http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-linda ... 34741.html

Nov 22, 2006

Over the past decade, our trade policy has run amok.

We have learned the hard way from NAFTA - and the deals like CAFTA that have spawned from it - that our skepticism of the free trade model is well-founded.

Real wages for American families are down. Our trade deficit is in the tens of billions of dollars.

Our manufacturing base is falling apart.
Now, we are at an important turning point. The recent mid-term elections demonstrated that the American people are unhappy with the course of the U.S. economy. They are tired of seeing these free trade deals put American workers into an impossible competition with labor markets abroad that are cheap due to a lack of environmental and worker protections.

Ignoring the voice of the American people, the Bush Administration signed a free trade deal with Colombia on Wednesday. This agreement is another expansion of the bad NAFTA model that will ultimately harm working families in the U.S. and in Colombia. The U.S. stands to lose even more manufacturing jobs to cheap labor abroad.

In Colombia, it could be even worse. The Colombia Free Trade Agreement (FTA) will gut that country's legitimate agricultural industry, which will likely lead to higher production of drug crops by farmers who can't afford to compete with subsidized American produce. Also, Colombia is one of the most dangerous countries in the world for worker advocates, with regular assaults and assassinations against labor leaders.

Here's the good news. First, the special "fast track" authority that allowed these poorly conceived trade deals to be negotiated is about to end.

There is also a committed and talented group of bipartisan Members of Congress working to bring about a new trade policy for the United States. We understand the basic economic rule that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Real economic growth comes from increased innovation, efficiency, and improved productivity - not forced labor, currency manipulation, or artificially low wages.

Finally, U.S. and Colombian legislators have the power to block the passage of the FTA. The deal must have final legislative approval in both countries to be implemented.

I'm traveling next week to Colombia to talk with local leaders about the potential consequences of the proposed FTA. I'll be meeting with members of the Colombian legislature, as well as civil society leaders and students. Together, we will show that President Bush and Colombian President Alvaro Uribe underestimated their opposition when they signed this bad trade deal.

This trip will be about forging a new direction in U.S. trade policy. The NAFTA model is simply failing our country. We can no longer afford to be asleep at the wheel of trade policy. We must demand equal standards, stop exporting jobs, and start exporting more goods and services.