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Thank Corporate Cash for China Vote
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
Today's Economic Crisis in Historical Perspective
Democracy and Elections:
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Steven Rosenfeld
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ForeignPolicy:
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Water:
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Thanks to support of House Republicans, President Clinton won passage of the House bill giving China most favored nation trading status. Unfettered, market-driven, corporate dominated free trade is what Clinton has wanted most from his presidency. He passed the North American Free Trade Agreement with the support of 39 percent of the House Democrats. For China, his support dwindled to 35 percent. When it comes to economic policy, Clintonian Democrats -- a minority in the Democratic Party -- seem more and more akin to mainstream Republicans. But it's money, not ideology, that binds them. Both sides worship at the alter of corporate campaign contributions.
Corporate America spent big for this bill. So did labor, but, as always, it lacked the financial resources to have real clout. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, the 200 corporate members of the Business Roundtable spent about $10 million in advertising to promote the Clinton initiative. This expenditure came on top of the $58 million members of the Roundtable contributed to the Republican and Democratic parties this year. Citibank, for example, gave both parties $231,000 in soft money; $100,000 of which went to the fundraising arm of House Democrats to encourage support for the bill.
In actual purchasing power the value of a campaign contribution is double the investment. Implicit in any contribution is the threat that money given to one candidate can be withdrawn in the next election and given to the candidate's opponent. In other words, Citibank gave the House Democrats $100,000 for the China bill. If that money goes to House Republicans in the next election cycle, the differential in campaign resources between what the Democrats lost and the Republicans gained is $200,000. That's why money has become the currency of American politics. As Representative Gene Taylor, a Democrat from Mississippi who voted against the China bill, asked in the New York Times, "Have you ever seen big money lose?"
The China vote was determined by money, not merit. Proponents argued that unregulated free trade with China would help bind the U.S. and China together in the realm of economics and politics. The lure of exports and financial investment may temper some aspects of Chinese policy, but don't expect Chinese leaders to simply give up on their own "great power" ambitions. The Clintonians may believe the Eisenhower-era hokum that what's good for corporate America is good for America, but the Chinese leaders have interests of their own. Trade with the United States is not going to inspire China to let Tibet go.
Clinton and his Republican allies also argued that the bill agreement will open China to American markets. And that's really hokum. The American trade deficit with China is already larger than it is with any other trading partner. We import more than we sell for the simple reason that the Chinese don't make enough money to buy American products.
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