FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 24, 2008
Contact: Alci Maldonado
Phone: 571-276-3109
OP-ED By George Allen: Pass
Colombia Free Trade Agreement
Now
Below
please find an extremely well
written and well thought out
opion piece by George Allen,
former Virginia Senator and
Governor and founding member of
the RNHA National Advisory
Board. In the piece, Governor
Allen makes a powerful case for
Congress to pass the Colombia
Free Trade Agreement as soon as
possible. We must continue to
pressure congressional
leadership, especially Speaker
Pelosi, to allow this important
agreement to come to a vote.
Please do your part to help our
economy, our national security
and our strongest ally in Latin
America; contact Speaker
Pelosi's office and say “Stop
the political ploys and pass the
U.S.-Colombia Free Trade
Agreement, Now”. Below is the
contact information for Speaker
Pelosi. Let your voice be heard
for the best interests of our
nation.
Allen: Pass Colombia Free Trade
Agreement now
By George Allen
www.insight-report.com
April 23, 2008
The U.S.-Colombia Free Trade
Agreement (CFTA) will benefit
the people of both America and
Colombia and must be passed by
Congress without political
posturing.
Recently, President Bush sent a
letter to Congress to implement
an American free trade agreement
with Colombia. The pact would
help create more jobs in the
United States by opening
Colombian markets to our
agricultural, manufactured
products and services. The
agreement would also help
Colombia improve its economy and
strengthen its democracy.
The agreement would allow the
United States to export numerous
products to Colombia duty-free
and allow Colombian exports to
continue to enter the United
States without tariffs.
Currently, American products
exported to Colombia have
tariffs of 35 percent for
non-agricultural goods and even
higher for agricultural
products. The CFTA will make
American products as accessible
to Colombians as Colombian
products are to America by
eliminating tariffs on more than
80 percent of American exports
of industrial and consumer
goods.
Exports account for almost half
of all economic growth in the
United States. The CFTA will
stimulate the slowing economy by
increasing American exports to
Colombia by $1.1 billion
annually. More than 9,000
American businesses are involved
in trade with Colombia. This
means freer trade with Colombia
will increase sales and create
more high-paying jobs. The CFTA
will also benefit the American
agriculture, construction,
medical and scientific sectors
that rely on products exported
to Colombia. Key products in
these areas would be acquired
duty-free. Farmers would also
benefit if expensive exports
like beef, cotton, soybeans and
fruit are exported to Colombia
without tariffs. The National
Association of Manufacturers
President John Engler urged
passage of the CFTA saying it
“will mean more jobs in the U.S.
and an increase of $2.5 billion
in economic growth in a time our
economy needs a boost.”
The Colombia Free Trade
Agreement goes beyond economic
growth for both Colombia and the
United States: it will improve
American national security by
bolstering a strategic ally in
the war on terror. Colombian
President Uribe has been a
courageous leader who is
attempting to provide economic
stability and democratic
freedoms to the Colombian
people. His government has
worked fervently to put an end
to drugs, crime and terror.
Since 2002, the crime rate has
been dramatically cut in half
and the cocaine production has
declined by 30 percent. Great
strides have also been made to
combat the problem of human
trafficking. President Uribe has
accomplished this by
demobilizing tens of thousands
of paramilitary groups. He has
established an independent
prosecutors unit and created a
special program that protects
labor activists. Violence
against members of labor unions
has diminished significantly.
The government has also worked
to reduce poverty by 20 percent
since 2002. There is no doubt
that Colombia’s economic and
social progress will be
strengthened with the passage of
CFTA.
Unfortunately, Congressional
Democrats have stalled
consideration of the agreement.
Many Democrats, such as
presidential aspirants Hillary
Clinton and Barack Obama,
believe the trade agreement does
not extend enough privileges to
Colombian labor activists, and
that it does not alleviate the
country’s problem of crime. But
what these Democrats fail to
realize is that by stalling the
legislation, they will only
weaken the Colombian economy and
thwart the democratic ideals
currently being formed.
Furthermore, Venezuelan
authoritarian Hugo Chavez gets a
kick out of U.S. Congressional
dawdling, obstruction and
opposition.
With all the partisan political
posturing in a presidential
election year, how will this
passage occur? The Democratic
presidential candidates and
Congressional leaders have taken
anti-free trade positions to
assuage the strong, adamant
demands of labor union leaders.
If the Colombian Free Trade
Agreement is not passed in the
next few months, then it will
need to pass after the November
elections in a “lame duck”
session to avoid alienating
Democratic Party factions.
Indeed, by the end of this year,
Congress must pass the U.S. free
trade agreements with Korea,
Panama and Colombia. Each of
these agreements benefits
American job growth and allows
access to foreign markets of
good friends and allies of
American goods and services. By
passing the CFTA, America will
also be helping a friend in need
and demonstrating worldwide
support. Republicans and
Democrats alike should unite to
pass this beneficial agreement
sooner, rather than later.
-George Allen, former Governor
of and Senator from Virginia, is
currently the President of
George Allen Strategies and
serves as the Reagan Ranch
Presidential Scholar. To learn
more, visit
www.georgeallen.com.
The
mission of the Republican
National Hispanic Assembly is to
build a membership organization
to foster the principles of the
Republican Party in the Hispanic
community, provide Hispanic
Americans with a forum to play
an influential role in local,
state, and national Party
activities, increase the number
of Hispanic Republican elected
officials, and create and
maintain a network of Hispanic
Republican leaders.