Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Fair Trade
Costa Rica on Sunday will become the first country where citizens have the opportunity to vote for or against a trade agreement. Despite being heavily outspent by the moneyed interests, despite opposition from the Costa Rican government and the U.S. ambassador, despite an extremely hostile media, the latest polls show momentum building for the opposition to the Central American Free Trade Agreement. Incredibly, just the other day, in a nation of only 4 million people, more than 100,000 marched in opposition to the treaty -- a sign of the deep grassroots opposition there to CAFTA.
Free trade is very good for the large multinational corporations who can throw American workers out on the street, move abroad to China and other low-wage countries, hire people there for pennies an hour, and bring their products back into this country. For those people, for the CEOs of large corporations, unfettered free trade has been a very good thing, but for the middle-class and working families of this country, for working families and poor people in Mexico and in other low-wage countries, unfettered free trade has been an unmitigated disaster.
Increasingly, trade policy is not a partisan issue. The vast majority of Republicans now have serious concerns about our current trade policies because they see those trade policies as being harmful to the middle class and working families of this country, according to a new poll. "By a nearly two-to-one margin, Republican voters believe free trade is bad for the U.S. economy, a shift in opinion that mirrors Democratic views and suggests trade deals could face high hurdles under a new president. The sign of broadening resistance to globalization came in a new Wall Street Journal-NBC News Poll that showed a fraying of Republican Party orthodoxy on the economy," The Wall Street Journal reported in a page-one news story on Thursday.
Meanwhile, the editorial page of The Wall Street Journal, the pundits for the plutocrats, twice this week weighed in on what it thinks is good for the people of Costa Rica. They also had a thing or two to say about me.
My trip to Costa Rica last month was not about telling the people there how to vote. That's their business, not mine. The trip that Rep. Mike Michaud and I made was to help counter the lies being spread in Costa Rica that suggested that if the people there, exercising their democratic rights, voted "no" on Cafta, the U.S. government would punish them by excluding them from the Caribbean Basin Initiative as well as other punitive actions.
While I strongly disagree with the Journal editorial page's right-wing ideology, I'll give them points for persistence. Year after year, despite all of the evidence, the Journal has continued to be a cheerleader for the unfettered free-trade policies that, while benefiting multinational corporations, have caused so much economic pain for working families here in the U.S. and our trading partners abroad.
There may be disagreement on the merits of unfettered free trade, but there should be no disagreement that when the people in a free, democratic and independent country like Costa Rica vote their conscience they should not be punished by the world's superpower. That is not what democracy is about.
A Journal columnist, Mary Anastasia O'Grady, wrote last Monday about how wonderful passage of the trade agreement will be for the people of Costa Rica. The Journal said the exact same thing to the people of Mexico during the 1993 debate over the North American Free Trade Agreement.
What happened with the passage of Nafta? In Mexico, the agricultural sector has been decimated by cheap exports from American agribusiness. Poverty has increased, the middle class has declined and people are literally dying in the desert trying to flee Mexico for the U.S. Working families in Mexico suffer, the rich have gotten richer and we now have the obscenity of the wealthiest person in the world, Mexican Carlos Slim Helu, coming from a country in which millions of families struggle to feed their children. This may be the kind of economic development championed by you, but not by me. We can have trade policies that can do better, that must do better.
It's not only Mexico and other developing countries that have been hurt by these unfettered pro-corporate free-trade agreements. It's also the working families in the U.S. who are now engaged in a horrendous "race to the bottom."
Despite an explosion of technology and a huge increase in worker productivity, poverty in America is increasing, the middle class is shrinking, and the gap between the rich and the poor is growing wider. In the past six years, millions of good-paying jobs in the U.S. have been lost as companies shut down here and move to China and other low-wage countries.
During that same period, median household income for working-age families has declined by about $2,500, 8.6 million Americans have lost their health insurance, three million have lost their pensions, and millions are working longer hours for lower wages. Meanwhile, the gap between the rich and the poor in the U.S. is now the highest of any industrialized country and greater than at any time since the 1920s.
Nobody I know believes we should place a wall around this country. Trade is a good thing, but what we must begin doing is negotiating fair trade agreements that reflect the interests of working families in America, working families in other countries, and not just large multinational corporations and the CEOs who help write these trade agreements.
Bernie Sanders was elected to the U.S. Senate in 2006 after serving 16 years in the House of Representatives. He is the longest serving independent member of Congress in American history.



17 Comments so far
Show AllKUCINICH/SANDERS
"Free trade is very good for the large multinational corporations who can throw American workers out on the street, move abroad to China and other low-wage countries, hire people there for pennies an hour, and bring their products back into this country."
And thanks to George W. Bush's 'brokeback' dollar these cheap Chinese products cost more and more. How much longer can the former middle class afford to shop at thrift stores? But at least the food that we grow will be cheap enough to fill a rich man's SUV or Hummer. Americans are watching their hungry children sicken and die under a vetoed healthcare bill. When will Satan's Little Helper provide Slave Quarters for his Wage Slaves now that shelter is unaffordable? Perhaps his feeling of smug selfrightiousness will satisfy the urge to civic duty.
God help us! Come yourself, don't send Jesus. After GWB's S-CHIP veto this is no place for a child, not even your own.
Hi Bernie:
Thanks for your article and efforts on behalf of the people of the United States and Costa Rica. And thank you to Common Dreams for carrying an article, on an issue that seems relatively minor, and unknown in the U.S.
I have written extensively, I have a personal connection, on CAFTA and Costa Rica. For those of you interested in learning more, you can visit my blog at
http://www.bananatreehotel.com/costarica
Costa Rica is a unique country on this planet - a treasure that should be preserved. Although the U.S. housing boom, and consequent investment in Costa Rica the past few years (which I write about), caused a tremendous amount of social and environmental damage , Costa Rica has not been completely destroyed. It still has no army, it's environment although damaged can recover, it's social institutions weakend by corruption can be cleaned up, and it's society has not yet been totally "Americanized". In other words, their is hope for Costa Rica, to have a better future.
If CAFTA passes tomorrow, in a fair or unfair election, the future of Costa Rica will be very uncertain - to put it nicely. As Bernie points out, these trade deals benefit the corporations and CEO's, to the detriment of the middle class and poor. The Vote tomorrow will decide the future of Costa Rica.
Once the people have been removed from the land, the jungles destroyed, the animals killed off, Costa Rica ceases to be unique. And will never have another chance.
Perdone me, yo say que yo soy un Gringo, pero, por el futuro del su pais, la gente costaricense, y los animales, y tambien el mundo...Vote "No al TLC"
Gracias,
Ramsay
"KUCINICH/SANDERS"
Just two words and yet how they can fill one with such hope. Imagine that ticket- -better, imagine that presidential administration. It would be a Gestalt shift from despair to promise and progress not only for the US but the world. The palpable sense that an unending dark and oppressive cloud of superpower imperialism and war would be instantly lifted. Then the enormous wealth of the US economy and its international influence in the world would finally and unambiguously be sided with economic and social justice for the US and the world.
"Free trade is very good for the large multinational corporations who can throw American workers out on the street, move abroad to China and other low-wage countries, hire people there for pennies an hour, and bring their products back into this country."
-- Uh, no, Sen. Bernie Sanders. That is NOT free trade. That is the government sanctioned corporate take-over, neo-fascist state that America has become. Free trade means the government stays OUT of trade, by definition.
Ron Paul/Mike Gravel
Dana Garrett, "Then the enormous wealth of the US economy and its international influence in the world would finally and unambiguously be sided with economic and social justice for the US and the world."
-- "the enormous wealth of the US economy"? The last time I checked we were deep in debt. (And we've been in debt to European banks for decades..The Fed)
-- "would finally and unambiguously be sided with economic and social justice for the US and the world"
And I here I coulda sworn we saved Europe's ass in WWII. Maybe we should give Europe back to the Nazis, they love to bitch about us so much. And according to them we never unambiguously sided with social justice for the world. Imagine that!
Oh yeah, I forgot. Many Americans and Europeans have not only turned against us and joined the Jihad but have already rejoined the Nazis. (Just check out the many bigoted comments on so many articles here.)
Mr. Bernie Sanders:
Isn't it about time that the governments of the respective states and the federal government stop subsidizing corporations and use these subsidies to create jobs that are local with middle class wages. With governments interest in long term stability for its people there can be investments in building, educating and maintaining wind, solar and small hydro-power in communities that have been ravaged by destructive global capitalism. Local power production and local food production are vital to a community. Self-reliance in local production necessitates interest in the local environment. Collective participation of local people can transform communities into healthy living environments with unique identities.
At any rate, if one were to pursue the exciting world of local creation, one might find it leads to happier, healthier and richer people.
TANSTAAFM: There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Market. It's like a perpetual motion machine, an ideal that can't be realized.
Politically, however, "free market" advocates work hard to eliminate true free markets, because that requires transparency and honest cost accounting. (I note most of what is called cost accounting is actually price accounting.)
Good for Costa Rica. The oligarchy can't act against a binding referendum. It can only try to prevent them.
Imagine if we in the US could have binding referendums on Iraq, on energy, on anything and everything of concern to the public. That is exactly what Mike Gravel's National Initiative does. It makes people the lawmakers.
Costa Ricans are lighting the way.
Adios, Costa Rica. You will soon be on Hugo Chavez`s list of Latin American basket-cases in dire need of rescue.
Most if not all of this could have been prevented if people had listened to people such as myself and Ross Perot rather than the likes of Bill Clinton. Now I fear it is too late to undo the enormous damage that has been done.
Lobo Gris
For the record: The majority of Canadians were against NAFTA.
What happened with the passage of Nafta?
A huge flight of manufacturing jobs, mass layoffs and unemployment.
And then in the interests of a level playing field:
Lowered education
Lowered health care
De-regulation of standards aviation safety, pesticide/herbicide use on food crops
broken unions families homes political promises
and a continuous heartbreaking battle to prevent corporate theft of the commonwealth of the people.
thats what NAFTA got us, time to rescind it and the FTA.
I find it funny that the many of the same people that are against NAFTA as I love those veg's that come from deep in the south. The same for China products. I bought a radiator the other day $69 that was made in China. I checked and the same one made in America was $199. Gee I thought the people in China don't demand a big car and a big house with a big yard and a neat 401 account. I don't have those things so I'm tickled that I could save $131. It's also amusing that Wal-mart is the number one retailer in the world. No matter where it comes from people flock to their store.
Even people that live at poverty level live quite well in America compared to over 2 billion that exist on 2 dollars a day. Lots of Americans are just going to have to be satisfied with an adjusted American Dream because by all indications many more jobs are going to go over seas or to Mexico. They say the merchant has no country. Well neither does the shopper. We've been putting Ford and GM "out of business" for decades buying Honda's and Toyota's. Those who complain that it's the merchant/manufacturer that is trying to cut corners by moving ought to look at one's own behavior. You too will save when you can. What is good for the goose is good for the gander!
GRAVEL/NADER
KUCINICH/SANDERS
Mix and match these candidates into the ultimate progressive ticket for the people!
Preach to the choir all you care to Bernie; you don't speak for me. I will be voting Nader again. While you and Hartmann are joined at the hip, it appears everyone who followed your lead and voted Democratic, threw their vote away on Iraq - appears we will be there for God knows how long, at least according to the Dem front runners. Threw their vote away on Impeachment: (if no one told you becuase of that elitist pearch you and Hartmann occupy: Impeachment is off the table. Threw your vote away on a Living Wage for the poor: instead we got a "minimum wage" that you voted for. Threw their vote away on a recount in Ohio: again you voted against the measure. You and your status quo friends will NEVER SPEAK FOR ME!
NADER/PODHORETZ !