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Last post 12 years ago by pdxstogieman. 13 replies replies.
Obama is a Republican in sheeps clothing
pdxstogieman Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 10-04-2007
Posts: 5,219
Interesting, yet disgusting story that highlights how Obama is facilitating the Republican foreign trade agenda (free reign to corporations to offshore more jobs) with these latest deals and alienating himself further from the mainstream of the Democratic party. And for those of you who think the Tea Party hasn't been co-opted by the Republicans, this story sheds some light on how those "Tea partiers in congress, who won swing states campaigning against job offshoring and protecting U.S. sovereignty supported the Obama trade agenda more so than the GOP under Bush".

The corporatist lobbyists and self interests own the U.S. Government and act quickly to co-opt movements that promote re-establishing government that looks to protect the interests of U.S. citizens first instead of the interests global corporations in pushing the populaces of all industrialized nations back to 3rd world wages, living standards, and subjugation.

Obama's Wheel and Deal
Todd Tucker and Lori M. Wallach
October 31, 2011

The administration's recent trade agreement with Korea, Colombia, and Panama is expected to destroy more than 200,000 American jobs.

As he gears up for a difficult re-election campaign, President Obama risks losing key swing states that he won in 2008 because of a recent flip-flop on trade commitments. Back on the campaign trail, Obama had committed to a new approach to trade deals that would protect the environment, boost manufacturing, and protect food safety.

That was then; this is now. On October 12, he shoved through three NAFTA-style trade deals with Colombia, Korea, and Panama that are officially projected to increase the U.S. trade deficit and cost tens of thousands of American jobs. These deals were negotiated and signed by George W. Bush in 2007, but had not been formally approved by Congress. While Wall Street and the Chamber of Commerce applauded the deals, Obama’s base and most congressional Democrats opposed them; the GOP provided almost all of the votes for passage.

Even the government’s own study, produced by the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC), showed that these pacts would increase U.S. imports by more than exports. In contrast, when the ITC employed the same optimistic methodologies for its studies of NAFTA, it projected improved trade balances.

The Obama administration, along with many in Congress and corporations, chose to present only the raw export numbers, which became the basis for the oft-repeated line that the deals would “support” over 70,000 jobs. Excluded was how many jobs would be destroyed by new imports. A full accounting by the Economic Policy Institute projected net job losses of over 214,000. By excluding the import projections, they used this half-story to spin these deals as a source of job creation.

But the actual “trade” impact is only the beginning of the story. Since NAFTA, trade agreements have grown to encompass thousands of pages of text, and only a minority of the provisions deal with tariffs—trade policy’s historic remit. Today’s so-called “trade” deals set constraints on how governments can regulate inside their own borders. For instance, the recent pacts ban "Buy America" policies that ensure tax dollars are used to purchase American-made goods and allow corporations to challenge environmental policies for cash compensation. They include such severe limits on financial regulation that the financial services industry celebrated the Korea deal in particular as “the best financial services chapter negotiated in a free trade agreement to date,” according to Citigroup.

Instead of probing such matters, most mainstream press reports over the entire four-plus year debate simply parroted corporate and Obama-administration talking points.

The missed political storyline, too, was equally astounding. Two-thirds of Democratic House members opposed Obama on the Korea pact and 82 percent who opposed him on the Colombia pact. It's his biggest split with House Democrats thus far. The number who voted against the deal is even greater than the percentage of House Dems who opposed the Patriot Act (63 percent) or the war-funding bills (56 percent). And of course, Obama got nothing in return for the capitulation: Republicans advanced the trade pacts while blocking his second stimulus package. So much for negotiation.

It took Bill Clinton nearly eight years of NAFTA job losses, sellouts, and scandals to have about two-thirds of the House Democrats vote against China’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2000. Obama managed to meet and beat that record with his first trade votes. The percentage of Democratic House votes against these deals even surpassed Democrats’ average level of opposition to Republican presidents’ trade initiatives.

These trade deals run exactly counter to Democrats’ efforts to channel the anger of the Occupy Wall Street movement, and the contradiction was noticed. Demonstrators nearly shut down the Democratic-run Senate Finance Committee hearing on the trade pacts, railing against Obama’s flip-flop. Protestors were out in front of congressional offices in Portland, Manhattan, Long Island, Pasadena, Van Nuys, downtown Los Angeles, and Pittsburgh demanding "no" votes on these deals.

In other words, the virulently anti-Obama Tea Party—which won in swing states by campaigning against job offshoring and for protecting U.S. sovereignty—was even more supportive of the president's trade agenda than the GOP was under Bush. How these deals played out in the GOP was also news. Historically, 25 percent of Republicans have voted against a Democratic president's trade deals; under a Republican president, that number drops to 10 percent. But this time around, only five percent or Republicans opposed Obama on the trade pact. In other words, the virulently anti-Obama Tea Party—which won in swing states by campaigning against job offshoring and for protecting U.S. sovereignty—was even more supportive of the president's trade agenda than the GOP was under Bush. These Republican flip-flops will likely provide fodder for many Democratic challengers in the upcoming congressional elections.

Nonetheless, Obama seems to be playing perfectly into Republicans’ script. In an interview just before the 2010 elections, Mitch McConnell stated that “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.” The senator noted, however, that “if President Obama does a Clintonian backflip, if he’s willing to meet us halfway on some of the biggest issues, it’s not inappropriate for us to do business with him.” One of the top items McConnell mentioned over the following days was the trade deals. The two goals (replacing Democrats and passing controversial trade deals) are in fact connected. Clinton’s advocacy of NAFTA was a major factor in Democrats’ loss of Congress in 1994.

These trade votes could have played out very differently. After the 2008 election, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Rep. Mike Michaud (D-Maine) introduced legislation that outlined a pro-environment, pro-labor, pro-consumer-safety model for trade policy. The 2009 Trade Reform Accountability Development and Employment Act was based on Obama’s campaign commitments and garnered the support of the majority of House Democrats and committee chairs. If the president had renegotiated the trade deals with that new model in mind, he could have sealed a legacy of creating a new consensus on trade policy.

Instead, the total absence of honest public debate shields the continuation of trade policies that do not serve most Americans and creates a public understanding that our current policies are the only way to trade. This in turn builds the public opposition to trade that polling now shows [PDF] is a majority view among Democrats, Independents and GOP alike.

HockeyDad Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,169
It is enough to make you think that maybe we globalists control everything.
pdxstogieman Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 10-04-2007
Posts: 5,219
HockeyDad wrote:
It is enough to make you think that maybe we globalists control everything.


Don't confuse being a servant of the globalists with being a globalist. Are you the Assistant Regional Manager or the Assistant to the Regional Manager?
HockeyDad Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,169
I never confuse anything. DOn't you have some toiling to do?
MikeyRavioli Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 10-10-2005
Posts: 2,105
And thats why arguing Dem vs Rep is completely senseless

Its tme for more parties.
pdxstogieman Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 10-04-2007
Posts: 5,219
HockeyDad wrote:
I never confuse anything. DOn't you have some toiling to do?


I'm multi-tasking.
pdxstogieman Offline
#7 Posted:
Joined: 10-04-2007
Posts: 5,219
MikeyRavioli wrote:
And thats why arguing Dem vs Rep is completely senseless

Its tme for more parties.


Well, it wasn't completely senseless in the past but has become increasingly so, due to ever more pervasive influence of lobbyists and special interests and thanks to the "Corporations are people" ruling of the Supreme court opening the floodgates to further corporate purchasing of political influence.

I don't think more parties alone fixes that. Reform on campaign contribution laws, term limits, and perhaps some pitchforks and torches are needed.

Brewha Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 01-25-2010
Posts: 12,201
More parties sounds vague – Are we talking keggers?

Stogieman, I agree with campaign reform and the like, but try to remember that what you write has to travel a mind numbing distance and will be stretched and red shifted by the time it reaches Planet HockyDad. Perhaps you should regroup and use prime numbers . . .
HockeyDad Offline
#9 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,169
Or instead of writing about it you could get up off the couch and do something about it.

Pitchfork & torch set: $25
borndead1 Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 11-07-2006
Posts: 5,216
MikeyRavioli wrote:
And thats why arguing Dem vs Rep is completely senseless

Its tme for more parties.


There are plenty of other parties. Ever wonder why their candidates aren't allowed in any debates? Think
ZRX1200 Offline
#11 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,635
Because they don't adhere to one party rule....
pdxstogieman Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 10-04-2007
Posts: 5,219
ZRX1200 wrote:
Because they don't adhere to one party rule....


Wash them with tri-sodium phosphate to remove their sheen to improve the adherence to one party rule.
pdxstogieman Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 10-04-2007
Posts: 5,219
HockeyDad wrote:
Or instead of writing about it you could get up off the couch and do something about it.

Pitchfork & torch set: $25


Airing of grievances comes first, then feats of strength.
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