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Bush, in El Salvador, Pushes Free Trade Zone Across Latin America
AP via The New York Times ^ | March 24, 2002

Posted on 03/24/2002 12:13:08 PM PST by sarcasm

SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -- President Bush promised Sunday to push for free-trade policies for economically strapped Latin America and said the United States ``is wide open'' to buy goods from around the world.

Winding up a journey to Mexico, Peru and El Salvador, Bush also pledged to promote immigration policies that link workers from the region with American jobs.

Bush said it was in the best interests of the United States to have a ``prosperous and peaceful'' Latin America, a region known for decades of civil war, poverty and strife.

Trade, Bush said, will ``reinforce the region's progress toward political, economic and social reform.''

Bush said trade between El Salvador and the United States approaches $4 billion a year. ``Trade means jobs. Trade means that people who want to work are more likely to find jobs,'' Bush said.

``We're going to continue to pursue the Free Trade of the Americas (agreement), which aims to encompass the entire hemisphere,'' he said.

Bush also rejected Democratic criticism of his trip. Antonio Villaraigosa, a former speaker of the California state Assembly, said Saturday the trip was aimed at currying favor with Hispanics in the United States.

The president said he was disappointed with the remarks.

``Sometimes in Washington, D.C., people cannot get rid of old habits, which is petty politics,'' he said.

Bush's new free-trade pitch came just days after he slapped new tariffs on steel and softwood lumber imported to the United States. Those retaliations came in part because the administration concluded foreign governments were unfairly subsidizing those industries.

Asked about U.S. subsidies for agricultural produce that hurt smaller countries, Bush said he could do little about such programs approved by Congress.

But, he said, ``Our market's wide open.''

Salvadoran President Francisco Flores and his wife, Lourdes, met Bush and first lady Laura Bush on their arrival. Hundreds of military personnel in their ceremonial uniforms stood at attention.

Bush greeted his counterpart with an embrace and Mrs. Flores with a kiss.

On the eve of his visit, Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, said the president was promoting trade and democracy.

Bush was spending just under six hours in the country. But it was time enough ``to really celebrate a region that 10, 15 years ago, nobody would have given a chance to be living at peace,'' Rice said ahead of the stop.

Over a quick lunch with the leaders of El Salvador, Belize, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Honduras and Panama, Bush planned to underscore his intent to make the long climb toward a U.S.-Central America free trade agreement.

As he said Saturday in Peru, ``I believe strongly that if we promote trade, and when we promote trade, it will help workers on both sides of this issue. ... I mean, the best way for people to get lifted out of poverty is a job. And the best way to encourage jobs is through trade.''

Critics say two new tariffs imposed by the United States this month raised questions about Bush's oft-stated commitment to free trade in the Americas.

The Bush administration on Friday imposed tariffs totaling 29 percent on Canadian softwood lumber for what the Commerce Department said was unfair trading practices.

Also this month, the United States clamped tariffs of up to 30 percent on several types of imported steel. The decision angered Brazil, which exported $726 million worth of steel products to the United States last year.

A special trade pact between Central America and its giant neighbor to the North remains just an idea.

Formal talks have yet to begin, or even be planned, and other trade agreements already in the works offer little by way of promising precedent.

Work on creating the hemisphere-wide Free-Trade Area of the Americas agreement that President Clinton proposed in 1994 is proceeding toward its 2005 target date for completion. But as long as Congress stubbornly withholds special negotiating authority for the president, would-be partners in the FTAA remain skeptical about its prospects.

The trade promotion authority for Bush passed the House last year but is bottled up in the Democratic-controlled Senate.

Bush sees trade as the ``next phase'' of progress for a region that, not long ago, was wracked by war and revolution, Rice said.

``The president has a very warm spot in his heart for the Central American presidents who, despite very, very difficult odds, where most of them were living in countries that were in civil war just a few years ago, are really making a tremendous effort to make life better for their people,'' Rice said.


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To: smarticus
Oh really? Tell that to the workers at the Ford plant in Mexico, they went on strike to try to get the right to unionize, and to get a wage increase. The managers at the Ford plant called in the Federalies, and they attacked the striking workers with machine guns, killing at least one, and then after the strike was crushed, the people went back to work with a 50% pay cut. This little item went almost unreported in the media.

Millions of mexicans are in the US illegally because there isn't any work in mexico. This means that it's a buyers market for labor in mexico, and those ford plant workers stayed with a 50% pay cut because no one else will hire them. A unionized strike only works in a tight/sellers labor market, then the management must pay. A paying job is better than being unemployed and starving, and is an improvement for most mexicans(lifting their boat).

41 posted on 03/24/2002 10:01:22 PM PST by Eagle74
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Comment #43 Removed by Moderator

To: Orion
This coming from a guy who is protecting steel to prop up his chances of reelection in '04. Are there any Bushbots out there who can justify this?

The steel industry is critical to our defense, brooms and VCRs aren't.

44 posted on 03/25/2002 4:37:28 AM PST by #3Fan
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To: willie green
Willie green, white courtesy phone!
45 posted on 03/25/2002 5:24:04 AM PST by Clemenza
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To: antidemocommie
Yeah, Michael Savage is right much of the time. Nevertheless, he is an obnoxious A--hole.
46 posted on 03/25/2002 5:25:44 AM PST by Clemenza
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To: Clemenza
Dubya = Juan Termer
47 posted on 03/25/2002 8:31:51 AM PST by Willie Green
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To: smarticus
"Freedom for me, but the rest of you can just kiss off!" Right?

If they didn't want to work for Ford at that wage, they were free to leave and find work else where. I certainly don't think they have the right, to threaten to destroy a business(the ford factory) because they feel the threat will gain them more money. Let's face it, that's what a strike is all about, and when the mafia does it it's called Extortion. I worked as a Teamster for Toyota for 8 years, until I got sick of paying dues to an organization that then supported my political enemies with my money. I would have liked to continue working there, but California has no right to work laws, and only teamsters were allowed. So I Quit, Unions are just legalized mafia.

48 posted on 03/26/2002 2:17:30 PM PST by Eagle74
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