Adam B. Kushner
|
Aug 27, 2008 12:03 AM
DENVER, Colo. -- Tom Donohue’s optimism about NAFTA
shouldn’t be taken as read on the Democratic Party’s attitude, writ
large, toward trade liberalization. Even if the controversial trade
agreement survives unaltered, now is a day of rising protectionism. Mark Warner, who spoke at Tuesday's convention proceedings, is a case in point.
The
2008 presidential hopeful was once the face of centrist liberals. He
was a hugely successful businessman (cell phones) and the Democratic
governor of a red state. He belonged the Democratic Leadership Council, wrote articles with titles like “The Sensible Center,” and endured the ire of the party’s left wing. His answers to a 1996 questionnaire support free trade.
But
in tonight’s speech, he threw red meat to anti-free-traders. Warner’s
summation of world affairs: “Two wars, a warming planet, an energy
policy that says let’s borrow money from China to buy oil from
countries that don’t like us.” And at the climax:
If
you can send a job to Bangalore, India, you sure as heck can send one
to Danville, Virginia and Flint, Michigan and Scranton, Pennsylvania
and Peoria, Illinois. In a global economy, you shouldn’t have to leave
your home town to find a world-class job.
Let me tell you about a
place called Lebanon—Lebanon, Virginia. Lebanon is in the coalfields of
southwest Virginia, and everyone in that whole town could fit right
here on the convention floor. Lebanon is like many small towns in
America. It has seen the industries that sustained it downsized,
outsourced, or shut down. Now, some folks look at towns like Lebanon
and say, “Tough luck. In the global economy, you’ve lost.”
“Outsourcing,”
even if it makes American goods and services cheaper in the aggregate,
is not something politicians can ever get behind. But their critiques
of it lie on a scale, and Warner’s has, over recent years, moved from
the mild pole to the fiery one.
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