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Pelosi Plays Hardball on Trade: the Good, the Bad and the Ugly

Posted by David Sirota, Open Left at 4:28 PM on April 9, 2008.


Mostly the ugly...

This just off the Reuters wire:

The House of Representatives will decide on Thursday whether to put off indefinitely a vote on the Colombia free-trade agreement that President George W. Bush submitted to Congress this week, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said. Pelosi, announcing the move to reporters on Wednesday, would not give a time frame for when the trade pact might be debated and put up for a vote on passage in the House. The vote on Thursday would change rules for considering the deal by eliminating a 90-day deadline for Congress to approve the Colombia trade deal.

This is good news, bad news and potentially ugly news.

The good news: Finally, a Democratic leader is trying to use some modicum of legislative power to halt our economically destructive and wildly unpopular trade policies. It's a start.

The bad news: Pelosi has yet to say she will work to kill the pact outright. In fact, she issued a press release earlier this week merely worrying that Bush's tactics jeopardize the final passage of the Colombia Free Trade Agreement. Meanwhile, other top Democrats like Jim Clyburn have gone on record saying they want this deal to pass (Clyburn has since amended his statement - but sometimes the truth is in the first reaction).

The potentially ugly news:

Is Pelosi throwing America's fair trade majority a meaningless bone that ends up helping lobbyists pass this deal?

While it certainly is good in the short-term that Congress is postponing passage of the Colombia deal, if Democrats are ultimately aiming to pass it anyway, then the delay may actually be a bad thing, in that it would serve to give K Street lobbyists more time to pressure Congress to pass it. It's quite possible (probable, really, based on the Democrats willingness to sell out on this issue) that this postponement (if it passes) will let them cut a deal with Bush to modestly increase Trade Adjustment Assistance funding in exchange for the free trade deal. That would be a terrible bargain for workers, giving them a few crumbs while robbing yet another loaf of bread out of their hands.

In fact, Pelosi's press release this morning seems to suggest she still wants this bill to pass:

"I thought there was a risk, the President sending it to the Congress now.If brought to the floor immediately, it would lose. And what message would that send?"

See that? Her big fear is not the deal passing, thus hurting American workers and validating the murderous Colombian government. No, her big fear is that the deal would NOT pass right now.

If Pelosi is successful in engineering this rejection of fast track - rather than the rejection of the Colombia FTA- it puts the timetable for the vote firmly in her hands. She will be able to engineer the vote's timing so that it passes (imagine, for instance, Pelosi calling a vote on this bill in the post-election lame-duck session, in a wink-and-nod deal with corporate campaign contributors). And rest assured, that if this bill does not get outright rejected, the lobbying pressure to pass it will only increase over time.

This issue is obviously a moving target. Stay tuned.

UPDATE: Well, it seems like that ugly side could be coming true. Here's CongressDaily:

House Democratic leaders are seriously considering delaying a vote on the Colombia Free Trade Agreement until after the November elections, thereby providing needed cover for vulnerable rank-and-file members, according to senior Democratic leadership sources.

CongressDaily says the lame-duck plan is gaining momentum, and that - despite polls showing the vast majority of Americans opposing this NAFTA-style trade policy - Democrats say killing the deal "is not seen as a viable political option."

Digg!

Tagged as: pelosi, colombia fta

David Sirota is a veteran political strategist and author of Hostile Takeover, a New York Times bestseller about the corruption of both political parties.


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Pelosi and the Dems sell us out again ...
Posted by: PaulC on Apr 9, 2008 6:48 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is Bush's shot at Hugo Chavez I suspect - an attempt to ween suitors away from his growing sphere of influence.

Washington either thinks that South Americans are simply too ignorant to know what is in their best self interest, or they are hoping to encourage more authoritarian regimes to step forward and reach for the free weapons platter. Gotta keep those upstart peasants from getting too big for their britches!

peace,
Paul

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Grrrrr
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Apr 9, 2008 8:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Parliamentary maneuvers used with the sole purpose of frustrating...US! The Democrats. The people who elected these Quislings.

Good luck Cindy - and every other progressive challenger to a DINO. Not sure who I want rid of more, the outright fascists or their collaborators.

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» RE: Grrrrr Posted by: progdem
"There is no WE in corruption"
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Apr 10, 2008 9:12 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Question:
Does the US control their domestic & foreign policies?: "Moody's: U.S. rating could be pressured in long term"

Americans are so used to believing that screwing other nations or cultures is essential & beneficial to THE AMERICAN CAUSE...

that they just aren't ACCUSTOMED to realizing what Canadians & non-Caucasian Americans already know...

... "THERE IS NO WE in CORRUPTION"

...as members of the Council of Canadians can easily confirm...

FREE trade is a sick, sick joke.

Beware the 'Security & Prosperity Partnership'...

because it only benefits, those George Bush would call 'My Base'

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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What Amazes Me Most....
Posted by: Wacre on Apr 10, 2008 12:36 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is that some tool will be quick to say something like: "This is an effect of the free market", or ' globalization.'

Nonsense. There's no natural law that stops American companies (or any for that matter) from protecting the industries that are crucial to their economies.

The 'free market' is a myth (seemingly designed to dupe people into believing that losing jobs is somehow beneficial to them) as well because the United States has never been as successful as when it protected (increased tariffs and taxes on imports) the industries crucial to the performance of its economy, be it the production of blue jeans or bicycles.

The 'free market' isn't so free when a country's markets are being overwhelmed by under-priced imports (which, as the last bunch of lead-tainted imports from China revealed a few months ago, can kill) or when the United States spends more money creating welfare for lawyers (the way we defend intellectual property rights and copyright–while valid–doesn't seem proportional to the way we allow companies that create 'real' things to send thousands of jobs overseas a year).

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Pelosi
Posted by: Dianka on Apr 12, 2008 6:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Or it's just more Dem Party gamesmanship. Time and again, they've voiced a measure of opposition to the worst of policies, but sure enough, one way or another, those policies are enacted. They inevitably "fall short" of votes to block the worst policies, just miss out on over-riding any vetos, repeatedly showing that the New Dem Party is either utterly impotent or in solid unity with the Republican right-wing.

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Pelosi playing hard ball??
Posted by: Doubtom on Apr 13, 2008 10:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pelosi wouldn't know a hard ball if one hit her upside the haid! Given her voting record and leadership, I'd guess that she already got in the way of a hard ball.

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