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- <text id=94TT1409>
- <title>
- Oct. 17, 1994: Politics:Trickery Wins Over Trade
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 17, 1994 Sex in America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 34
- Trickery Wins Over Trade
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Business leaders have dreams of conquering new markets, but
- they bridle as Newt Gingrich delays one of history's most ambitious
- acts of economic legislation
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy/Washington--With reporting by Janice Castro/New York, Julie Johnson and
- Adam Zagorin/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It is not often that Washington inspires American business
- leaders to rise from their seats and dream out loud about the
- economic frontiers that suits and pols can conquer together.
- But the prospect that Congress was coming closer last week to
- approving the new global trade treaty--one of the most far-reaching
- acts of economic legislation in U.S. history--had the chief
- economist for one of the nation's biggest food exporters talking
- the language of Manifest Destiny. "We're going to grow more
- grain. We're going to grow more beef. We're going to be slaughtering
- more hogs. We're going to grow more poultry. We're gonna get
- that European market!" said Dick Gady of ConAgra.
- </p>
- <p> Gady had meat on his mind. The Clinton Administration had visions
- of 300,000 new jobs at home by 2004. But instead, members of
- Congress did what they have been doing a lot lately: they obstructed
- for the sake of obstructing. For months, House Republican whip
- Newt Gingrich had assured White House officials in private that
- he would vote for GATT, the General Agreement on Tariffs and
- Trade, which, according to the White House, could mean the equivalent
- of a $750 billion worldwide tax cut over the next 10 years through
- the reduction in the prices of imported goods. Sure, Gingrich
- had helped kill Clinton's health-care plan and nearly prevented
- an ambitious crime bill from becoming law. Just last week he
- derailed a minimalist lobbying-reform bill, largely because
- Democrats were for it. But all that was obstructionism as usual.
- When it came to a trade pact that was seven years in the making,
- the part-time history professor longed to be a statesman.
- </p>
- <p> That incarnation will have to wait. Less than 24 hours before
- the House of Representatives was set to act on the treaty, Gingrich
- blocked a vote until after the November elections. He juggled
- several excuses for his U-turn in public, but his chief explanation
- in private was that Ross Perot made him do it. Gingrich lamented
- to Democratic leaders that the Texas industrialist was bombarding
- him with telephone calls last Tuesday. Apparently that was enough
- for Gingrich to cave in. "I know," Gingrich told the leaders
- afterward, "that there's some distrust on your side about me."
- That, a Democratic staffer said later, was "the understatement
- of the year."
- </p>
- <p> Gingrich and Speaker Tom Foley agreed to return to Washington
- in November to vote on the legislation, and insisted that they
- can pass it easily. But if voters ever needed a reason to seethe
- at a do-little Congress, they need look no further than its
- refusal to take action on GATT. If carried out, the treaty would
- place the equivalent of $1,700 into the bank account of the
- average American working family during a 10-year period, according
- to a White House estimate. While most Americans might not yet
- appreciate the benefits of the agreement, the latest delay dismayed
- industry executives whose companies stand to gain most immediately
- from its adoption. "This is the opportunity of the century,"
- sighed Dwayne Andreas, the chairman of Archer Daniels Midland,
- the vast Illinois-based food-products and grain company. "This
- is the biggest step toward free trade that has ever been taken
- in the history of the world." Said Maurice ("Hank") Greenberg,
- chairman of American International Group, the giant insurance
- company: "If the United States Congress fails to ratify the
- Uruguay Round, it will set back any hope of financial services
- being liberalized." Worse, he said, it would "tarnish" the image
- of his company. "We have been representing the argument in favor
- of freer trade, and here our own country has failed to support
- that viewpoint! Our credibility would be impeached."
- </p>
- <p> The setback was equally unsettling to the White House. Since
- taking office, Bill Clinton has consistently been successful
- as a champion of increased foreign trade, one of the few areas
- where he has earned his stripes as a New Democrat. He first
- toughened George Bush's strategy toward closed Japanese markets
- and, after some hesitation, took on his own party's left wing
- when he fought for--and won--congressional approval of the
- North American Free Trade Agreement.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's reasons for bucking party doctrine and backing free
- trade were both practical and political: in a tight fiscal environment,
- a President has few opportunities to stimulate the economy.
- Creating export-related jobs, which pay 17% more than the average
- U.S. job, is one way to accomplish this, and the President was
- reminded last week of how urgently he needs to do it. The Census
- Bureau reported that median household income fell last year
- $312, or 1%, while the number of Americans living in poverty--below $14,763 a year for a family of four--grew 1.3 million
- and now accounts for 15% of the population. This news came as
- a surprise to those economists who counted about 2 million new
- jobs last year and pronounced the economy to be in its second
- full year of expansion following the 1990-91 recession. But
- it does help explain why surly voters are preparing to take
- out their frustration on congressional Democrats next month.
- </p>
- <p> For timing reasons only, then, the delay on GATT was perhaps
- the most wounding of Clinton's legislative defeats. Nonetheless,
- it did expose a weakness in Clinton's trade crusade. Effective
- as he is at negotiating tougher agreements, the President has
- had trouble holding together the legislative coalitions he needs
- to get them approved. Republicans have generally supported his
- effort because free trade has long been a G.O.P. first principle.
- But as the 103rd Congress ended last week with what White House
- chief of staff Leon Panetta called a "cry of anguish," most
- Republicans were willing to abandon years of doctrine in order
- to score some political points. And, as was the case on health-care
- and campaign-finance reform, the President's own party helped
- derail its leader's program: more than 75 Democrats refused
- to support GATT, and 50 more were wavering. One Democratic congressional
- aide watching the votes erode marveled at how powerless the
- Clinton White House was to stop it. "They are," he said, "uniquely
- capable of losing the unlosable."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, in a city that has perfected the tactic of trading
- long-term gain for short-term points, Gingrich's maneuver struck
- many as the most cynical they had seen in years. For months
- he worked behind the scenes as a pure free trader, insisting
- to Administration officials at every turn that he supported
- the treaty. Indeed, during the summer he won many changes in
- the measure as it was being drafted. He convinced the White
- House that U.S. participation in the World Trade Organization,
- a powerful new international body formed to arbitrate trade
- disputes, should be subject to a congressional vote every five
- years. Then, when Home Depot, the hardware superstore chain
- based in his Georgia district, objected to a Clinton proposal
- that would have increased taxes on inventory, Gingrich fought
- to have it removed. "We did that too," sighed an Administration
- official.
- </p>
- <p> Gingrich's full immersion in the details of GATT made it a little
- hard for the White House to swallow his sudden complaint last
- week that the legislation required further study. So did his
- sudden objection to a provision that would reduce licensing
- fees for three cellular-telephone companies. White House officials
- maintained last week that Gingrich knew about the provision
- all along. Yet he balked because, he said, it favored the Washington
- Post Co., which owns a controlling interest in one of the cellular
- operations and was therefore an example of the special breaks
- contained in the thousand-page legislation that deserved further
- study. The unnecessary delay left even some Republicans appalled.
- "Pandering to protectionism--and to Ross Perot," said Bill
- Kristol, who runs the Project for the Republican Future, "is
- bad for the Republican Party and the United States."
- </p>
- <p> Some Republicans saw in Gingrich's delay a possible strategy
- designed to push Clinton into the hands of his party's left
- wing next year. Here's how that thinking goes: Clinton will
- have to ask Republicans and business interests for help with
- the trade treaty after the election, but that courtship will
- leave his partners on the left feeling jilted, and they will
- demand favors of their own. Their IOUs will make it more difficult
- for Clinton to govern from the center next year, when the 104th
- Congress turns more moderate. As Wayne Berman, who helped manage
- trade issues in the Bush Administration, put it, "The Republicans
- are going to pass the GATT, but they want to make Clinton bleed
- for it."
- </p>
- <p> For his part, Clinton tried to appear perplexed by all the maneuvering.
- "I've never come to the end of a full congressional session
- before," he said, "so for all I know this often happens." Such
- confusion might be charming if it weren't so disingenuous. For
- there is another, darker scenario possible: the election results
- could make it harder for Clinton to win passage of the measure
- in November, which could kill the treaty altogether. Even if
- the Democrats don't lose the Senate and the House outright,
- Republicans are virtually certain to gain effective control
- of both chambers, particularly on trade issues.
- </p>
- <p> White House officials acknowledge that the Republicans could
- return to Washington after Thanksgiving and declare that the
- lame ducks are no longer legitimately able to act in the public
- interest--particularly on a pact as vital as GATT. Better
- to wait until the new Congress is installed, they might say,
- than let an old one make any more mistakes. Add to the mix the
- usual round of talk-show shrillness, a few salvos from Perot
- and the usual White House miscues, and all bets are off. "Anything
- could happen," admits an Administration official, "because the
- future of GATT is in Republican hands."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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