Before concluding its national convention in Los Angeles this week, the membership of the AFL-CIO adopted a resolution calling for a new approach to global trade and summoned a collective threat that it might actively oppose the controversial Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement that has been pushed by President Obama and will soon be put before Congress.
Describing the global trade regime represented by secretive trade deals like the TPP as a system that promotes the “rise in corporate power at the expense of working people,” the union resolution argues the history of so-called “free trade” agreements (FTAs) shows that regional agreements like NAFTA and various bilateral deals have fueled the profits of companies who “outsource and offshore” jobs while suppressing the “wages and standard of living” of average workers.
“So long as the TPP appears poised to promote the rights of the 1%—rather than shared gains from trade—we, along with our international labor movement and civil society partners, will oppose its adoption and implementation, devoting resources to create a national campaign,” reads the resolution.
However, even though that language stands as a strong statement against the status quo concerning international trade, it does not go so far as to declare the AFL-CIO will necessarily launch a full blown campaign to block the deal in Washington.
As Celeste Drake, trade policy specialist with the AFL-CIO, told Politico in an interview, the resolution cannot be construed as an official and complete “statement in opposition — yet.”
According to Politico:
And speaking of Colombia, it was union leader James P. Hoffa, president of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, this week who voiced admiration for trade unionists, farmers, and other Colombian workers for marching against the devastating economic impacts that the implemented Colombia/US FTA has created in their country in recent years.
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