http://www.newsday.com/business/ny-bzsell0319,0,1292393,print.story?coll=ny-top-headlines


His campaign store sells a pullover from nation whose products he has
banned from being sold in the U.S.

The official merchandise Web site for President George W. Bush's
re-election campaign has sold clothing made in Burma, whose goods were
banned by Bush from the U.S. last year to punish its military
dictatorship.

The merchandise sold on www.georgewbushstore.com includes a $49.95
fleece pullover, embroidered with the Bush-Cheney '04 logo and bearing
a label stating it was made in Burma, now Myanmar. The jacket was sent
to Newsday as part of an order that included a shirt made in Mexico
and a hat not bearing a country-of-origin label.

The Bush merchandise is handled by Spalding Group, a 20-year-old
supplier of campaign products and services in Louisville, Ky., that
says it worked for the last five Republican presidential nominees.

Ted Jackson, Spalding's president, said, "We have found only one other
in our inventory that was made in Burma. The others were made in the
U.S.A." He said the company had about 60 of thefleece pullovers in its
warehouse, and that a supplier included the Burma product by mistake.

Bush campaign officials did not return calls seeking comment. The
imports are potentially an issue because outsourcing has become a hot
political topic in the election.

Bush last July signed into law the Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act,
saying "The United States will not waver from its commitment to the
cause of democracy and human rights in Burma."

Violators of the import ban are subject to fines and jail, according
to the U.S. Treasury Department.

Burmese textile workers earn as little as 7 cents per hour, according
to the National Labor Committee, a human rights group.

"If it is true, it is very contradictory because the sanctions were
imposed by the Bush administration," said Bo Hla-Tint, a spokesman for
the Burmese government-in-exile in Washington, D.C.

Spalding, which works exclusively with Republican candidates at both
local and national levels, tries to order American-made products,
Jackson said. "Our first effort is always to source things from the
U.S., but not a lot of garments are made in the U.S. Friday," he said.
He said all embroidery is done in the United States.

The Bush-Cheney fleece pullovers were imported to the United States by
Denver-based Colorado Trading & Clothing. President Jeff Schmitt said
Thursday the pullovers were included in one of the last shipments
brought in from Burma last year before Sept. 1, when the import ban
went into effect. "It's a terrible irony" that the Burmese jacket
landed at Newsday, he said.

Schmitt said Colorado Trading employs an agent in Asia who conducts
checks of factory conditions.

Human rights watcher Charles Kernaghan, director of the National Labor
Committee, said the slip-up showed a lack of conviction on the
administration's part. "Given the debate about outsourcing, it's
amazing that the campaign would be selling stuff made in the most
brutal country on earth, known for things like child labor and sexual
slavery," he said. "It shows a crude indifference to this issue."

The National Basketball Association recently vowed to stop selling
Burmese-made sweatshirts after a campaign by the NLC.

Last week, Newsday ordered a hat, T-shirt and fleece pullover or
jacket from both the Bush and Kerry campaign stores. The Bush
merchandise - which totaled $81.85 - arrived this week. The Kerry
products, worth $62, have yet to arrive because the fleece jacket was
on back order, according to Financial Innovations, the company that
licenses and sells Kerry merchandise on the Web site
www.kerrygear.com.

The campaigns receive no profits from the merchandise because of
federal election regulations.

The Kerry merchandise was made in the United States, according to Mark
Weiner, the president of Financial Innovations. The company, whose
employees belong to the Communications Workers of America Union,
sources most of its merchandise from union factories.

"It's becoming more difficult to find American-made union product,
especially in textiles, but you just have to look. We pay more money
for them, so we make a smaller profit margin," said Paul McConnell,
Financial Innovations' vice president.


http://www.drudgereport.com/flash2.htm

LETTER TO CAMPAIGN FROM MERCHANDISE SUPPLIER
Fri Mar 19 2004 13:26:53 ET

Mr. Tom Josefiak
General Counsel
Bush Cheney '04 Inc.

Dear Mr. Josefiak:

I am writing to apologize and accept responsibility for the recent
distribution of foreign goods in our Bush Cheney '04 merchandise
program. We take great pride in providing this service to your
campaign, and at your request have worked with our vendors to
distribute goods that have been made in America.

Unfortunately, in one of our recent shipments, a vendor inadvertently
supplied us with foreign goods, and our own company did not discover
this mistake before distribution to the public. The purchase orders
for these items included a statement specifying "Made in USA
products." (See attached document). We received an acknowledgement
from our supplier substantiating that it was their factory mistake.
(See attached document).

We have already reviewed our entire stock of items and have pulled
from inventory all foreign products. Of the 60 fleece jackets in
stock, only two were from Burma. According to best estimates by our
supplier, less than a total of ten items from Burma were shipped to
the public. We have taken corrective action to assure this will never
happen again. We are a small company employing 40 workers and take
pride in the professional services provided by our hard-working
American families.


xponent
The Marketing Of The President Maru
rob

Please accept my sincere apologies for this error and let me assure
you that all necessary steps have been taken to guarantee that all
future shipments will contain only American made products.

Sincerely,

Ted Jackson
President, Spalding Group



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