honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, June 13, 2008

McCain touts value of free trade

By Jim Kuhnhenn
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., greets supporters during a town hall-style campaign event in Nashua, N.H.

LM OTERO | Associated Press

spacer spacer

NEW YORK — John McCain is bullish on free trade. The country isn't. Yet McCain doesn't miss many opportunities to reproach Democratic presidential rival Barack Obama's emerging opposition to international trade deals.

McCain is such an avowed free trader that he is scheduled to address the Economic Club of Canada next week in Ottawa to assert his support for the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Such an appearance helps McCain burnish his foreign policy credentials. But trade can also carry great risks, especially in election battlegrounds such as Ohio and Pennsylvania where many voters blame trade deals for job losses.

Canadian officials are watching the election attentively, too. Obama, who four years ago declared NAFTA had been beneficial, recently talked about reopening NAFTA to strengthen enforcement of labor and environmental standards.

McCain has been thumping Obama on that, arguing that such a step not only would hurt trade, but undermine the credibility of the United States abroad.

"You know what message that sends? That no agreement is sacred to him," McCain told reporters yesterday in Boston.

McCain's trip to Canada was announced Wednesday by the Economic Club of Canada.

An AP-Yahoo News poll conducted mostly in April found that most Americans have a negative view of trade agreements.

Of those polled, 64 percent said that increasing trade between the United States and other countries has hurt the economy, while just 22 percent said it has helped.

Moreover, 54 percent opposed the federal government negotiating new agreements with other countries, as opposed to 43 percent who favored more agreements, though Republicans tended to be evenly split on the question.

McCain clearly recognizes the public antipathy, particularly in some Midwestern states where the economy is reeling. "They're hurting there in Ohio," he told fundraisers in New York earlier this week. "It's been tough and it's been hard."

But McCain has been pushing expanded training and educational programs to help displaced workers prepare for new jobs.

McCain maintains that without free trade, American businesses would have even more difficulties.

"Our exports are one of the only bright spots in our whole economic picture, we all know that," he said earlier this week.

McCain also has been making a vigorous pitch for Congress to pass a new trade deal with Colombia, which Obama opposes.

The House blocked a vote on that pact, citing continued violence against organized labor in the country and differences with the Bush administration over how to help U.S. workers displaced by foreign competition.