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Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Protectionist Language Stirs Controversy
by Donald Lambro
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WASHINGTON -- Just as the Democrats were getting ready to pass the $800 billion stimulus plan, President Obama gave the green light to water down the bill's "buy American" trade provisions.

Labor leaders were up in arms over what they saw as a betrayal of Obama's campaign promise to support tough trade restrictions. The softer language quietly added to the bill was sought by the Chamber of Commerce and other business groups as the price for their support. In the end, they got some of what they wanted.

The behind-the-scenes battle over the "buy American" language received little media attention in the fiery political warfare over the big spending bill. But the White House's late shift on the issue shook labor's trust in the new president's promises and showed that, when push came to shove, Obama can quickly turn pragmatic.

The protectionist language that Democratic leaders inserted in the original bill immediately raised red flags over at U.S. Chamber headquarters, just one block from the White House.

Section 1605 (a) of the infrastructure-spending package on the "use of American iron, steel and manufactured goods" said this: "None of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available by this act may be used for a project for the construction, alteration, maintenance or repair of a public building or public work unless all of the iron, steel and manufactured goods used in the project are produced in the United States."

This language not only threatened to invite severe protectionist reprisals from our trading partners, triggering a trade war in the midst of a global recession -- it would have violated provisions in U.S. trade agreements.

Obama began sending signals publicly and through back channels that the provisions went too far. He told Fox News that the United States "can't send a protectionism message," then told ABC News that the bill's wording could be a "potential source of trade wars that we can't afford at a time when trade is sinking all across the globe."

The president's language was right out of the U.S. Chamber's playbook, shocking labor officials that Obama could turn so quickly on the issue, but thrilling big-business lobbyists.

That language remains in the bill, but waivers are also in there, saying it "shall not apply in any case or any category of cases in which the head of the Federal department or agency involved finds that applying subsection (a) would be inconsistent with the public interest."

Other language was added to reassure our trading partners that "the administration will ... comply with U.S. obligations under the World Trade Organization Agreement on government procurement under U.S. free-trade agreements."

As the bill was working its way through a House-Senate conference, the liberal blogosphere was burning with indignation. "President Obama submitted to globalist demands as the administration quietly watered down the 'Buy American' provisions," wrote Jerome Corsi, author of "The Late Great USA," on the World Net Daily.

What this means, Corsi wrote, is "free-trade presidents, now stretching from Carter to Obama, have won. With the added language, NAFTA, CAFTA and the World Trade Organization will continue to trump 'Buy American' efforts to support the struggling U.S. worker."

Arthur Stamoulis, director of the Oregon Fair Trade Campaign, told the Los Angeles Times that "Obama promised to support 'Buy American' legislation. The fact that he's hedging on this is not promising," he said. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Obama's deficit
It is not entirely certain that NAFTA or other "free trade" provisions have superceded Buy American. So, far I do not think that a challenge has been successful -- but sure the WTO or something else may determine that is the case.

Still, I want to stick with it. It worked in good times like the 50s, 60s, 80s and 90s. We need to keep this industry here. Just as it is unwise to make our tanks and planes in China (even though it would be cheaper).

Akagi
Akagi, as for how paying more is a deal for the taxpayer, where does that spent money go? It goes to an American company, which pays an American's wages. And who are our taxpayers? Americans.

When we buy a product from overseas, the consumer may reap an immediate benefit of a cheaper product (and that's assuming it's not poisoned a la China), but it's a one-time shot. The American producer and American worker who was once producing certainly do not benefit.

Instead, once that money goes overseas to pay for the import, that money still represents the same purchasing power, only now it's used towards the payment of foreign workers and production of foreign goods. And if another country's sufficiently strict, it doesn't leave their economy, or at least it doesn't come back to ours.

Protectionism keeps wealth here instead of transferring it to other nations and their citizens. That's the benefit.
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