Bush says US should not walk away from NAFTA

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DEB RIECHMANN | April 22, 2008 06:29 PM EST | AP

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President Bush, accompanied by Mexican President Felipe Calderon, left, and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, gestures during their joint News conference, Tuesday, April 22, 2028, at the North American leaders summit in New Orleans. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Tom Hanson)

NEW ORLEANS — President Bush chastised lawmakers on Tuesday for letting international trade deals falter in Congress and criticized Democratic presidential contenders for wanting to scrap or amend the vast North American free-trade zone.

At the close of a two-day summit, Bush, along with Mexican President Felipe Calderon and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, stood solidly behind the North American Free Trade Agreement. Under NAFTA, trade between the U.S., Canada and Mexico has swelled from roughly $290 billion in 1994 to an estimated $1 trillion by the end of this year.

"Now is not the time to renegotiate NAFTA or walk away from NAFTA," Bush said. "Now is the time to make it work better for all our people. And now is the time to reduce trade barriers worldwide."

The summit was overshadowed by Tuesday's Pennsylvania Democratic presidential primary race between Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama, who have threatened to pull the U.S. out of NAFTA or renegotiate it to push for more protections for workers and the environment.

With fears about job security already being fanned by downturns in the economy, trade has become a key issue of the presidential election. Bush argued that NAFTA has fostered prosperity in all three countries and that Clinton and Obama are wrongly using anti-trade messages to lure working class voters. Free-trade opponents say expanded international trade helps businesses, but threatens U.S. jobs and keeps wages from growing.

Bush warned that without NAFTA, migratory pressure from Mexico would be worse.

"If you do away with NAFTA, there's going to be a lot of Mexicans, more Mexicans out of work," Bush said. "It will make it harder on the border.

"So people who say, `Let's get rid of NAFTA' because of a throwaway political line, must understand this has been good for America and it's also been good for Mexico and Canada."

Bush said he was less worried about the future of NAFTA than the pending trade deals he wants Congress to ratify with South Korea, Panama and Colombia. Bush singled out House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., saying if she doesn't schedule a vote on Colombia she will have to take responsibility for killing the deal.

Not only will Pelosi have turned her back on a U.S. ally, Bush said, she will fuel anti-U.S. sentiment in Latin America and embolden leftist leaders like Venezuela's Hugo Chavez.

"She's going to have to explain why the voices of false populism have been strengthened, why anti-Americanism could flourish," the president said, "when America turns its back on a strong leader" like Colombian President Alvaro Uribe.

In Washington, Pelosi accused Bush of taking a partisan potshot. She said the United States must address its own economic weaknesses before signing any more trade pacts abroad.

"Democrats stand ready to work with the president to bring the Colombia Free Trade Agreement to a vote in the House, but the timing has to be that of America's working families, not the timing of the president," she said in response.

Asked about the state of the U.S. economy, Bush said: "We're not in a recession. We are in a slowdown."

"I'm obviously concerned for our consumers," the president said. He was asked whether the rising cost of gasoline will erode the potential positive impact of the $168 billion economic stimulus package passed by Congress, but he did not answer specifically.

"No question that rising gasoline prices are like a tax on our working people," Bush said.

Bush said he chose to host his final North American summit in New Orleans to showcase the city's rebirth from the devastating effects of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Calderon, who will host the next summit in Mexico, said NAFTA should be strengthened, not canceled. He implored Congress to ratify the Colombian trade pact.

"It's extremely important, I think, to bear in mind that when you provide more opportunities for trade in the Latin American region, there will be many more opportunities for prosperity," said Calderon, who also warned of heightened migratory pressure from Mexico if NAFTA was dissolved. "It needs to be made very clear that the prosperity of Latin America, particularly that of Mexico, is a crucial factor for the prosperity of the people of North America."

Harper said he was confident that Bush's successor would come to understand the importance of NAFTA and the commercial relationships in North America.

"I think that a rejection of or turning our backs to such as ally as Colombia could create log-term problems for our countries in South America," Harper said.

Besides trade, the three leaders talked about food and product safety standards, harmonizing auto production standards, emergency response, combatting trade of counterfeit and pirated goods, fighting organized crime, low-carbon energy, intellectual property rights, global warming and reducing bottlenecks and congestion at border crossings, such as Detroit-Windsor and San Diego-Tijuana.

On his way back to Washington, Bush stopped in Baton Rouge to raise money for the U.S. Senate bid of Louisiana treasurer John Kennedy, who is trying to unseat the Democratic incumbent, Sen. Mary Landrieu of New Orleans. The event raised $800,000 _ $500,000 for Kennedy's campaign and $300,000 for the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

___

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- Mike169 See Profile I'm a Fan of Mike169

We can't even walk away from Bush. This country is a mess!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:42 PM on 04/23/2008
- outnow See Profile I'm a Fan of outnow

Learn Spanish if you haven't already; then learn Chinese. Then learn to have your children work for a dollar per hour. Then get ready for global warming. You can migrate north to take over the territory of the polar bears. Globalization is a catastrophic mess that will take out the entire human race. Free trade is just another facet of the demise of our nation. Bush wants the Chinese to unload their cargo in Mexico and to have Mexican truckers drive the cheap goods to the United States in Mexican trucks. It is for the benefit of the multinational corporations that control America, Mexico and Canada. The Bush meetings are in secret. That sucking sound you hear is your children's future being sold on the international auction block. Thank Bill Clinton and Hillary, too.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 AM on 04/23/2008
- Podewumun See Profile I'm a Fan of Podewumun

That little fella who was "all ears" was right on the money about NAFTA, wasn't he?

And still the idiots in Pennsylvania voted for Hillary, and against their own best interests. Sad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 PM on 04/23/2008
- LivingStardust See Profile I'm a Fan of LivingStardust

Yeah they should George, because we are no longer interested in supporting your Ponzi scheme with the Mexicans. NAFTA needs to be as dead as your legacy (both as a President and a general human being). America NEEDS its manufacturing base back to survive. I realize you don't give a s**t about America though, so I expect to to keep acting like the same warmongering fascist tool as you have for the last 8 years.

I look forward to the day you are placed under arrest or your violence karma catches up with you.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:04 AM on 04/23/2008
- VivaZapata See Profile I'm a Fan of VivaZapata

The US should not run away from NAFTA; it should run away. Whatever Bush says, do the opposite. He's the perfect negative guidepost.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:54 AM on 04/23/2008
- vandegrasse See Profile I'm a Fan of vandegrasse

You're right, Bushie. It should run screaming away from that dreadful thing that Clinton pushed down our throats.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:10 AM on 04/23/2008
- dadw5boys See Profile I'm a Fan of dadw5boys

in 2005 the bush budget offered more tax incentives for American Businesses to move offshore.

THANKS BUSH AND TELL DADDY BUSH TANKS TOO.

REAL UNEMPLOYMENT RATE ABOUT 15% IS THE USA SO WATCH OUT PEOPLE.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 04/23/2008
- TuffPosh See Profile I'm a Fan of TuffPosh

Oddly enough, this report completely fails to point out that the meeting was of the SPP, a possible precursor to a North American Union. As for Bush's worries, he needn't be concerned since none of the top three candidates are going to do anything about NAFTA.

In fact, Barack Obama recently came out in support of Bush's SPP:

http://lonewacko.com/blog/archives/007494.html

Not only that, but Obama spoke in code when indicating his support of Bush's plan.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 04/23/2008
- drkazmd65 See Profile I'm a Fan of drkazmd65

One of the seldom talked about consequences to Mexico (or at least Mexican farmers) of NAFTA was how NAFTA's removal of tariffs has devestated the ability of Mexican farmers to compete against US corporate Ag's volume and costs.

Here's one report from 2002.
http://www.organicconsumers.org/chiapas/112602_chiapas.cfm

One of the drivers of poor Mexicans across our boarders looking for better employment has been the collapse of the small farmer's potential to make a living since NAFTA. If you farm in Mexico, at least on non-specialty crops, you can't sell product for what the Americans can, so you change or starve.

For many - the change has been leave to find work in America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:31 PM on 04/22/2008
- peaceandfreedom See Profile I'm a Fan of peaceandfreedom

Dr. good points all. I have caught hell from the politically correct squad on why allowing illegals to work here is a highly immoral and inhumane way to address this larger problem. Not only is what is happening in Mexico with the destruction of the family farm eerily similar to what is going on here, but the redistribution of the land--a problem going back to Villa and Zapata leading the Revolution for fair land practices--shares many points with the current subprime foreclosure crisis that hit over 2 million Americans last year. Fascism, no matter where or when is really a form of land feudalism that turns citizens into serfs. The only answers are, Impeach Bush, end NAFTA, force Mexico to deal with its own people and problems while we take care of business here!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 04/23/2008
- dadw5boys See Profile I'm a Fan of dadw5boys

It opens the door for large U.S. Farmers to lease their land and farm it.

Mexicans still comming to the U.S. because American Businesses in Mexico bring in workers from Panama, Hondoras, and others countries for less then Mexicans will work for.
All the time saying "MEXICANS WILL NOT DO THIS WORK". SOUND FAMILIAR??????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 AM on 04/23/2008
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