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Michaud: Congress and Next Administration will Decide Trade Agenda (4/10/08)
WASHINGTON, DC - Today, Congressman Mike
Michaud, co-founder of the House Trade Working Group, issued the
following statement on today's expected House action on the Colombia
Free Trade Agreement.
"The Administration took the unprecedented step of sending up the
Colombia FTA without the cooperation of congressional leadership. I am
pleased that Speaker Pelosi has responded by exercising congressional
authority over our nation's trade policy by stripping fast track
consideration from this process.
"But simply postponing consideration of the agreement in hopes of passing it at a later date is unacceptable.
"We also shouldn't be trading other measures, such as TAA or SCHIP,
for passage of the Colombia FTA. We cannot allow the lives of unionists
in Colombia and our jobs here at home to be used as bargaining chips
for the Administration's misguided priorities.
"It is my hope that waiving the 90 day consideration requirement
will effectively kill the Colombia FTA this year and force meaningful
changes in the way our country approaches trade agreement
negotiations. It is my hope that the next Administration would
renegotiate this badly flawed trade deal."
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Statement of Congressman Mike Michaud On the Bush Administration Submitting the Colombia FTA to Congress (4/7/08)
"The Colombia FTA is dead on arrival. Speaker Pelosi has publicly
indicated Congress can't take up an agreement with Colombia until the
horrific violence and labor rights record are addressed. Despite the
warnings, President Bush is forcing a vote and turning a blind eye
toward the egregious human rights violations in Colombia.
"If the Bush Administration really believes this agreement is vital
to national security interests, it would not send it to a certain
defeat. They would work with Democrats to stop labor leader
assassinations and address forced displacement and murder of
Afro-Colombians. Yet again, the Administration is pushing an agenda
under the guise of national security in order to promote its own
interests.
"Approving the FTA in a country engaged in a five decade conflict
will perpetuate the violent intersections of commerce and conflict.
Colombia's record of human rights is dismal. Attacks on civil society,
union leaders, Afro-Colombians and indigenous people continue with
impunity. The FTA will deepen the economic disparity, which is a root
cause of the conflict, and diminish human rights.
"The House Trade Working Group will continue to do all it can to ensure this agreement is soundly defeated."
Congressman Michaud is co-chair of the House Trade Working
Group, a bipartisan group of Members of Congress dedicated to fighting
for fair trade agreements.
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House Trade Working Group Members React to President's Submission of Colombia FTA (4/7/08)
WASHINGTON, DC - Members of the House Trade
Working Group today released the following statements in response to
President Bush's submission of the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement
(FTA) to Congress.
Rep. Mike Michaud (D-ME), co-founder, House Trade Working Group:
The
Colombia FTA is dead on arrival. Speaker Pelosi has publicly indicated
Congress can't take up an agreement with Colombia until the horrific
violence and labor rights record are addressed. Despite the warnings,
President Bush is forcing a vote and turning a blind eye toward the
egregious human rights violations in Colombia. If the Bush
Administration really believes this agreement is vital to national
security interests, it would not send it to a certain defeat. They
would work with Democrats to stop labor leader assassinations and
address forced displacement and murder of Afro-Colombians. Yet again,
the Administration is pushing an agenda under the guise of national
security in order to promote its own interests
Rep. Phil Hare (D-IL), former union member and clothing factory worker:
I
am deeply disappointed by President Bush's unprecedented decision to
unilaterally submit the Colombia FTA. Rewarding a country that
tolerates the systematic assassination of union organizers would
undermine our reputation as a staunch defender of human rights. The
Colombia FTA would also wreak havoc on our economy which has already
experienced three consecutive months of job loss. The President has
indicated he is willing to swap an overhaul of the broken Trade
Adjustment Assistance (TAA) program for passage of the Colombia FTA. We
should not be fooled. First of all, this same President threatened to
veto House-passed TAA legislation last year. Secondly, we cannot allow
the lives of union organizers to be used as bargaining chips for the
Administration's misguided priorities. I urge Democratic leaders to use
all the tools in their arsenal to kill this agreement.
Rep. Betty Sutton (D-OH):
I strongly oppose the
U.S.-Colombia FTA and will fight this harmful deal. Not only is it a
continuation of bad trade policy, but it ignores the gruesome human
rights and labor rights violations which have plagued Colombia. Today,
Colombia remains the most dangerous country in the world for union and
labor organizers, who are simply fighting to improve the lives of
working families and communities in the country. We should not even be
considering a trade agreement with Colombia until this horrific
violence ends and those responsible for the murder of thousands are
brought to justice. Aside from the unspeakable violence that rages on
in Colombia, the fact remains that this deal is just another
reincarnation of the same broken trade policies. The communities in
Ohio that I represent are full of hardworking people with the sole
expectation that their government will work with them, not against
them. Our trade policies have a direct impact on American workers, and
unfortunately, they have not treated American workers, businesses and
communities kindly or fairly. By this action, the Bush Administration
continues to show how out of touch they are with the realities facing
working families and communities across this country. I will fight
against the U.S.-Colombia FTA and for a trade model that will finally
work for our people rather than against them.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur (D-OH):
It is unconscionable
that the President wants to force a trade agreement with a country rife
with corruption, violence, discrimination, and civil war.
Rep. Dale E. Kildee (D-MI):
I stand with
American labor leaders in urging Speaker Pelosi to use every tool at
her disposal to stop the Colombia FTA. It is absurd to even think of
bringing to the floor for a vote a trade deal with a nation like
Colombia that has an abysmal human rights track record. I believe both
of the Democratic presidential candidates exemplify the stance of the
Democratic Party on the state of human rights in Colombia.
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