Title: How interesting NAFTA may be found to be illegal!
Thomas:

The things you find on the Internet are truly amazing.  I have not seen one word of this in the press or magazines I often review - and yet here is a time bomb that has been building while we have been worrying about Princess Di and JFK Jr. untimely demises.  

Respectfully,

Thomas Lunde

From: Mark Graffis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Thursday, July 22, 1999

Obscure Lawsuit Could Alter U.S. Trade Policy
By EVELYN IRITANI, Los Angeles Times

Trade advocates are bracing for a ruling by a federal judge in Alabama
in a little-noticed lawsuit whose outcome could dramatically alter the
way the U.S. has conducted its trade policy over four decades. Sometime
in the next few weeks, U.S. District Judge Robert Propst is expected to
rule in a labor-backed lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the
landmark North American Free Trade Agreement. The case has attracted
the attention of some of the nation's top legal scholars. Although a
finding of unconstitutionality would not undo the 1993 pact, it could
make it more difficult for the United States to commit itself to future
international endeavors and cast doubt on the legitimacy of a host of
other global agreements, according to Bruce Ackerman, one of the
nation's leading constitutional scholars. "It would destabilize the
existing system of international law," said the Yale University
professor. "It would be difficult to declare NAFTA unconstitutional
without calling into question our commitment to the WTO, the World Bank
and many, many other economic arrangements."

Such a scenario would also put the U.S. in the uncomfortable position
of being committed under international law to a trade agreement that
its own courts ruled in violation of its founding document.  "This is a
Rod Serling plot," said Robert Stumberg, an international law expert at
Georgetown University's Harrison Institute for Public Law. "We [would
now have] entered the twilight zone, where an agreement that is binding
on the U.S.  vis-a-vis the rest of the world cannot be enforced
internally."

The case itself turns on the relatively narrow question of whether
NAFTA, which links the economies of the U.S., Canada and Mexico in a
giant free-trade zone, is a trade agreement or a treaty.  That question
has historically been decided on a case-by-case basis as legal scholars
and politicians debated when a pact has a broad enough impact to meet
the higher test of a treaty.  During the first 150 years of U.S.
history, most of this country's major foreign policy commitments were
forged through treaties, according to Ackerman. But after World War II,
when international trade exploded, leaders began relying more heavily
on some form of congressional-executive branch agreement rather than
treaties to facilitate more commercial growth.  Between 1930 and 1992,
the United States ratified 891 treaties and 13,178 international
agreements, the government said.  The plaintiffs--the Made in the USA
foundation, a coalition of domestic manufacturers and unions, and the
United Steelworkers of America--argue that NAFTA's scope qualifies it
as a treaty that, under the U.S. Constitution, required ratification by
a two-thirds vote of the Senate, instead of the simple majority of both
houses of Congress that favored it.

The Clinton administration insists NAFTA is not a treaty but a
congressional executive agreement, a common tool in U.S.  trade policy
that requires the approval of a simple majority of both houses.  The
administration maintains that even if the plaintiffs win their
constitutional challenge, NAFTA would remain in place because the U.S.
is bound under international law to honor its commitments to foreign
governments.  "Under international law, we are not allowed to say,
'Sorry, Mexico, sorry, Canada, we didn't do this right,'" Justice
Department attorney Martha Rubio argued in court earlier this year.
Given the stakes, a successful challenge to NAFTA is likely to be tied
up in appeals for years as it wends its way to the Supreme Court,
according to trade lawyers--and to create a long period of uncertainty
for U.S. trade policy.  This legal skirmish is just the latest effort
by globalization critics to slow the Clinton administration's campaign
to open markets around the world. With the U.S. trade deficit headed
for another record year, unions and other groups are counting on
lawsuits, shareholder activism and old-fashioned protests to draw
attention to their concerns over job loss and erosion of national
sovereignty.

In spite of the robust U.S. economy and near-record low unemployment,
the Clinton administration has had a tough time convincing voters that
free-trade agreements such as NAFTA are in their best interests.  The
administration gives NAFTA credit for boosting trade between the U.S.
and its NAFTA neighbors by more than 44% and creating at least 311,000
jobs. But the Made in the USA Foundation contends the trade agreement
has cost more than 400,000 American jobs.  Last year, fierce
grass-roots resistance forced the White House to abandon an effort to
gain the fast-track authority that would allow the president to
negotiate free-trade agreements more easily.

The administration is sending its top trade officials on a domestic
roadshow to drum up support for launching a new round of trade
liberalization talks at this fall's Seattle ministerial meeting of the
World Trade Organization.  Joel Joseph, chairman and general counsel of
the Made in the USA Foundation, argues that Americans are growing more
disillusioned about trade agreements because they have witnessed the
dark side of globalism, from the Asian financial crisis to the
stepped-up competition from low-cost competitors overseas.  He and his
supporters are counting on a win in Alabama to boost their political
leverage in an election year and put pressure on Congress to at least
consider revising NAFTA to include greater protections for labor, the
environment and consumer health and safety.  "NAFTA was not designed to
benefit workers, it was designed to benefit corporations and financial
institutions," said George Becker, president of the United
Steelworkers, which claims that NAFTA has cost more than 7,000 steel
jobs.

Although the foundation's legal challenge has gained little notice on
Main Street, it has become a cause celebre in legal circles because it
has ignited a "battle of the stars" between Ackerman and Laurence Tribe
of Harvard University, two of America's most prominent constitutional
scholars.  Tribe, a longtime critic of U.S. trade agreements, supports
the plaintiffs' notion that NAFTA--which regulates everything from
investment rules to food safety and labor rights--is a treaty and was
therefore adopted in violation of the Constitution.  However, he does
not share Ackerman's concerns that a ruling that NAFTA is
unconstitutional would wreak havoc on America's past or future foreign
economic policy.

"To recommend searching constitutional inquiry each time the United
States considers binding itself to the terms of an international
agreement does not make one guilty of fostering international
'destabilization,' as Professor Ackerman has suggested," he wrote in
the Harvard Law Review. But Ackerman argues that NAFTA, like dozens of
other international agreements ratified since World War II, was
developed by Congress and the executive branch as a way of countering
the Senate's isolationist tendencies. He describes the so-called
congressional-executive agreement as a more populist alternative to the
Founding Fathers' "anti-democratic" and "outmoded" decision to give the
Senate control of foreign economic policy through the treaty process.
In the end, Ackerman points out, the Senate still retains the power to
reject any international agreement and insist that it be handled as a
treaty. "I think it would be very wrong for the courts to intervene to
protect the Senate's prerogatives when the Senate itself recognizes it
is part of the team with the House," he said.

----------------------
Daniel J.B. Mitchell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ho-su Wu Professor at UCLA
Anderson Graduate School of Management and
School of Public Policy & Social Research
Office Mailing Address/phone:
   Anderson Graduate School of Management
   U.C.L.A.
   Los Angeles, California 90095-1481 USA
   Office phone: 310-825-1504
Personal Mailing Address:
   P.O. Box 492391
   Los Angeles, California 90049 USA
Fax: 310-829-1042



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