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Rangel and Levin Unveil New Trade Policy for America Plan incorporates changes to strengthen pending FTAs and regain bipartisan consensus
WASHINGTON, DC – House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles B.
Rangel (D-NY), and Trade Subcommittee Chairman Sander Levin (D-MI), today
unveiled “A New Trade Policy for America,” to improve pending free trade
agreements and allow for bipartisan support in the House.
“We are on the brink of restoring bipartisanship to American trade
policy,” said Chairman Rangel. “The policies we’ve outlined today should
send a clear message that this Congress wants trade, but we want trade that
works for all Americans.”
“We must use trade as a tool to shape globalization and spread its
benefits more broadly,” urged Trade Subcommittee Chairman Sander M. Levin.
“Congress, and this Democratic Majority, is reasserting its
constitutional authority to stand up for U.S. businesses, workers, and farmers
in the global marketplace.”
Specifically, the policy calls for the United States Trade Representative
(USTR) to:
- Require countries to adopt, maintain and enforce basic international
labor standards in their domestic laws and practices – not merely “enforce their
own laws.”
- Promote sustainable development and combat global warming by
requiring countries to implement and enforce common Multilateral Environmental
Agreements, and address illegal logging of mahogany in Peru.
- Re-establish a fair balance between promoting access to medicines in
developing countries and protecting pharmaceutical innovation.
- Promote U.S. national security by protecting operations at U.S.
ports.
- Ensure that trade agreement accords “no greater rights” to foreign
investors in the U.S. than to U.S. investors.
The Proposal also puts these pending FTA issues into the broader context and
addresses a number of other key issues (including the pending negotiations with
South Korea) that would set trade policy on the right track.
A summary of the proposal is
attached.
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