Like Gasoline
on Flames
You wont find many fans of ambitious new international
trade agreements in Marion, Indiana.
One of the largest employers in Marion, Thomson Electronics,
represented by Local 1160, has faced so many cutbacks in production
and subsequent layoffs that its work force today numbers in the
hundreds, down from a high near 4,000 in the mid-1970s.
"Im sure the union did what it could," said Local
1160 member Clinton Tyson, who, until July, had worked there for
29 years. "But it wasnt enough."
Unfortunately, what the union alone can do to stop the global
trade policies that are destroying domestic manufacturing industry
is virtually nothing.
Despite the efforts of union leaders and the hard work of its
members, the decisions that encourage companies to shutter American
factories are made in the global marketplace by multinational
corporations, far from the production line. In the United States,
trade policies are set by lawmakers in Congress and the chief
executive, President Bush. They are the only ones with the ultimate
authority to change policies that are putting American factories
out of business. They are the ones who are responsible for the
near-extinction of the countrys industrial base.
Incredibly, the political powers that be have decided more so-called
free trade is the answer to the countrys economic problems. Last
year, Congress bestowed upon the president fast track trade authority,
the ability to negotiate pacts without meddling by legislators.
The first agreements under fast track, with Chile and Singapore,
were approved by Congress in July. And the trade representatives
are just getting warmed up.
Now they are going for what one now-deposed dictator might have
called the "mother of all trade agreements." The Free
Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), which is between the United
States and 33 other countries in the Western Hemisphere, encompasses
North, South and Central America, from the Yukon Territories of
northern Canada past the equator and all the way down to Cape
Horn, the gateway to the South Poleevery country but Cuba.
With 800 million people and $13 trillion in combined gross domestic
product, the FTAA would be the worlds largest trading bloc in
2005, the year it is scheduled to take effect. While it would
grant extensive new rights to multinational corporations, it would
provide no guarantees for workers rights, public health, safety
or the environment.
If FTAA is enacted, expect to hear even more stories like those
union members tell in Colombia, where being a union member could
mark you for death. Colombia is the most dangerous nation for
union members, with 184 of the worlds 213 confirmed killings
last year, according to the International Confederation of Free
Trade Unions. While Colombia might be an extreme example, it demonstrates
the appeal of companies to countries with weak labor laws.
Here at home, Marion symbolizes the middle America that represents
the engine of growth powering our economy since the dawn of the
manufacturing age. Since several consecutive presidential administrations
have ranked liberal trade policies higher than the value of a
strong domestic industrial base, we have slowly and steadily witnessed
its agonizing decline.
Operations have been outsourced overseas, where labor laws are
cursory and unions are either nonexistent or ineffectual. With
the special trade protections of the FTAA, expect multinational
companies to ramp up their production, as well as professional
and technical operations, in other countries across the hemisphere.
In this democracy, our representatives, from our local mayor
to the president of the United States, are accountable to us for
every decision they make. If you think your vote doesnt matter,
remember Clinton Tyson.
Cast your online ballot against FTAA at www.ibew.org
and take a stand against yet another ruinous trade agreement.
Ed Hill
International President
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Presidents Message
September 2003 IBEW Journal
"operations have been outsourced overseas, where
labor laws are cursory and unions are either nonexistent or
ineffectual." |
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