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- <text id=93TT0108>
- <title>
- Oct. 25, 1993: Attention NAFTA Shoppers!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 25, 1993 All The Rage:Angry Young Rockers
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TRADE, Page 33
- Attention NAFTA Shoppers!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Trading favors: Clinton is not so much selling his trade pact
- with Mexico as he is buying it, with goodies for key lawmakers
- and special interests
- </p>
- <p>By MICHAEL DUFFY WASHINGTON--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett and Dan Goodgame/Washington
- </p>
- <p> It's hard to imagine that someone as freewheeling as Bill Clinton
- could become a disciplined guerrilla warrior. Yet the President
- has deliberately gone underground in his battle for congressional
- approval of the North American Free Trade Agreement. That pact,
- which would tear down most trade barriers between the U.S.,
- Mexico and Canada, is faring poorly under the damaging "air
- war" of television ads, talk-show appearances and telephone
- banks designed by labor unions and Ross Perot. So Clinton is
- fighting back in defilade--in the congressional districts
- of 100 undecided lawmakers whom he believes can be won over
- with special attention and favors.
- </p>
- <p> Laura Tyson, the top White House economist, was dispatched to
- Atlanta last Wednesday to drum up support for NAFTA among two
- groups of business leaders. Tyson's trip was designed, in part,
- to put pressure on Democratic Representative Buddy Darden and
- other members of the Georgia delegation who are still not sure
- how they will vote.
- </p>
- <p> Transportation Secretary Federico Pena spent Thursday in Baltimore,
- Maryland, touting the benefits NAFTA would shower on a dredging-equipment
- firm that exports 80% of its products overseas. Not coincidentally,
- Pena spoke not far from the home district of Representative
- Ben Cardin, another Democrat who remains undecided about NAFTA.
- </p>
- <p> Later that day, Treasury chief Lloyd Bentsen told Texas Instruments
- workers in Representative Sam Johnson's north Dallas district
- that the firm would add 2,000 jobs if NAFTA is approved. Johnson's
- vote too is up for grabs.
- </p>
- <p> Such targeted hits have helped Clinton halt the progress of
- anti-NAFTA forces since September and begin to pick off votes
- in the House of Representatives, where NAFTA faces a make-or-break
- vote Nov. 17. But a more important ingredient in this campaign
- is that Clinton himself has moved to a concerted "inside game"
- in which he concentrates less on public appearances than on
- behind-the-scenes lobbying. "We now have the momentum on our
- side," says Representative Bill Richardson, a key House vote
- counter. "I would not have said that two weeks ago."
- </p>
- <p> One sign of Clinton's seriousness is that the NAFTA campaign
- has taken on the frenzied quality of the previous do-or-die
- efforts on behalf of the budget and health care. Every Tuesday
- or Wednesday in the Roosevelt Room, Clinton meets for at least
- an hour with 10 to 20 undecided House members from both parties.
- The goal is to meet all waverers by the end of October. Once
- a week, Bentsen, Vice President Al Gore, Trade Representative
- Mickey Kantor and economics counselor Bob Rubin invite to Washington
- 100 business and opinion leaders--mostly handpicked by undecided
- House members--to learn more about the pact. Every visitor
- receives a follow-up note from the President and a call from
- someone in the NAFTA "war room."
- </p>
- <p> White House lobbyist Howard Paster, meanwhile, has drafted Cabinet
- officers into a "shadow whip" system aimed at turning the undecided
- around. On "even" weeks, agency chiefs meet with three undecided
- members; on "odd" weeks, they are deployed to at least one fence-sitter's
- congressional district to make speeches, attract local press
- and provide "cover" for the lawmaker to vote yes.
- </p>
- <p> The Cabinet chiefs are also gathering information on the handouts
- for which the holdouts might swap their votes. "We're not trading
- yet," said an Administration official. "But is the bazaar open?
- Absolutely."
- </p>
- <p> Most members are looking for concessions that would minimize
- the local impact of exports from Mexico. California lawmakers
- want to delay lifting the wine quota. Martin Frost of Texas
- is worried about flat-glass imports, and has asked for a study
- on how many jobs will be lost and won in his district. Republican
- Dan Miller is worried about the impact of Mexican produce on
- vegetable growers in his Florida district who specialize in
- the "winter tomatoes" that spruce up salads between late fall
- and early spring. "I've got a major tomato problem," said Miller
- last week. "I'd like to be for it," he said, but added, "I'm
- switching to leaning against."
- </p>
- <p> Not all the fence-sitters are getting what they want. A handful
- of lawmakers from districts that produce household broomcorns
- have been told they will get no help from the White House. On
- the other hand, Labor Secretary Robert Reich announced this
- week that the Administration will propose spending an additional
- $100 million over the next 18 months to workers who lose their
- jobs as a result of NAFTA--even though nearly everyone at
- the White House, including Clinton, opposes the idea as ineffective
- and thus a waste of money. And the White House is willing to
- redress problems that have nothing to do with Mexican imports:
- it is trying to earn a few votes in Pennsylvania and Ohio by
- promising to "adjust" steel imports with Japan.
- </p>
- <p> The dealing has some Republicans who favor NAFTA hinting that
- they might bolt. Last Friday Representative Tom Ewing of Illinois
- asked Clinton to forgo a new $5-a-seat tax on overseas air travel
- to help offset lost tariff revenues. New taxes, said Ewing,
- could be NAFTA's "death knell."
- </p>
- <p> But NAFTA's fate next month will probably turn on 20 votes among
- Congressmen from Florida and Louisiana, who insist that sugar
- and citrus producers in their districts should continue to be
- protected from free-market competition, and that U.S. consumers
- should be protected from buying less-expensive Mexican imports.
- The treaty provides for a 15-year adjustment period on sugar
- imports, but it also allows the Mexicans to export sugar freely
- after seven years if that nation has a surplus. Sugar-state
- lawmakers are worried that the Mexicans will substitute corn
- syrup and other sweeteners for domestic use and divert cane
- and beet sugar for export, thus creating an artificial surplus.
- "If it's not fixed," says Louisiana Senator John Breaux, " NAFTA
- cannot pass in the House. Period."
- </p>
- <p> Such adjustments in the name of free trade are frowned upon
- by free-traders, but that does not trouble the White House.
- "Trade agreements are never perfect," Tyson said last week.
- "They always require compromises and balancing of interests.
- So I don't think it undermines the principle of free trade."
- </p>
- <p> Besides, Clinton believes he had little choice. With less than
- four weeks left before the vote, House leaders say they have
- only 156 firm "aye" votes, a total that includes 93 Republicans.
- That leaves Clinton 62 votes short of victory. The count is
- a sad commentary on his Democratic Party: no one on Capitol
- Hill can recall the last time the opposition party was expected
- to provide more votes than the ruling party on a White House
- piece of legislation.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton will soon beef up the "outside game," making more NAFTA-specific
- speeches as the vote nears. This week he will be host of an
- "American Products-American Jobs" fair on the South Lawn, featuring
- workers who stand to benefit from NAFTA. White House officials
- say miniature versions of the event will be repeated in key
- members' districts in the coming weeks. It's a measure of the
- Administration's aggressiveness for the sake of NAFTA that Clinton
- quietly turned to former Bush aide Craig Fuller, now a vice
- president at Philip Morris, to organize the South Lawn affair.
- It is also a bit ironic: Fuller organized the 1992 Republican
- Convention in Houston that was designed to sink Clinton's campaign.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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