automobile tires, in a case brought by the United
Steelworkers.
That case will test how Obama maneuvers between the
concerns of U.S. manufacturers and his pledge at the Group of 20
summit to avoid protectionist measures.
Arkansas Democratic Senator Blanche Lincoln and other
senators are sending Obama a letter today urging him to impose
tariffs or quotas on the Chinese tires.
“We firmly believe that providing this specific measure of
relief would send a powerful message to the American people that
you intend to keep your promise to enforce trade laws fully,”
Lincoln and other senators wrote. This “is an important test
case and an important step in regaining the public’s confidence
in trade liberalization.”
Kirk, who didn’t address the tires decision today, said
that getting nations to drop trade restrictions is different
than erecting new barriers to imports.
“The ability of the U.S. to maintain the high ground is
largely contingent on us acting the same as we are acting our
partners to act,” he told reporters after his speech.
To contact the reporter on this story:
Mark Drajem in Washington at
mdrajem@bloomberg.net
.
Last Updated: July 16, 2009 16:14 EDT