Wednesday January 2, 2008
 Barack to the Future? Obama embraces failed NAFTA-style policies of past
 
Barack to the future? More like back to NAFTA-style globalization

In the fall of 2004, Barack Obama made a memorable campaign appearance at sun-dappled Washington Park in Milwaukee, talking movingly about the bleak future of Maytag workers with whom he’d met in Galesburg, Illinois, whose jobs were heading off to Mexico.

In other speeches, he has often spoken of organizing laid-off steelworkers on Chicago’s South Side who had seen their futures crumble before their eyes.

But during the current presidential primary, Obama has essentially abandoned those Maytag workers, the Chicago steelworkers, and millions of other vulnerable Americans and latched on to the corporate agenda where investor rights are enshrined and decent wages and environmental conditions sacrificed.
CHANGE=CORPORATE STATUS QUO?
Obama has apparently decided that the central theme of his campaign–"change"–actually translates into more of the status quo on corporate globalization and the outsourcing of US jobs. This status quo means letting corporations re-shape the world into a global plantation through more NAFTA-style trade agreements like the one just adopted with Peru.

The Bush-initiated deal with Peru, which contains no meaningful new protections for worker rights and the environment, was supported by both Obama and Hillary Clinton, although neither were present to case votes. (See David Sirota’s comments summarizing Columbia Law Prof. Mark Barenberg’s detailed analysis of the spurious claims of solid new worker protections in the Peru agreement.)
Pushed from the left by primary opponents like John Edwards and Dennis Kucinich, Obama claims to have a solution for victims of corporate flight to Mexico and China: more "retraining" and educational opportunities. But as long as corporations retain the unilateral power to relocate jobs and thereby devastate entire communities, and as long as the government provides protections and incentives for such corporate behavior, more training and education hold no certainty of employment.

Still, the New York Times heaped praised on Obama in this 12/23/07 editorial: "Barack Obama has offered the most resistance to the easy path of blaming imports from foreign countries for the woes of the American middle class. “Global trade is not going away, technology is not going away, the Internet is not going away,” he said in New Hampshire. “And that means enormous opportunities, but also means more dislocations.”

But in reality, Obama’s point in New Hampshire was absurd. No one is upset with the Internet or other technological advances. But millions of Americans, like the 73% who oppose outsourcing of US jobs according to a 2006 Pew Research poll, are alarmed about corporate flight. They recognize that "global trade" is most often a code phrase for US firms "exporting jobs" to Mexico and China and "importing" finished products from their overseas plants.

NAFTA alone has been responsible for more than 879,000 job losses as of 2003, according to the Economic Policy Institute.  Yet the remedies favored by both Barack Obama and the Times editorialists–more formal education and enhanced retraining of dislocated workers–are proving to be totally empty consolation prizes for workers with insecure futures.

 In this era of the greatest polarization of wealth that the US has seen since the 1920’s, working families deserve a better answer. We cannot continue to watch passively while the richest 1% earn an astonishing 22 of all (pre-tax) US income, while the bottom 40% combined makes just 12.5%.

As for piling on more university degrees to add job security, Princeton economist Prof. Alan Blinder argues that even Phds are now vulnerable to watching their jobs being sent overseas. Blinder estimates that up to 42 million professional jobs are "highly off-shorable" to low-pay sites like China, India, and elsewhere. (Wall St. Journal, 3/28/07)

On the retraining front, it is obvious that neither the Times editorialists nor Obama’s staff have bothered to read Times economics writer Louis Uchitelle’s superb book, The Disposable American. Uchitelle documents that even with retraining, 73 out of every 100 victims of mass layoffs face substantial losses in their earnings or are forced to retire early.

Obama initially appeared to be a voice of fresh thinking in American politics and the personal embodiment of immense changes in America’s structures for opportunity. But with his embrace of corporate-designed global trade –like the new Peru agreement– and his meaningless "solution" of retraining for non-existent family-supporting jobs, Obama has turned his back both on the very displaced workers he formerly organized and on any credible claim that he represents a "change" in the global economic order. ##30##

 
 


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I'm teaching in Labor Studies at Penn State and the University of Illinois in on-line classes. I've been continuing with my work as freelance writer, with my immediate aim to complete a book on corporate media coverage of globalization (tentatively titled The Giant Sucking Sound: How Corporate Media Swallowed the Myth of Free Trade.) I write frequently for Z, The Progressive Magazine's on-line site, The Progressive Populist, Madison's Isthmus alternative weekly, and a variety of publications including Yes!, The Progressive, Foreign Policy in Focus, and several websites. I've been writing a blog on labor issues for workinginthesetimes.com, turning out over 300 pieces in the past four years.My work specializes in corporate globalization, labor, and healthcare reform... I've been a progressive activist since the age of about 17, when I became deeply affected by the anti-war and civil rights movements. I entered college at University of Wisconsin Milwaukee just days after watching the Chicago police brutalize anti-war demonstrators at the Democratic Convention of 1968. I was active in a variety of "student power" and anti-war activities, highlighted by the May, 1970 strike after the Nixon's invastion of Cambodia and the massacres at Kent State and Jackson State. My senior year was capped by Nixon's bombing of Haiphong Harbor and the occupation of a university building, all in the same week I needed to finish 5-6 term papers to graduate, which I managed somehow. My wife Carolyn Winter, whom I met in the Wisconsin Alliance, and I have been together since 1975, getting officially married 10/11/81. Carolyn, a native New Yorker, has also been active for social justice since her youth (she attended the famous 1963 Civil Rights march where Dr. King gave his "I have a dream speech"). We have two grown children, Lane (with wife Elaine and 11-year-old grandson Zachary, who introduced poker to his classmates during recess)  living in Chicago and Rachel (who with her husband Michael have the amazing Talia Ruth,5, who can define "surreptitious" for you) living in Asbury Park, NJ. My sister Francie lives down the block from me. I'm a native of the once-heavily unionized industrial city of Racine, Wis. (which right-wingers sneeringly labeled "Little Moscow" during the upheavals of the 1930's), and both my grandfathers were industrial workers and Socialists. On my father's side, my grandfather was fired three times for Socialist or union activity. His family lost their home at one point during the Depression. My mom's father was a long-time member of UAW Local 72 at American Motors, where he worked for more than 30 years. Coming from impoverished families, my parents met through  a very low-cost form of recreation: Racine's Hiking Club.

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