Why You Should Oppose
Fast Track Trade Negotiating Authority
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As part of its drive to expand NAFTA to the entire Western Hemisphere, the
Bush administration is working hard to get "Fast Track" trade negotiating
authority. Fast Track would prevent Congress from changing, or even having
extended debate on, any trade agreement negotiated by the president. Such an
arrangement would reduce the role of Congress in trade negotiations to
little more than a rubber stamp. As Fast Track shows, the free trade"
agenda is as much about governance--who will make the rules in the new global
economy--as it is about trade. Fast Track is simply undemocratic. In recent
years, Fair Trade forces twice defeated President Clinton's Fast Track
requests. By educating our communities about the failures of free trade, we
can do it again.
Fast Track Would Remove the Checks and Balances of Governance
While the U.S. Constitution gives the president exclusive authority for
managing "relations with foreign sovereigns," it invests in Congress the
power to "regulate Commerce with foreign Nations." This design is one of the
many checks and balances built into the Constitution to prevent one branch
of government from having absolute control of a vital policy area. Fast
Track would destroy that balance by delegating Congress' constitutional
authority over trade policy to the White House. Fast Track would prevent
Congress from amending trade deals and would allow the president not only to
draft agreements, but also to craft any legislation needed to bring U.S.
laws into compliance with such agreements. Essentially, it gives the
president the ability to legislate without having to listen to citizen
input. By concentrating even more power in the executive branch, Fast Track
takes our government in an undemocratic direction.
Fast Track Would Limit Public Debate on Trade Issues
If Congress approves Fast Track, our representatives and senators will limit
themselves to having no more than 20 hours to debate any trade deal brought
before them for ratification and to vote on the issue within 60 days of when
it is introduced. Those limits would curtail public discussions about trade
policy. Extended debates on Capitol Hill give ordinary citizens the chance
to influence public policy by expressing their opinions to their elected
representatives. If trade legislation is forced to speed through Congress,
that will limit the opportunities for careful deliberation on the merits and
weaknesses of complex trade agreements. Because it curtails discussion, Fast
Track is fundamentally undemocratic.
Fast Track Would Help Corporations Write the Rules for Trade
Already, corporations are given a back stage pass to trade negotiations
through the U.S. Trade Representatives' Industry Sector Advisory Committees.
For example, more than 300 business representatives have been helping to
write the rules for the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) while civil
society groups are left in the dark. By forcing Congress to have a yes-or-no
vote on trade deals and preventing Congress from making any changes to such
agreements, Fast Track puts even more power in the hands of the corporate
rule-makers. Corporate representatives will know they can craft deals that
suit their agenda without worrying about any counter-influence from public
interest groups.
Fast Track Takes Us in the Wrong Direction
The Bush Administration says it wants Fast Track to pursue a new round of
trade talks under the WTO and speed up negotiations for expanding NAFTA to
the entire hemisphere through the FTAA. But the rules imposed by the WTO and
NAFTA are a disaster for working families, the environment and human rights
protections. Such agreements are spurring a global "race to the bottom" that
harms the majority of people while mostly benefiting transnational
corporations. Take, for example, Mexico, where, according to the Mexican
government, wages in the country's manufacturing sector have fallen 10
percent since NAFTA went into effect. Since NAFTA began, the ordinary
Mexican's purchasing power has decreased 39 percent and the number of people
living in "severe" poverty (surviving on less than $2 a day) has increased
by 4 million, according to the United Nations. Mexico's environment has
also suffered: In the Mexican state of Guerrero, 40 percent of the forests
have been lost in the last eight years, and when peasants tried to fight the
massive clearcutting there they were jailed. When we're headed in the wrong
direction, getting on a fast track is the last thing we should do.
Fast Track is an Obstacle to Making Trade Clean, Green and Fair
According to a recent University of Maryland poll, 78 percent of Americans
believe that trade agreements should include protections for the environment
and labor rights. But Fast Track, by limiting citizen involvement in making
trade policy, will render that demand meaningless. If we are to achieve
socially responsible and environmentally sustainable commerce, we need more
public participation in the decision-making process, not less.
Fast Track is Outdated
When Fast Track was first created, in the 1970s, international trade
agreements dealt only with very narrow topics such as tariffs and import
quotas. Today, the rules laid out by the WTO and NAFTA affect almost every
aspect of our lives?from environmental regulations to food, worker safety,
and banking standards. Modern corporate globalization agreements also affect
how communities will be able to spend their local tax dollars and how
governments can provide basic social services. The WTO and NAFTA rewrote
significant sections of US laws that directly affect millions of Americans.
Clearly, Congress' delegation of its trade authority is unwise given the
broad areas of law impacted by today's commercial treaties.
Resistance to Fast Track is Building
Twice during the Clinton Administration Fair Trade forces around the country
mobilized to put pressure on their representatives to defeat the president's
Fast Track requests. Those hard-won victories were made possible because
public opinion is on our side. According to a poll by a professional polling
agency, 57 percent of Americans oppose the idea of Fast Track. That
sentiment comes in part from skepticism about the "free trade" agenda in
general. As the continuing protests against corporate globalization have
shown, a growing number of people agree that free trade is not working for
the majority of the world's citizens or the environment.
There is a Better Way
The Bush Administration likes to say that it can't make policy without Fast
Track. But Fast Track has only been used five times since it was first
created. And, in any case, there are better ways to create trade policy. We
need a democratic process that ensures that trade negotiators are
accountable to public opinion when making these important choices. A new
"democratic track" on trade policy would preserve Congress's legislative
role and strengthen public participation. Enforceable labor and
environmental standards must be included in future agreements. Workers
rights and the environment must be given the same or tighter protection as
international investors. And trade rules must never undercut public health,
safety and environmental laws.