NEW YORK, June 13, 2008

McCain's Free Trade Support Carries Risks

Presumptive GOP Nominee Set To Assert Support For NAFTA

  • Play CBS Video Video Who's Leading The Veepstakes?

    Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain have begun the task of choosing a running mate. The choice for the number two spot can offer important insights into the candidate. Jeff Greenfield reports.

  • Video Candidates Spar Over Economy

    Barack Obama wants to protect Americans from amassing more credit card debt, while John McCain derided his plan for leading to higher taxes across the board. Susan Roberts reports.

  • Video Left Hook, Right Cross! 06-09-08

    Vice-Presidents! Who's on the radar now that we know it's a Barack Obama-John McCain head-to-head this November? Ramy Inocencio has your Hook.

  • Photo Essay John McCain

    Some call him a hero, some a maverick. Will Americans call him Mr. President?

  • Timeline McCain's Quest

    Mileposts in the Arizona senator's race for the GOP nomination and the presidency.

(AP)  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 Thursday 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. And he 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.

McCain said Thursday that the fate of the Colombian agreement goes beyond trade.

“It is an affirmation or a rejection of the cooperation, friendship and enormous support that the Colombian government and people have given us in trying to stem the flow of illegal drugs into the United States of America,” he said.

Asked if he was planning a trip to Colombia, McCain said his plans were in flux. “We're looking at a lot of different places that maybe I should go, so we have no definite plans,” he said.

Still, NAFTA is the most contentious and most recognized trade deal and it figured prominently during the Democratic primaries.

Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton both criticized NAFTA as they campaigned in Ohio, Pennsylvania and other industrial states where workers have lost jobs. Obama questioned whether Clinton had always opposed the trade agreement.

In his own 2004 Senate campaign in Illinois, Obama spoke of benefits to his state from NAFTA, though he also called for more aggressive trade protections for U.S. workers. Four years later, he declared, “I don't think NAFTA has been good for Americans, and I never have.”

But he came under scrutiny after a leaked Canadian diplomatic memo suggested one of his advisers told Canadian officials not to take Obama's campaign rhetoric against NAFTA too seriously.

The adviser, Austan Goolsbee, said his words during the meeting with Georges Rioux, Canada's consul general in Chicago, were misrepresented.

Canadian opposition member of Parliament Bob Rae said McCain's speech suggests Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government is playing favorites in the U.S. presidential contest.

“It's hard not to wonder what this is all about given the previous history of this story and I'm sure he would not have come unless he was told by the government of the day that it was a good idea,” Rae said. “It does put Canada in the middle of the campaign.”

By Jim Kuhnhenn
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment
by antoniof123 June 16, 2008 11:47 AM EDT
Prescott Bush was also a big fan of "free trade".

Posted by abbe91 at 08:18 AM : Jun 16, 2008

To the Nazi''s.

You have to hand it to the Republicans they keep kicking even after they knowl that America wants to stop this type of activity.

MaCain you are a poison to the Repulbicans or maybe you just drank to much yourself.
Reply to this comment
by abbe91 June 16, 2008 11:18 AM EDT

Prescott Bush was also a big fan of "free trade".
Reply to this comment
by kansas1946 June 16, 2008 3:15 AM EDT
(AP) 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.
*************************************

This is how crazy John McCain is. The majority of the country is very suspicious of these "free trade" deals, and yet he supports it, brings it up all of the time, and bashes Obama for being soft on free-trade. Frankly, Obama couldn''t buy that good of advertising. It is all in his favor and it doesn''t cost him a nickle. Go Obama.
Reply to this comment
by deacon20081 June 15, 2008 9:02 PM EDT
No
American
Fools
To
Ask.................Big Brother Speaks for us?
Reply to this comment
by wardoglrs June 14, 2008 11:35 PM EDT
Thats good info jack3213 were did you get the link if any?. I think its very clear that Obama & McCain are just the same old *** we been getting I hope Enough Americans will come together and throw out the Bums.
Time to fight back. Dr Paul has a new effort in play and I hope you will join.

http://www.campaignforliberty.com/
Reply to this comment
by jack3213 June 14, 2008 11:47 AM EDT
In a breakdown of top energy issues, you''ll find the GOP is in favor of more options for energy than the Democrats.

ANWR Exploration
House Republicans: 91% Supported
House Democrats: 86% Opposed

Coal-to-Liquid
House Republicans: 97% Supported
House Democrats: 78% Opposed

Oil Shale Exploration
House Republicans: 90% Supported
House Democrats: 86% Opposed

Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Exploration
House Republicans: 81% Supported
House Democrats: 83% Opposed

Refinery Increased Capacity
House Republicans: 97% Supported
House Democrats: 96% Opposed

That''s startling information. Look at that again. Put another way, the Republicans are opposed to grinding our economy to a halt due to soaring energy costs and the Democrats are in favor of shutting down our economy and way of life.

Reply to this comment
by downsteamjim June 13, 2008 10:32 PM EDT
To noloyalisti: You must love the economic policy found in Myanmar and Zimbabwe. Anti free trade is also alive in North Korea. To a dedicated Maxist, a starving population is no big deal.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti June 13, 2008 7:55 PM EDT
Look at who McSame''s friends are. Corporate lobbyists who have no value for human life. Neo con privatization conspiracists who never saw a war of conquest they didn''t like. Tax avoiding fascist oil corporations. The list of slime goes on and on.
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti June 13, 2008 7:12 PM EDT
Free trade is a lie. There is no free trade, it is a manipulated system to benefit multinational corporations at the expense of citizens and workers. The neo con men phrase it like that but it is just like Bushoccios Healthy Forests, Clean Skies, Fair Voting Act, No Child Left Behind and Free Trade Agreements.

It is a government corporate conspiracy to do exactly the opposite of the titles. Fascist Pigs!!!!
Reply to this comment

Exclusive Webshow

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie." Watch Now

  • MOST POPULAR
Discussed
  1. House Passes Landmark Health Care Bill

    (478 recent comments)

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: