-Caveat Lector-

Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com
http://www.ioa.com/~davehart


The Seattle Weekly                                                      8/19/99

Shutting down Seattle

        BY GEOV PARRISH

The World Trade Organization's talks are scheduled to be held in free
trade-friendly Seattle this fall. So is "the Protest of the Century," as
WTO opponents gather to give the ruling class a kick in the groin.

On a cool but soon to be warm, sunny, and perfectly serviceable midsummer
Saturday morning, when you'd think otherwise rational people would have
something midsummerlike to do, some 120 organizers filed into the Labor
Temple in Belltown. They came to hear the true believers fire them up over
global trade issues. They also came to prepare for days, months from now,
when it will be cold and dark and wet.

And loud.

"It's historic . . . the confrontations in Seattle will define how the
bridge to the 21st century will be built and who will be crossing
it--transnational corporations or civil society." That's Michael Dolan
speaking, field organizer for the Washington, DC-based Naderite group
Public Citizen. If Dolan has his way, the opening talks of the Seattle
Round of World Trade Organization consultations, set for November 29 to
December 3 this year, will be a benchmark, a huge protest of corporate
dominance of the global economy that will give politicians pause and CEOs
cold sweats.

The WTO represents over 100 countries in an unprecedented effort to
globalize commerce. Advocates see it as a means of boosting the world's
economy by bringing down trade barriers. But opponents believe the WTO is
systematically gutting worker, consumer, and environmental protections,
and deliberately usurping the rights of each country to make its own
laws--especially when those laws might conflict with trade.


Dolan is working on behalf of the Citizens' Trade Campaign (CTC)--a
broad-based national coalition including Public Citizen; labor groups like
the United Auto Workers; consumer groups; environmental groups like
Friends of the Earth and Clean Water Action; farm groups like National
Farmers Union and National Family and Farm Coalition; church
organizations; and many more.  Over 700 international groups have signed
on to the CTC's demand to oppose the Multilateral Agreement on Investments
(MAI), a controversial free trade proposal that will probably be on the
WTO's Seattle agenda. Instead of donating money to the cause of organizing
against the trade meetings, the CTC has donated Dolan, who has spent much
of the spring and summer meeting with community activists and lining up
logistical support.

This month, the CTC opened a storefront operation downtown that will work
until December to help coordinate protests. And that's only one of the
anti-WTO organizing efforts under way. The AFL-CIO has dispatched two
full-time field organizers to coordinate a massive march and rally set for
November 30, days after labor union heads from around the world will
convene in Seattle for their own conference. The teamsters, longshoremen,
and other industrial unions are each conducting their own mobilizations;
the steelworkers' union has reserved 1,000 hotel rooms in Tacoma and
Bellevue.  There will be teach-ins and alternative conferences and press
conferences and rallies and marches and blockades galore. Farm groups like
the Northern Plains Resource Council, Western Sustainable Agriculture, the
Institute for Agricultural and Trade Policy, and the Campaign to Reclaim
Rural America will be bringing outrage. There is talk of a procession of
tractors. Scores of nongovernmental organizations will come to try to make
their voices heard. The Zapatista-originated Peoples' Global Action is
bringing caravans across North America to descend on Seattle. The Sierra
Club is mobilizing its membership.

Even peace groups like the War Resisters League are involved--free trade,
by specifically exempting military spending from its agreements, acts to
encourage the arms trade and military buildups by Third World governments.
Art and Revolution is bringing its giant puppets and public spectacle from
the streets of San Francisco. And the Evergreen State College, well, they
might as well close the campus--they'll all be in Seattle, as will
students from around the country, led by the Boston-based Center for
Campus Organizing.

Steven Staples, British Columbia field organizer for the Council of
Canadians, estimates that "hundreds and hundreds, maybe thousands" will be
coming down from Canada, where activists are concerned about the WTO's
threat to their country's education and health care systems. After
Vancouver's experience with heavy-handed riot police at the 1996 APEC
meetings (pepper spray, preemptive arrests), Staples says, "people got a
very clear idea of whose interests were being served." All in all, Seattle
will see traffic snarled and resources stretched to their limits by a week
of international protests mingling with trade ministers, heads of state,
and both President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore. Republican
King County Council member Brian Derdowski, who is working with the
protesters, calls the scenario "a security nightmare," and "the greatest
security risk this region has ever known."

Seattle organizers of the WTO meetings--operating under the well-financed
umbrella of the Seattle Host Organization (SHO)--are fond of calling the
Seattle meetings the largest trade gathering ever held on US soil.
Opposition to it will almost certainly be the largest anti-free trade
protests ever held on US soil.

Dolan is one of the early speakers to the Saturday morning gathering at
the Labor Temple, and he speaks with the fervor of an evangelist. The
crowd, with doughnuts, coffee, handouts, and reprints in hand, responds
with enthusiasm. Dolan talks of a political opening, with the defeat last
year of Clinton's desired fast-track authority for negotiating free trade
agreements and the subsequent derailing of MAI negotiations. He calls them
"kicks in the groin of the ruling class." Dolan recounts with glee a
recent front-page Wall Street Journal article on the protests--"The bosses
are scared!"--and reminds the assembled that there's only 16 weeks to go,
a short time for a logistical juggernaut that--unlike the meetings
themselves--must be organized on a shoestring. Motel rooms and meeting
spaces for the period are already gone; available flights into Seattle
have all but disappeared. One of the greatest challenges for groups from
around the country that want to come to Seattle will simply be getting
here and having a place to stay. It's not a good time of year for camping.

A flyer for the Saturday meeting calls the upcoming protests of the WTO
meetings the "Protest of the Century." It may not equal, say, Seattle's
1919 General Strike, but organizers are thinking in terms of that kind of
scale;  they bandy about hopes of bringing 100,000 people into the
streets. The stakes are extremely high; for any one of the contemplated
eight or nine subagreements on the possible agenda of the trade ministers,
a lasting regime of corporate dominance could ensure human misery,
environmental catastrophe, and short-term profit affecting billions of
people on a scale barely imaginable even a decade ago. The surprise is not
that protesters by the thousands will be drawn from all over the world.
The surprise is that more people aren't up in arms.

What's that giant flushing sound?

The WTO was created in 1994 as the successor organization to the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade. The idea is to execute a series of
treaties among member nations that would reduce and eventually eliminate
tariffs and other restrictions on trade in various sectors of the world
economy. The negotiations for those different sectors have been named
after the locations where the first meetings of the particular "Round"
take place. The next several years will be known as the "Seattle Round."


One hundred and thirty-five countries--including all the major ones except
China--are members; some 30 others have observer status. The United States
dominates the proceedings, and the evolution of the WTO is one of the
major reasons transnational corporations love Clinton. The WTO is
exceptionally good news for transnationals. As with the North American
Free Trade Agreement, on which it's modeled, removing barriers to free
trade generally means weakening, preventing, or striking down
environmental, wage, worker safety, public health, and consumer laws. It's
a whirlpool effect--what Dolan calls a "downward harmonization," or a race
to the bottom as countries find all but the lowest standards eliminated as
unfair trade competition. Or think of it as public interest laws simply
being flushed down the toilet.

In Seattle, ministers will consider both new and old business. Left over
from the previous Uruguay Round are agriculture, services, and government
procurement; new to the Seattle Round will be many Northwest-appropriate
topics, including the Forest Products Agreement, the Multilateral
Agreement on Investments (banking and finance), biotechnology,
intellectual property rights, and electronic commerce. The "talks" will be
largely for photo ops and political posturing; much of the real
negotiating is taking place behind the scenes, in various meetings on
different subagreements leading up to the event.

The global movement to challenge free trade is part of a larger movement
challenging neoliberalism--the usurpation of public policy by the
marketplace and the needs of transnational corporations. These
corporations have steadily increased their grip over the policies of
nation-states since the fall of the Berlin Wall and, previously, the era
of Reagan-Thatcher. At stake is democracy itself, as corporations, through
instruments like the MAI, gain the power to overrule the laws of elected
officials at the national, state, or local level. Currently, governments,
often at the behest of corporations, can challenge the laws of other
countries as "unfair" to trade, with the issue decided secretly by a
Geneva-based tribunal of corporate lawyers.

The initial trickle of rulings by the tribunal is starting to accelerate:
overturning a European ban on US hormone-fed beef; ending a law designed
to assist Caribbean banana exports to Europe; a ban on EPA-mandated safety
devices for shrimping nets, designed by the US to protect endangered sea
turtles; a challenge to US environmental laws prohibiting a Canadian
gasoline additive; and, most recently, overturning a subsidy for Brazil's
fledgling aerospace industry. Ominously, on July 9, US Secretary of
Agriculture Dan Glickman, responding to a new EU ban on genetically
modified organisms, promised to go to the WTO to prevent it. So far, the
secret tribunals of the WTO have not once ruled to preserve a challenged
law.

It's little wonder critics see the WTO, in one author's words, as a
"secret world government"; one U.N. official infamously referred to the
proposed MAI agreement in 1996 as "writing a constitution." King County
Council's Derdowski sees concern with free trade and the WTO's course as
transcending traditional conservative/liberal labels. "The issue for
conservatives is the sovereignty of America, the constitution. State and
local authority is in danger of being eroded through international
treaties, ceding authority to foreign regulatory bodies . . . those are
issues that resonate very much with conservatives."

Wild in the streets?

During the WTO's last consultations, last summer in Geneva, Switzerland,
there were riots in the streets. In June's meeting of the G-7 nations in
Cologne, Germany, there were street demonstrations in Cologne and in
dozens of other cities around the world, with extensive property damage in
London and New York and so-called "riots" in, of all places, Eugene,
Oregon.  (Eugene's anarchist rioters say they'll be in Seattle for the
WTO.) Slowly but surely, opposition to unfettered trade is coming to
America. Its first major stage will be the streets of Seattle. This has
certainly not gone unnoticed by Seattle police. The Seattle Police
Department is heading a multiagency planning commission to deal with the
WTO's security headaches, involving the King County Sheriff, the US Secret
Service, the FBI, the State Department, the Federal Emergency Management
Agency, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, and many others. In
The Wall Street Journal , a spokeswoman for the SPD noted pointedly that
"we have access to pepper spray." Many area activists also participated in
planning for protests at Vancouver's APEC meetings and remember the
heavy-handed tactics of the Mounties there. All are hoping for an orderly
week, but with so many different groups and ideologies descending on the
city, there will almost certainly be civil disobedience of some sort at
some point. A July 28 King County Council memo estimates the county's
share of security costs--including itemized expenditures for things like
bomb suits, "NATO Ballistic Shields," and riot boots and helmets as well
as the usual escort services for dignitaries at well over $1.1 million.
That will be picked up by the taxpayers, and Derdowski thinks it's
underestimated: "We've got to do everything we can to make sure things
happen peacefully and safely."

Not all WTO opponents will be in the streets. Some nongovernmental
organizations are coming for teach-ins or conferences such as one being
sponsored by the International Forum on Globalization. While some groups,
such as the Third World-based Peoples' Global Action (a movement
especially popular among peasant farmers in countries like India), wish
flatly to destroy the WTO, others want simply to fix it. The Seattle Host
Organization is attempting to create space for public dialogue with a
series of "public sector programs" during the ministerials, including
programs on labor issues, electronic commerce, agriculture and food
products, environmental issues, and trade in services. These aren't
exactly all anti-free trade--the electronic commerce forum, for example,
is being organized by Microsoft. But two are being organized by
individuals who have publicly challenged the course of the WTO: Patti
Goldman of Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund is coordinating the
environmental program, while labor is being handled by the King County
Labor Council's Ron Judd.

Tinkering with trade

"We are not going to be denouncing the WTO, asking that it be killed or go
away," says Judd, who will also help oversee the November 30 labor rally
that will probably be the largest and most visible protest of the week.
"We don't believe the rules as presently written are working very well for
workers . . . we want to make WTO make as part of their mandate sanctions
against [countries that violate] workers' rights: child labor, slave
labor, the right to organize, the right to bargain collectively, ending
discrimination in the workplace." Goldman, in describing the usefulness of
working with the Seattle Host Organization rather than outside the doors,
says, "I think there is some advantage to having some powerful speakers
who can describe [the WTO's] effects on the environment."

The biggest challenge for WTO opponents will be deciding what they want
and speaking with a unified voice. Public Citizen's Dolan and the
Citizens' Trade Campaign are attempting to unify protest organizers around
a demand that, rather than hammering out yet more agreements, trade
ministers use the Seattle Round to take stock and analyze the effects of
the trade agreements already in place. They are convinced, of course, that
any objective analysis of the last four years will find enormous harm to
the economies and resources of the developing world as well as democracy
worldwide. Free trade proponents see no need for such introspection. In
the state of Washington, it's hard to find an elected official who doesn't
crow the praises of trade:  Patty Murray, Slade Gorton, Gary Locke, and
Jim McDermott are all on board.  They tout free trade as beneficial for
the state's Pacific Rim-based economy (and, of course, for Boeing). The
Seattle Host Organization claims that, as a hosting group, it takes no
position on the WTO's actions, but both privately and publicly a lot of
time and money are being spent promoting the glories of free trade. The
SHO is doing extensive public outreach in the coming months, including
town hall meetings, business outreach events, a school curriculum
extolling the virtues of free trade, and regional events concerning trade
in different continents (the Africa forum will be convened by McDermott,
busy promoting his Africa free trade bill in Congress).

"Remember Seattle?"

Can protests in the streets of Seattle challenge the dominance of free
trade policies? In the short term, no. Free trade enjoys solid bipartisan
support, led by the Clinton/ Gore Administration and the
ever-accommodating Republican wing of America's one-party state. Among
both Democrats and Republicans, those who question the wisdom of
unfettered trade are relegated to the fringes of the party. The coalition
of labor, environmental, agricultural, consumer, human rights, and
constitutionalist groups that hope to slow, if not stop, the momentum of
an ever-increasing number of free trade agreements anticipates using
Seattle as a springboard. By filling the streets for several days,
snarling traffic, worrying the cops, and tapping out what few meeting
places and motel rooms remain, they may just possibly galvanize a
movement.

Seattle's protests aren't likely to change the outcome of the momentous
trade talks that will be held here. But the first step in changing a
policy is letting the public know that the political terrain is even
contested. The hope of the tens of thousands of protesters descending on
Seattle this fall is that it will be the start of something big. The goal,
according to Dolan, is "to create something that later will cause
politicians to say, 'Remember Seattle?'--and it gives them pause before
they advance the corporate agenda." As Derdowski drily notes: "To give
away your fundamental liberties for the sake of trade dollars is a very
poor choice."*
------------------------------------------------------------------------

For a schedule of planned anti-WTO events in Seattle or to help with
preparations, contact People for Fair Trade at 1-877-STOP-WTO. Volunteers
are welcomed at the Public Citizen storefront: 1914 4th Ave in downtown
Seattle. For help or information on the November 30 march/rally, contact the
King County Labor Council at 206-441-8510. More information on the WTO is
available through the following Web sites: www.tradewatch.org;
www.peopleforfairtrade.org; www.seattlewto.org

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