WASHINGTON, July 14, 2008

McCain: Unapologetic NAFTA Supporter

Republican Tells National Council of La Raza He Rejects "False Virtues Of Isolationism"

    • Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., campaigns at the San Diego Convention Center during the National Council of La Raza keynote luncheon in San Diego, Calif., Monday, July 14, 2008.

      Republican presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., campaigns at the San Diego Convention Center during the National Council of La Raza keynote luncheon in San Diego, Calif., Monday, July 14, 2008.  (AP)

    • Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks at the National Council of La Raza Convention in San Diego, Calif., Sunday, July 13, 2008.

      Democratic presidential candidate, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., speaks at the National Council of La Raza Convention in San Diego, Calif., Sunday, July 13, 2008.  (AP)

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(AP)  Republican presidential candidate John McCain in one of his strongest endorsements of free trade called himself "an unapologetic supporter of NAFTA," an agreement that many Americans feel has cost them jobs.

"I reject the false virtues of economic isolationism," McCain told the National Council of La Raza, a major Hispanic organization. "Any confident, competent country and its government should embrace competition," he said. "It makes us stronger."

The Arizona senator has often defended free trade, but his speech Monday was among his most detailed and full-throated commentaries.

"Lowering barriers to trade creates more and better jobs, and higher wages," he said. "It makes goods more affordable for low- and middle-income consumers."

Citing his recent visit to Colombia and Mexico, McCain said he understands "how vitally important it is to the prosperity and security of our country to strengthen our trade, investment and diplomatic ties to other countries in our hemisphere." He said he fully supports the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the Central American Free Trade Agreement and the Colombian Free Trade Agreement.

Congress approved the NAFTA agreement with Mexico and Canada in 1993 and the agreement with six Central American nations in 2005, but has blocked the agreement with Colombia.

"I believe a hemispheric free trade agreement is a worthy and necessary goal whose time has come," he said of a proposal he unveiled during the campaign.

Acknowledging that some Americans do lose jobs "to foreign competition," McCain said he has proposed "a comprehensive reform of our unemployment insurance and worker retraining programs."

"And for workers of a certain age who have lost a job that won't come back," he said, "if they move rapidly to a new job we'll help make up the difference in wages between their old job and the new one."

McCain's Democratic opponent, Barack Obama, has been much cooler to free trade agreements and wants to revisit some aspects of NAFTA.

McCain said he has earned the trust of Hispanic voters by championing an immigration reform bill that nearly killed his presidential bid. Obama, he said, failed to take a similar stand on the politically explosive issue of illegal immigration.

Obama has criticized McCain for turning against his own immigration bill.

Reminding the group that Congress failed twice in the past three years to overhaul the nation's immigration laws, McCain said he did not want to try a third time until the government can "prove we have the resources to secure our borders and use them."

McCain said the two failed bills, which he supported, would have dealt "practically and humanely" with illegal immigrants "without excusing the fact they came here illegally or granting them privileges before those who have been waiting their turn outside the country."

Critics of the 2006 bill he backed, however, said it would have granted just such privileges to some illegal immigrants. It would have allowed those who have been in the country five years or more to remain, continue working and eventually become legal permanent residents and citizens after paying at least $3,250 in fines and fees and back taxes and learning English.

Obama told the La Raza gathering Sunday that he supports up to a 50-percent tax credit for small businesses providing health insurance to their employees, a program he hopes has special appeal to Hispanics and other minority groups struggling for a toehold in the U.S. economy.

©MMVIII, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by johnmcsame July 16, 2008 1:17 AM EDT
johnlameshame is obssessed with muslims because his daughter is married to a muslim boy ...and john is p-issed off of the fact that his grand childrens are going to muslims...and he is dying inside every day...

Posted by pointbreak14 at 09:32 PM : Jul 15, 2008

pointbreak14, thanks for making my point. As a muslim yourself you should know. If my daughter married a muslim man, her children would be muslims. There is no two ways about it. I noticed the thought that they could be brought us as Christians or Atheist did not occur to you because the whole world knows that the children of a muslim man automatically become muslims.

It was a slip of the tongue but you proofed by point that Obama was born a muslim. Most of the liberals who post on this blog are ignorant about this. They probably don''''t know any muslims.
Reply to this comment
by l00ker July 15, 2008 10:52 PM EDT
Wonder what McPain, Bush and Obama even, is going to do about all of young teens who can''t find summer work, or part time after school evening work. If you go into McDonalds and Burger King, where youth employment is part of the American experience, you can barely get your order taken correctly, with all of these illegals who can barely speak english. Moreover, you are more than led to wonder what name you''re being called in spanish, while your order is being taken and filled. As dear old Dave - Wendys founder - said, where''s the beef?
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by l00ker July 15, 2008 10:37 PM EDT
We had all better WAKE UP AND accept the idea that we are on our own. The people in Washington Dem. and Rep. alike do not have our best interest in mind. They are only interested in lining their own pockets, and taking all they can get.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Posted by Joan1v at 03:21 PM : Jul 15, 2008



Indeed, and all we have to do is rid ourselves of these parasitic racketeers, and we''ll all be just shy of home free. If you want something done?...
Reply to this comment
by Stratmaster7 July 15, 2008 10:31 PM EDT
McCain is on the wrong side of every freaking issue. I wonder if he is willing to take a manufacturing job for $1.50 an hour to show how "competitive" Americans can be with foreign laborers?
Reply to this comment
by joan1v July 15, 2008 6:21 PM EDT

We had all better WAKE UP AND accept the idea that we are on our own. The people in Washington Dem. and Rep. alike do not have our best interest in mind. They are only interested in lining their own pockets, and taking all they can get.
Reply to this comment
by six-six-seis July 15, 2008 5:03 PM EDT
Bring on the Amero, quick..
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 July 15, 2008 3:20 PM EDT
I remember back in the ''90''s when we had our globalization training at work - we were told that the white male would disappear from the workforce by 2010.

I remember turning to the guy next to me - and, noticing that he wasn''t white, I looked to the nearest white guy I could find, who was sitting across the room. I looked at him and asked, "Where are you planning to go?" He just shrugged.

Well - HERE WE ARE.

Gez they were right.
Reply to this comment
by johnstossel July 15, 2008 2:53 PM EDT
If McSame worked for a living he would be singing a different tune. hungry 1968 hit the nail on the head!!
Reply to this comment
by txgrouch2006 July 15, 2008 1:36 PM EDT
This election has come down to Archie Bunker versus Steve Urkel.

Archie is - well, just plain Archie.

Urkel is smart, and he means well. But, geez, he needs to get a little older. And quick.

Whaddaya gonna do?

I''m voting for Urkel. I''d rather take my chances on someone who can get over being too young, than have someone who will ALWAYS be Archie.

You know what I mean?

Reply to this comment
by indyvet66 July 15, 2008 1:17 PM EDT
Are you better off today than you were 8 years ago?

Senator McCain voted with President Bush 95% of the time during the past eight years. So much for being a Maverick.

If you like President Bush and think he has done a good job, then John McCain is your man.

If you''re one of many Americans who thinks that the war in Iraq was a mistake or believe that the Republicans have run the economy into the ground and think that the chaos George Bush and John McCain unleashed in our foreign affairs has something to do with the price of gas at the pump... then you have Bush%u2019s partner John McCain to thank.

No one worked harder than McCain to get Bush elected then reelected.

And no one originally promoted and advocated for the Iraq war than John McCain. John McCain%u2019s original sin was supporting Bush and going to war in the first place. That decision cost of more than $1 Trillion and 4,000 American lives. The economy is in big trouble and McCain now wants to perpetuate Bush%u2019s tax cuts for the wealthy.

Again, if you like the results of the past 8 years, then vote for McCain, because you will get more of the same for the next 8 years.

So, are you better off today than you were in 2000?

If not, then I respectfully suggest you vote for Barack Obama in 2008.
Reply to this comment
by hungry1968 July 15, 2008 12:30 PM EDT
McCain: Unapologetic NAFTA Supporter
Republican Tells National Council of La Raza He Rejects "False Virtues Of Isolationism"





Those "false virtues of isolationism", would keep terrorists and illegal aliens out, PERMANENTLY correct our trade imbalances, keep us out of unnecessary wars, keep us from dealing with rogue terrorist nations like Israel and the UAE - which of course - would keep us safe from terrorism)....


I don''t see too many "false virtues" in protecting your nation.
Reply to this comment
by johnstossel July 15, 2008 12:30 PM EDT
Of course he supports NAFTA he has a farking job!!!
Reply to this comment
by omnibus66 July 15, 2008 11:01 AM EDT
McCain''s a joke, a 72 year old joke. Not funny, either.

The more he talks, the more people will come to realize that he has at least four sides to his mouth, and different stances on every issue emanate from each corner.
Reply to this comment
by skyk-2009 July 15, 2008 10:03 AM EDT
So, Mr. McCain is in full support of China slapping 25 percent tariffs on American goods imported into China while we slap 2 percent tariffs on their goods. Doesn''''t sound fair to me. How about us putting a tariff on imported goods that matches the cost of making them in the good ol'''' U.S.A. - leveling the playing field with regard to the cost-savings of slave labor.

Posted by n8yvn29 at 05:12 AM : Jul 15, 2008

Yes but then Rich Corporations that OWN the Republican Party couldn''t exploit that Force Labor and they wouldn''t pay for the Politician''s Golf Weekends and such!
Reply to this comment
by whiskyrocker July 15, 2008 8:37 AM EDT
brianbwb
---------
Thank you
Reply to this comment
by louthesz9 July 15, 2008 8:36 AM EDT
Look, I have no problem doing business with Canada, but with Mexico??? There, you have to contend with the Juarez cartel, the Tijuana cartel, the Sinaloa cartel,.... The Mexican government is run, believe it or not, by bribes and payoffs. Even the president of Mexico can and has been bought off by the cartel. The judge in Mexico who released an illegal alien accused of running over a Border Patrol agent has probably been bought off by the cartel. Even the law enforcement officials in Mexico have been bribed by the Mexican Mafia. Imagine what would happen if NAFTA is strongly implemented. Then the Mexican cartels would be all over the place like terrorists.
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by whiskyrocker July 15, 2008 8:33 AM EDT
It''s good for McCain and that''s all that matters. Just ask his mentor Bu$h.
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by brianbwb-2009 July 15, 2008 8:31 AM EDT
"Lowering barriers to trade creates more and better jobs, and higher wages," he said. "It makes goods more affordable for low- and middle-income consumers."

Talk about false virtues, tell us, McSame, what about the "low income, and no-income Americans", whose jobs are now being done in slave labor countries, who are working Mcjobs, or cannot even get those, are goods more affordable for them?

Since whyen have goods become cheaper for the consumer McSame, since the companies did not pass on the cheaper labor costs?

What middle class, McSame, do you mean those millions whose jobs disappeared during the 70s and 80s, or the few who still have jobs, who have seen their real earnings potential diminish since the mid 70s, to only 20% of what it was then?

Are you talking about those people who have recently been told that the value of their lives diminished by $900,000 McSame?
Reply to this comment
by n8yvn29 July 15, 2008 8:12 AM EDT
So, Mr. McCain is in full support of China slapping 25 percent tariffs on American goods imported into China while we slap 2 percent tariffs on their goods. Doesn''t sound fair to me. How about us putting a tariff on imported goods that matches the cost of making them in the good ol'' U.S.A. - leveling the playing field with regard to the cost-savings of slave labor.
Reply to this comment
by downtowner97 July 15, 2008 6:48 AM EDT
We should embrace competition from people who can live on $3 a day? Reagan is rolling over in his grave.
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