-Caveat Lector-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: No FTAA without Fast Track
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 2000 10:42:32 -0600 (CST)
From: Michael Dolan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: ?
To: undisclosed-recipients:;

IF WE WANT TO DEFEAT THE FTAA, WE HAVE TO BEAT FAST
TRACK FIRST.

The new Administration needs Fast Track in order to
expand NAFTA throughout the hemisphere (see NYT story
below).  The transnational corporate 'free trade'
lobby will make Fast Track its highest legislative
priority in the new Congress.  Our challenge is to
repeat the victories of '97 and '98 when we frustrated
the Clinton White House, Big Business and the
Republican congressional leadership by defeating Fast
Track in the House of Representatives.

We can meet this challenge only by organizing at the
grassroots level, targeting undecided
congress-members, especially Democrats, starting
immediately.

U.S. based activists: please activate your Fair Trade
networks now, while the Congress is still in recess,
and make your opposition to FTAA and Fast Track loud
and visible.

For more information about FTAA and Fast Track, please
don't hesitate to access our web-site,
www.tradewatch.org.

And now this:
__________________
December 18, 2000
Latin America Is Priority on Bush Trade Agenda
By ANTHONY DePALMA
New York Times

He may not be comfortable discussing unrest in East
Timor, or pronouncing the name of the leaders of
Turkmenistan, but President-elect George W. Bush
considers the rest of the Western Hemisphere "our
backyard" and will have several opportunities in his
first year in office to make Latin America a trade and
foreign policy priority.

During the campaign, Mr. Bush said he would kickstart
the stalled process of getting a free trade agreement
of the Americas signed by 2005. The agreement would
build on the North American Free Trade Agreement,
which went into effect in 1994, and would unite 34 of
the countries in North, Central and South America into
what President Clinton once said would be "the world's
largest market."

The first order of business would be a bruising battle
in a divided Congress over fast-track authority, the
legislative tool that Mr. Bush will need to negotiate
a comprehensive trade deal. Under fast track, trade
deals are brought to Congress for approval only when
complete. Congress then votes on the agreement without
having the chance to add amendments that suit the
needs and wishes of individual members.

"I'd expect that within the first 100 days in office
he'll propose approval of fast-track authority," said
Sidney Weintraub, an economist at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies and a former
deputy assistant secretary of state for international
finance and development.

Even though Republicans narrowly control the House of
Representatives, Mr. Bush will need to reach across
the aisle to Democrats for help in getting fast-track
authority approved. Mr. Weintraub expects that the
need for bipartisan cooperation will provide Democrats
an opportunity to attach environmental and labor
standards to the bill, although Mr. Bush has made it
clear that he does not support such standards if they
are too rigidly drawn.

In negotiating a trade deal, Mr. Bush would also have
to heed strongly voiced opposition to such side
agreements from some Latin American nations, led by
Brazil, that fear that labor and environmental
standards attached to a trade deal could be used as
protectionist shields by American businesses that feel
threatened by Latin American competition.

In a campaign speech in Miami in August, Mr. Bush said
the Clinton administration dropped the ball on Latin
America after losing the legislative battle to win
fast-track authority. In the speech, he said that by
the time the third Summit of the Americas meets, a
fast-track bill will already have been introduced in
Congress.

"When the next president sits at the Americas Summit
in Quebec next April, other nations must know that
fast-track authority is on the way," he said during
the campaign.

Although Mr. Bush criticized President Clinton for
stalling the drive for a free trade agreement of the
Americas, the process has actually been chugging
along, though largely out of sight. Negotiating teams
have continued to work on technical details, and when
trade officials gather in Quebec, a substantial
framework for the trade negotiations leading to a 2005
deal will be in place.

"The 2005 date was set at the first Americas Summit in
Miami in 1994 and reconfirmed at the second in
Santiago," said Richard E. Feinberg, a former senior
director of the National Security Council's Office of
Inter-American Affairs under President Clinton and now
a professor at the graduate school of international
relations at the University of California in San
Diego. "All the major players remain committed to the
2005 date."

During the campaign, Mr. Bush talked about developing
a "special relationship" with Mexico, which is one of
the few foreign countries he has ever visited.
Referring more broadly to all of Latin America, he
said he would "look south, not as an afterthought but
as a fundamental commitment of my presidency."

As governor of a border state, Mr. Bush has had a
front-row seat on the expansion of international
trade, and the effect on Texas has been substantial.
According to a recent study by the Council of the
Americas, Texas exports to Mexico have more than
doubled since Nafta came into force in 1994.

Mr. Bush will not have to worry about union opposition
to new international trade deals as much as Vice
President Al Gore would have, but there is a segment
of the Republican Party that has become increasingly
protectionist and could complicate any trade deal.
That could force Mr. Bush to take a page from Mr.
Clinton's playbook and cast increased trade in
political and strategic terms, as Mr. Clinton did in
winning a trade vote on China.

Mr. Bush had promised to meet with Mexico's president,
Vicente Fox Quesada, even before Mr. Fox was
inaugurated on Dec. 1, a signal that the
administrations of both countries, starting at roughly
the same time, would work in tandem to resolve common
problems like illegal immigration, illicit drugs and
environmental pollution. Because of the extraordinary
delays in the American election, the meeting never
took place, but Mr. Bush sent a congratulatory message
to Mr. Fox on the day of his inauguration.

Mr. Fox has already taken a pre-emptive lead on some
of these areas. During the summer he visited Mr.
Clinton and both presidential candidates, and talked
freely about his ideas for deepening Nafta and taking
measures to reduce barriers that prevent Mexican
workers from entering the United States to find work.

Mr. Fox's ideas were not warmly embraced by either
Democrats or Republicans, and a close relationship
with him and Mexico could put Mr. Bush into a
difficult position with members of his own party.

"He will, as he said, have a `special relationship'
with Mexico, but the question now is what kind of
relationship will it be," said Larry Birns, director
of the Council on Hemispheric Affairs in Washington,
who supported Mr. Gore. "Here is where a Bush
presidency might run into real trouble."

__________________
Mike Dolan
Global Trade Watch
Public Citizen

Oakland California

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