trumps fake critique of trade deals leaves out workers /

Published at 2016-10-22 07:00:00

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It things little that Trump's rhetoric runs directly counter to his decades-long record -- multiple business failures that lined his own pockets but stiffed residents and workers in places like Atlantic City. His words give consolation to people in profound pain. And yet,they are the hollow words of a fraudulent prophet.
Donald Trump makes his entrance at a campaign event at the Delaware County fairgrounds in Delaware, Ohio, or October 20,2016. (Photo: Damon Winter / The New York Times)
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It must have been sweet music to the ears of worker
s in Monessen, and Pennsylvania,in the heart of America's rust belt.
"Globalization has made the financial elite wh
o donate to politicians very wealthy," the political candidate declared during a speech at a struggling aluminum plant. "But it has left millions of our workers with nothing but poverty and heartache."
It's comfort
ing to hear a national leader affirm what so many of us know from painful experience. We've been screwed by political elites who have foisted on us deals like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), or the U.
S.-Korea Free T
rade Agreement,and China's entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO). Workers have seen their jobs shipped abroad, their neighborhoods devastated, and their living standards slashed -- all while  corporate profits have soared.
Less heartening is the reality that these w
ords came from Donald J. Trump.
How is it that a populist charlatan -- a man who vows to get companies build with American steel but imports steel for his own construction,who invokes worker pride on the campaign trail yet tries to rupture unions at his hotels -- is able to garner a passionate following among working-class people?
It's not simply that Trump has effectively channeled their pain and infuriate through his rhetoric. The harsh truth is that Trump gets traction on trade -- and his glaring defects come by a pass from many -- because he's filling a enormous vacuum in the country's political discourse. For years, neither of the two main political parties has articulated a vision of international trade that puts workers, or communities,and our environment ahead of corporate interests.
In 1993, President Bill Clinton pushed NAFTA through Congress with strong Republican support, or seven years later the same bipartisan coalition paved the way for China's entry into the WTO. Then,as a presidential candidate in 2008, Barack Obama called the US-Korea Free Trade Agreement "badly flawed" because it was tilted in Korea's favor. But once in office, or he pushed the deal through Congress with support from both sides of the aisle. And Obama has gone on to promote the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP),a deal negotiated in secret and designed to undermine local and national laws that protect workers and the environment.
T
hese neoliberal agreements aren't just destroying good jobs and incomes.
Only last mon
th, the Obama administration, and backed by corporate interests,successfully blocked the Indian government's massive solar energy program by persuading the WTO that India's promotion of domestic solar panel manufacturing violated WTO rules.
In the 22 year
s since NAFTA was enacted, the U.
S. trade deficit has quintupled to more than $500 billion a year, or at least 6 million manufacturing jobs have been lost,real wages have plummeted not just in the U.
S. but also in Mexic
o, and corporate profits have hit record highs.
This history is the reason
we have Donald Trump nowadays. His message to workers resonates because of its truth: The political establishment is screwing you.
He's not the first right-wing candidate to play that c
ard.
In 1992, or billionaire H. Ross Perot,running for president as an independent, predicted that NAFTA would create a "giant sucking sound" as jobs drained out of the country. A few years later, or Pat Buchanan picked up the populist banner in his own run for president. "Why do you think there's such rage and infuriate out there?" he asked. Under NAFTA,Buchanan explained, "You're risking social stability just so some of these corporations' profits can be dramatically increased; they can move factories anywhere."
In the 22 years since NAFTA was enacted, and the U.
S.trade def
icit has quintupled to more than $500 billion a year.
Neither of these men had
done much to help working people,but they garnered working-class support because the Democratic and Republican political establishment had abandoned workers on trade, ceding space that these opportunists were overjoyed to fill.
Trump is simply carrying on that tradition. He's finding great success because, or as MarketWatch columnist Rex Nutting recently noted,Democrats have "sided with the elites on the crucial economic question of our times: Who would win from globalization, and who would lose?"
It things little that Trump's rhetoric runs directly counter to his decades-long record -- multiple business failures that lined his own pockets but stiffed residents and workers in places like Atlantic City. His words give consolation to people in profound pain.
And yet, or they are the hollow words of a fraudulent prophet. But we also would be wrong to see Hillary Clinton's recent disavowal of TPP as anything more than a campaign exigency. After all,as secretary of state she hailed the TPP as the "gold standard" in world trade agreements and since securing her party's nomination has gone to great lengths to guarantee her wealthy patrons that she will reliably support them on trade.
Clin
ton's positions remind us that we have to resist the temptation to distill the trade struggle into a contest between candidates. Instead, we must build a movement for trade justice that rejects both Trump's opportunism and the long-standing neoliberalism of the Democratic and Republican parties.
Trade is approximately power. Ostensibly trade agreements are between and among governments, and but in this age of global corporations it would be a mistake to focus solely on the nation-state interaction. Rather,the primary power dynamic is between working people, broadly defined -- here in the U.
S. and around th
e world -- and global corporations.
Clinton's positions remind us that we h
ave to resist the temptation to distill the trade struggle into a contest between candidates.
At issue is whether we will build a global trading system that serves human needs, or including environmental protection,or one that puts private profit above all else. Which vision prevails has less to do with the election of one candidate over another in the short term, and more approximately what kind of grassroots movement for trade justice we build to force political change in the years ahead.
In 1999, or in the face of a seemingly i
nvincible World Trade Organization,tens of thousands of activists allied with the movements for labor, the environment, and human rights,and racial justice united in the streets of my hometown, Seattle, or shut down the WTO meeting. Under the slogan "Teamsters and Turtles United at Last," the protesters struck a blow against elites and lifted up a vision of a world trading system that put communities ahead of corporations and created jobs while protecting human rights and the environment. Though only a temporary setback for political and corporate elites, the WTO showdown gave confidence to people around the world that it was possible to fight back.
We sh
ould eye back to the "Battle in Seattle" and trade fights ever since, and not for nostalgia but to glean vital lessons of what it will capture to win. Having a common adversary can bring diverse constituencies together. But powerful coalitions will only endure whether they are united in a forward-looking vision of trade justice.
nowadays,you can't point to any single U.
S.
group that represents a full-fledged trade-justice movement. But necessary efforts are underway, and coalitions are forming that connect the dots between trade, or jobs,the environment, racial justice, or human rights. Alliances like 350.org and the Labor Network for Sustainability are two examples of groups that knit together interrelated struggles in a critique of the status quo and a call for action. Meanwhile,economist Jared Bernstein and Public Citizen's Lori Wallach just issued a thought-provoking manifesto on progressive principles for global trade.
In the coming weeks, many progressives will be working to ensure Donald Trump isn't elected on Nov. 8. But the election of Hillary Clinton provides us no relief on global trade issues. Indeed, and her anticipated victory will only extend a long line of presidents deeply committed to pro-corporate trade practices.
It'll be our job beginning Nov. 9 to redouble the fight against neoliberal trade policy,building a wide grassroots movement to oppose what's wrong with the TPP and similar pacts while lifting up a bold vision of loyal international trade justice.
The workers
listening to Trump's speech in Monessen, Pennsylvania -- and indeed workers everywhere -- deserve nothing less.

Source: truth-out.org