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USW Urges Congress to Oppose All Three Free Trade Agreements - Wednesday, June 22, 2011


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For Immediate Release:  June 21, 2011
Contact:   Gary Hubbard, 202-256-8125; >ghubbard@usw.org
Wayne Ranick, 412-562-2442; wranick@usw.org

 

USW Urges Congress to Oppose All Three Free Trade Agreements

Cites weak American economic recovery, wrong policy direction for workers

 

Washington, D.C.  -- The United Steelworkers (USW) today released a letter sent to every member of Congress urging they vigorously oppose the free trade agreements with South Korea, Panama and Colombia because economic facts show the deals will “undermine our economic recovery, further decimate American manufacturing and jobs, and deepen the economic insecurity.”

 

USW President Leo W. Gerard wrote, “International trade and the consequences of accelerated globalization are matters of long-standing and deep concern to the USW, as an overwhelming portion of our members work in import-sensitive manufacturing sectors and all too often have lost their jobs due to bad trade deals and unfair and predatory trade practices.”

 

The detailed five-page letter signed by Gerard outlined the flaws for American workers in each of the proposed three FTAs. He said: “Promises made by administrations past and present touting the benefits of free trade have simply not materialized for America’s manufacturing workers.”

 

He declared the nation’s massive trade deficit is every bit as dangerous as the federal budget deficit, “fueled by trade deals that grease the path for greater and greater outsourcing and offshoring of jobs and capacity.”

 

Gerard cited trade deals during the past decade have caused the U.S. to lose six million manufacturing jobs and 55,000 plants. He explained multinational companies easily setup operations overseas and export back to the U.S. market. New Commerce Department data shows American multinational companies cut their U.S. work forces by 2.9 million during the past decade, while increasing employment overseas by 2.4 million, he said.

 

“Trade deals force working Americans to assume all the risk and encourage big multinationals to reap all the rewards,” the USW president wrote.

 

The union’s letter to Congress itemized key flaws based on analysis of each proposed FTA.  Final provisions in the U.S. – Korea trade agreement were singled out that will allow for an imported vehicle to be eligible for duty-free treatment with only 35 percent of the content by value. The USW says a Korean vehicle could have almost two-thirds of its content by value coming from another country like China, while giving discretion on three different methods to calculate content.

 

The U.S. – Korea FTA “will accelerate the offshoring and outsourcing of auto parts production, jeopardizing not only the jobs of the 350,000 Steelworkers that make products that can be used in the auto supply chain, but those of other workers across the country.”

 

Criticizing the Colombia FTA, the USW said it “puts in jeopardy America’s moral leadership by sacrificing the lives and livelihoods, the worker and human rights of the Colombian people at the altar of free trade.” A 2011 world survey of anti-union violence by the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) based in Brussels was cited by the USW for reporting Colombia continues “to maintain the lead in a grim record of murder and repression of workers involved in trade union activities.”

 

Gerard wrote, “Moreover the Colombian government continues to fail miserably at effectively prosecuting those responsible for anti-union violence.”  He said such impunity for anti-union killings and violence should not reward Colombia with a trade agreement, adding that the ‘Action Plan’ announced between the two countries gives no reason to believe these changes will have any real positive impact on workers.

 

The USW congressional letter transmitted June 20 is at:  USW Urges Congress to Oppose All Three Free Trade Agreements/.


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