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Obama At Nike

Obama stumps for a new super-sized NAFTA

Visiting Portland May 7-8, President Barack Obama spent the evening taking cash from the 1 percent, and the morning selling a trade deal written by the Fortune 500.

At both events, union leaders were the outsiders  — joining hundreds of protesters ringing a $500-per-ticket fundraiser at downtown Portland’s Sentinel Hotel, and crashing the gate at an invitation-only speech at Nike World Headquarters in Beaverton. On trade policy, organized labor is used to that outsider status, having been locked out of five years of super-secret negotiations over a 12-nation Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP).

Dan At Obama FundraiserIn recent weeks, Obama has been on the defense in Portland and around the country, trying to neutralize opposition to the super-sized NAFTA, and showing a willingness to fight that was never previously seen on any issue in six years. Even on ObamaCare, the president just laid out guidelines and asked Congress to send him a bill. But for the TPP, Obama is twisting arms, making phone calls, and showing up on Oregon’s doorstep with a hard sell.

Nike was a fitting locale for the TPP sales pitch: Founder Phil Knight wrote his Stanford masters thesis on outsourcing, and his company pioneered the strategy of offshoring manufacturing to Asia. It even outsourced its outsourcing, hiring third parties to manage overseas production. And in recent years, Nike shifted to Vietnam when wages got too high in China.

Bear that in mind when evaluating the company’s startling announcement that IF the TPP is approved, Nike will bring manufacturing jobs back to the United States. As a company press release explained on the morning of the Obama visit: “Footwear tariff relief would allow Nike to accelerate development of new advanced manufacturing methods and a domestic supply chain to support U.S. based manufacturing.” Translation: If we lower tariffs to make it cheaper for Nike to import shoes from overseas, that will “allow” them to make shoes in the United States. Like the jobs promises made for NAFTA, it’s a non-binding pledge.

Following a welcome hug from CEO Mark Parker (2014 salary: $14.7 million), Obama told some whoppers of his own in order to sell the super-secret TransPacific Partnership, which even members of Congress can’t get copies of. Here are six lies the president told at Nike World Headquarters:

OBAMA: “You got some critics saying … it’s a secret deal, people don’t know what’s in it. This is not true.”

Actually, it IS true. Several hundred American corporate lawyers have full access to the draft negotiating texts — the texts that U.S. trade negotiators are pushing other countries to agree to in the U.S.-led talks. But the texts are top secret for everyone else: They’re classified documents that are supposed to be kept secret up to four years after the negotiations conclude. Even members of Congress may only view the documents in a special room in the Capitol, and may not take photos or tell anyone what they see. Everything known about the TPP so far has come from a series of leaks publicized on WikiLeaks.

OBAMA: “Critics warn that parts of this deal would undermine American regulation, food safety, worker safety, even financial regulation. They’re making this stuff up.”

Actually they’re not. The TPP Investment chapter that was leaked to WikiLeaks shows a plan to let foreign investors sue governments and obtain taxpayer compensation for laws that reduce potential profits. As the New York Times reported March 25, “companies and investors would be empowered to challenge regulations, rules, government actions and court rulings — federal, state or local — before tribunals organized under the World Bank or the United Nations,” if those rules “undermine their investment ‘expectations’ and hurt their business.”

OBAMA: “98 percent of exporters are small businesses.”

According to his own trade office, “small and medium-sized businesses” (up to 250 employees) make up 98 percent of the exporters, but account for less than a third of the exports. Overwhelmingly, foreign trade is for big businesses, like Nike.

OBAMA: “So listen, I know a lot of folks are skeptical about trade. Past trade deals didn’t always live up to the hype.”

Actually, they never lived up to the hype. Nearly a dozen NAFTA-style trade deals have been hyped as job creators. But trade deficits with Mexico, Korea, and nearly every other trade partner actually INCREASED after their trade agreements took effect. Typically, exports to those trading partners increased, but imports increased even more. When imports outweigh exports, a country loses jobs, and goes deeper in debt.

OBAMA: “When I took office, I decided we could rethink the way we do trade in a way that actually works for working Americans. … If I didn’t think this was the right thing to do for working families, I would not be fighting for it. If any agreement undercuts working families, I won’t sign it.

“Trust me” is the message. But actual working Americans would do well to remember the expression, “fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me.” During Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, during which he told labor audiences he’d renegotiate NAFTA, his top campaign aide told the Canadian foreign ministry not to worry because he was only saying that to get elected. Once in the White House, Obama succeeded in pushing Congress to ratify agreements with Korea, Colombia, and Panama that had been negotiated by George W. Bush. And he continued the TPP talks that were begun under the previous administration.

OBAMA: “NAFTA was passed 20 years ago. That was a different agreement. This agreement actually fixes some of what was wrong with NAFTA by making labor and environmental provisions actually enforceable.”

NAFTA had side agreements with meaningless labor and environmental measures. With TPP, the meaningless measures are INSIDE the agreement. How meaningless? The TPP environment chapter leaked in early 2014 would set up an elaborate process for consultation and arbitration, but without any penalty if the government doesn’t implement the agreed-upon action plan. The labor provisions haven’t been leaked, but in all likelihood they’re equally weak.

[See the president’s full speech here.]

Riot police greet several young protesters at Nike World Headquarters May 8 as CEO Mark Parker welcomes President Barack Obama.
Riot police greet protesters outside Nike World Headquarters May 8 while inside, CEO Mark Parker welcomes President Barack Obama. (Photo courtesy Oregon Fair Trade Campaign)

1 COMMENT

  1. Obama’s been lying since the ’08 campaign–about everything. Then it was his promise to filibuster the FISA Amendments Act if it gave immunity to the telecom companies that helped the W regime commit thousands of felonies by spying on people without warrants. Not only didn’t he filibuster, but he voted for it–with immunity!

    Next lie was promising a public option for Obamacare. He negotiated, in secret, with the insurance industry and promised them there would be no public option while telling the rest of us he was working on it for the next nine months, until Obamacare passed WITHOUT a public option.

    He DID tell the truth about expanding the war in Afghanistan, but then he lied by telling people that HE had ended the war in Iraq when W had made the deal to end it and Obama tried–unsuccessfully–to bully Iraq’s leader into continuing the war.

    He went on to “look forward,” past his legal obligation to prosecute the torturers that ran the program under W, under both the US Code and the international Convention Against Torture, which is, as all ratified treaties are, the “supreme law of the land,” according to the Constitution.

    He somehow was unable to prosecute a single banker for destroying 43% of the wealth of black families through mortgage fraud and pushing them into taking subprime mortgages when their incomes didn’t require that. (see http://www.peri.umass.edu/681/ for some details on the theft)

    Obama made a big deal about former AG Eric Holder’s great work for racial equality, as well as his successor Loretta Lynch’s. But the truth is, you can’t be working for racial equality when you explicitly help banks steal from black folks (and Hispanic folks, as well). Lynch, btw, helped the bank HSBC get away with helping drug cartels and terrorist-associated banks launder money. What heroes of racial equality are our first African American president and our first two African American AGs. Yay!

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