http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/07/18/opinion/commentary/71705195445.txt

CAFTA undermines immigration laws


By: TOM TANCREDO - Commentary

Congress will soon take up the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA),
which many see as an extension of NAFTA and a precursor to the Free Trade
Agreement of the Americas that would convert all of North and South America into
one integrated market.

Opinions about CAFTA's impact on the regional economy vary widely among members
of Congress based largely on what the agreement will do for their constituents.
But in the rush to highlight who wins and who loses when these trade barriers
come down, almost everyone has overlooked the troubling non-trade provisions
that are tucked into the voluminous document.

CAFTA would do more than just phase out tariffs and open new markets ---- a lot
more. For example, buried among its nearly 1,000 pages, the agreement contains
an expansive definition of "cross-border trade in services." This definition
would give people in Central American nations a de facto right to work in the
United States. CAFTA is more than a trade agreement about sugar and bananas. It
is a thinly disguised immigration accord.

The immigration provisions are cloaked as "service agreements" in the document
that have become standard fare in most trade agreements.

One article of CAFTA reads, "Cross-border trade in services or cross-border
supply of services means the supply of a service ... by a national of a party in
the territory of another party." CAFTA goes on to stipulate that member nations
take care to ensure that local and national "measures relating to qualification
requirements and procedures, technical standards and licensing requirements do
not constitute unnecessary barriers to trade in services," and to guarantee that
our domestic laws are "not in themselves a restriction on the supply of the
service."

What those provisions mean is that a foreign company would be empowered under
CAFTA to challenge the validity of our immigration laws. If an international
tribunal rules against us, Congress would then be forced to change our
immigration laws or face international trade sanctions. These tribunals have the
authority to rule that U.S. immigration limits, visa requirements, or even
licensing requirements and zoning rules are "unnecessary burdens to trade" that
act as "restrictions on the supply of a service."

This hidden legislation to open the U.S. border is only the beginning.

The chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, which oversees most
international trade matters, believes that these kinds of immigration provisions
are fair game for future trade deals as well.

If CAFTA were really just about trade, the agreement would be little more than a
few pages long, declaring that tariff treatment for U.S. and Central American
goods will be on a reciprocal basis. But it isn't. In reality, CAFTA is about
expanding a growing body of international law that supersedes our own.

If CAFTA is approved, Congress' "exclusive" authority to regulate immigration
policy will be subjugated to the whim of international tribunals and trade
panels ---- in much the same way that Congress' once supreme constitutional
authority to "regulate commerce with foreign nations," has already been largely
ceded to the WTO.

Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., is a member of the House International Relations
Committee.