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Frequently Asked Questions
About Fast Track


What is Fast Track?

Fast Track is an arrangement by which Congress surrenders its constitutional authority to regulate foreign commerce and gives that power to the executive branch. It sets in advance the conditions for congressional consideration of any trade agreements, thereby limiting public participation in the formation of trade policies. Fast Track would allow the Bush Administration not only to negotiate international trade agreements but also to draft all of the implementing legislation required to bring U.S. law into accordance with these agreements. The resulting agreement and implementing legislation would then be presented to Congress as a package deal for a simple yes-or-no vote with limited debate and no amendments allowed. The time allowed for debate is limited to less than 20 hours.


Why does the Bush Administration want Fast Track?

Fast Track would allow the Bush Administration and its corporate allies to set the terms of international trade with minimum oversight from Congress. If Congress were more intimately involved in international trade negotiations, agreements like NAFTA might never have been passed. "Free trade" agreements in general benefit mostly a select few transnational corporations while contributing to environmental destruction and sweatshop-style production. Such agreements would face more scrutiny and have a harder time becoming law in a truly open and accountable system.

President Bush and his Trade Representative Robert Zoellick plan to use Fast Track to expand NAFTA and create the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). This agreement would impose the failed NAFTA model of free trade, deregulation and privatization throughout the Western Hemisphere. The Bush Administration describes Fast Track as crucial to their efforts to expand NAFTA and promote free trade worldwide. The President's 2001 International Trade Legislative Agenda lists enacting Fast Track as the Administration's top trade legislative priority.

But NAFTA expansion is only the tip of the iceberg. The Bush Administration also intends to use Fast Track to pursue a new round of trade talks under the WTO and speed up negotiations on other bilateral and regional agreements, including free trade agreements with Chile and Singapore. Fast Track would be the administration's best tool for passing all of these agreements. Fast Track would allow the Bush Administration to set the agenda on issues of international trade for the next 5-8 years.


Why should I be concerned about Fast Track?

Fast Track risks disturbing the delicate balance of power between Congress and the President on issues of international trade. While the US Constitution invests in Congress the exclusive authority to "regulate Commerce with foreign Nations," it bestows upon the Executive exclusive authority for managing "relations with foreign sovereigns." This design is one of many checks and balances built into the US Constitution to avoid one branch of government from having absolute control of a vital policy area. Fast Track would concentrate the power to set the terms of international trade in the hands of the President.

By denying Congress input in the trade negotiating process, Fast Track denies everyone except the corporate executives a voice on trade issues and gives corporations a free rein to profit from lower wages and increased environmental destruction. Already, the use of Fast Track in the past has led to pro-corporate free trade agreements like NAFTA that provide extensive protections and windfall profits for transnational investors while limiting governments' ability to regulate trade in the public interest.

Fast Track would remove the Bush Administration's trade negotiators from even the semblance of accountability--either to Congress or to the US public-- and essentially subordinate even the concept of democracy itself to the administration's drive toward the ideological manifest destiny of unfettered markets. Thousands of US laws affecting a myriad of issues could be rewritten without any hearings from congressional committees with jurisdiction over them. Neither you nor your congressional representatives will even be able to see these trade agreements--let alone join the debate--until it's already too late.

Negotiations for the Free Trade Area of the Americas are already being conducted in secret and without the input of consumer, labor and environmental groups. If Congress grants the President Fast Track authority, the scope of public debate on issues of international trade will be reduced even further. Speeding up the timetable for congressional consideration of trade agreements would place extraordinary limits on the ability of ordinary citizens to interact with their elected officials. It would also severely limit the ability of public interest groups to educate and mobilize people against trade agreements that are harmful to the public interest.

Concentrating the power to negotiate trade agreements in the hands of the President also strengthens the hand of transnational corporations. Over 300 representatives of transnational business already have a back stage pass to the negotiation process by virtue of their membership on the US Trade Representative's Industry Sector Advisory Committees. With Fast Track in place, transnational businesses will be able to directly influence the implementation process without having to worry about any counter-influence from public interest groups. Fast track would allow business interests ample opportunity to sneak additional sweetheart deals for themselves into the text of trade agreements and all related legislation. It would then forbid Congress from weeding these provisions out in the amendment process.


Where did Fast Track come from?

Fast Track's structural design dates back to a day when trade negotiations were about tariffs and quotas only. Fast Track, which was only used five times since its 1974 establishment, has now been outgrown by the huge scope of what is covered in today's international commercial negotiations--a host of regulations including environmental, food, worker safety and local banking and tax standards.

When Fast Track was first established, the issues under consideration in international commercial agreements were narrowly limited to traditional trade matters. Most US trade agreements were bilateral deals between industrialized countries dealing with specific industrial or agricultural sectors--a far cry from the complex, multilateral agreements (like NAFTA, the WTO and the FTAA) that the Clinton administration used it for and the Bush White House intends to use it for.

Fast Track was first used during the 1979 GATT Tokyo Round Agreement. The implementing legislation for the Tokyo Round was a thin document of under 50 pages; few U.S. laws were modified. The only non-tariff issues even discussed in the Tokyo Round were customs classifications, a non-binding, non-enforceable product standards code, fine tuning of existing anti-dumping rules, and some limited government procurement policies.

The second use of fast track was the U.S-Israel Free Trade Agreement of 1985. The pact's entire implementing bill was less than four pages long and pertains only to lowering tariffs and rules on government procurement between the two countries. It was only with Fast Track's third use, for the 1988 US- Canada Free Trade Agreement, that the issues under discussion in "trade" talks begin to expand into new areas. The US-Canada Agreement made changes to domestic agriculture, banking, investment, food inspection, and other policies. This was the first implementing bill for a trade agreement to span more than 100 pages.

The 1993 NAFTA and 1994 GATT Uruguay Round exploded the boundaries of what was included in "trade" pacts. NAFTA, GATT-WTO and their implementing bills rewrote huge swaths of US laws. These pacts required the reshaping of domestic laws on service industries and investments, not just terms for trade in goods. Each of these agreements' implementation legislation contained more than 1,000 pages of changes to a vast array of US laws. Each also had a court system with economic penalties, but not the due process guarantees of domestic law.

Regardless of whether Congress's delegation of its trade authority was wise in the past, it is clearly no longer appropriate for the broad areas of domestic policy and law affected by today's international commercial agreements.


What are the Alternatives?

We need to re-establish checks and balances in US trade-policy making. We need to put the brakes of accountability on the trade negotiators now freelancing new deals without congressional or public input. We need to take back trade policy making by establishing a new, democratic system of making these important choices. We need to get the United States off the Fast Track and back on the right track.

A new "right track" to trade policymaking would be based on the following principles:

  • Enforceable Labor and Environmental Provisions Must be Included in the Core Text of any Future Agreements

    Trade negotiating authority must require the inclusion of enforceable workers' rights and environmental standards in the core of all new trade agreements. New trade agreements must ensure that all workers can freely exercise their fundamental rights and require governments to respect and promote the core labor standards laid out by the International Labor Organization in its 1998 Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work.

    It is not sufficient simply to list workers' rights and environmental protections among the negotiating objectives. Already, workers' rights have been among our negotiating objectives for more than 25 years, with very little progress being made.

  • Workers' Rights and the Environment Must Be Afforded the Same Protections as Transnational Investors

    Workers' rights and environmental standards must be covered by the same dispute resolution and enforcement provisions as the rest of the agreement. Monetary fines modeled on the NAFTA labor side agreement or the Canada-Chile agreement are inadequate and have proven an ineffective means of enforcement. When violations against labor and environmental standards result merely in monetary penalties, corporations can write off fines as part of the normal cost of doing business, as simply an expense to be figured into any budgeting. NAFTA provides fines for labor and environmental infractions that do little more than shuffle money from one government fund to another. Such fines have proved to be ineffective. We need a system of trade sanctions that allows poor countries the same opportunity to file sanctions as richer countries. We must implement a real enforcement mechanism to give labor and environmental interests the same protection that corporate copyrights already enjoy.

  • Trade Rules Must Not Undercut Public Health Safety and Environmental Laws

    Trade agreements must not undermine public services or public health, nor allow individual investors to challenge state laws in secret. Trade authority must establish responsibilities for investors--not just rights--and must not require privatization and deregulation as a condition of market access. An alternative "right track" trade negotiating authority would require negotiators to develop trade rules that cannot undercut public health, safety and environmental laws.

  • Congress' Normal Legislative Role Must Be Preserved and Public Participation Strengthened A right track to trade negotiating authority must preserve Congress' constitutionally mandated role in trade legislation and encourage stronger public participation and democratic oversight in trade policymaking. Congress must ensure that ordinary citizens have access to negotiating texts on a timely basis, and that negotiators are accountable to both Congress and the public as to whether mandatory negotiating targets are being met. Bodies such as the Industry Sector Advisory Committees must be opened up to include public interest representatives, and all impacted constituencies must be involved in designing our nation's trade policies.


What can I do to help?

The Bush Administration is determined to obtain Fast Track negotiating authority to facilitate the FTAA talks. The corporate lobby is gearing for battle as well--it has targeted 167 congressional districts across the country and has set aside money for advertising campaigns, glossy lobbying publications and hefty campaign contributions. But the movement for global justice is growing all over the world, uniting workers, environmentalists, farmers, consumers, small businesses, people of different faiths, students, and activists, both within countries and across borders. This Fair Trade movement is demanding that human rights must take precedence over corporate rights. Having already forever shifted the debate around trade and investment issues, we now face an historic opportunity to democratize the decision-making on trade issues.

This page was constructed using resources from Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch.


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This page last updated October 28, 2007
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