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NAFTA Rules Can Trump State Laws
Also by David Sirota
Cutting Through the News Noise
Three books tackle issues rarely explored by the media: McCain's flip-flopping, America's political divide and the real story behind globalization.
Jun 27, 2008
Obama's Clearest Path to the Presidency: Talk About Wages
If Obama counters the GOP's race-baiting by promoting working-class interests and a fairer trade agenda, he will win the White House.
Jun 24, 2008
Why the Antiwar Movement Can't Budge the Dems to Leave Iraq
If the anti-war movement can't find a way to hold Dem politicians accountable, then don't expect anything more than the status quo.
Jun 5, 2008
The Associated Press has this crucially important story out on the wire:
International trade tribunals seen trumping state laws
MONTPELIER, Vt. --A Canadian company wants to open a new plant in Claremont, N.H., to bottle fresh water from a source in Stockbridge, Vt.
But if Vermont wants to limit how much water the company takes, it may run afoul of the North American Free Trade Agreement.
States around the country are growing increasingly worried about the threats posed to their laws and regulations by the secret tribunals that resolve disputes in international trade. Experts say everything from environmental rules to the licensing of nurses and other professionals could be affected.
"Free trade agreements are to state sovereignty and economic development what global climate change is to the environment and natural resources," said state Sen. Virginia Lyons, D-Chittenden. "I think it's a really significant issue for our state, and for every state in the country."
Vermont is one of seven states to establish committees to study the possible impacts of international trade on their laws.
Assistant Vermont Attorney General Elliot Burg said NAFTA and other trade agreements have opened up a path for international companies that want to circumvent state laws they don't like.
I delved into this issue in a recent nationally syndicated column, and how the issue is playing out on the series of proposed NAFTA expansions that Congress is currently considering. The Progressive States Network is working on legislative ways for states to fight back.
See more stories tagged with: nafta, trade
David Sirota is the author of Hostile Takeover: How Big Money and Corruption Conquered Our Government--and How We Take It Back (Crown, 2006).
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