When Paul Wellstone opted out of the 2000 presidential race, he fretted that trade policy would not be debated in the Democratic primaries and that the party would run a November campaign that failed to address blue-collar concerns about the damage done to the manufacturing sector by the North American Free Trade Agreement and freer trade with China. Wellstone was right to worry; Al Gore and Bill Bradley echoed George W. Bush's free-trade stances, and once Gore was nominated, his failure to distinguish himself on trade undermined his populist appeal to union workers in battleground states like Ohio, Missouri and West Virginia--all of which the Democrats lost for the first time since the 1980s.
What a difference four years makes. In the contest for the 2004 Democratic nomination, no issue except the Iraq war divides Democrats as does trade. Predictably, Joe Lieberman, favorite of the corporate-sponsored Democratic Leadership Council, preaches the Bush line. Yet it is John Kerry, traditionally a more skeptical free trader than Lieberman, who is the noisiest critic of Democrats who oppose "race to the bottom" trade policies that harm workers in the United States and abroad. Desperate to regain ground lost to Howard Dean, Kerry attacked the Vermonter for saying trade agreements must be reworked to protect workers and the environment. Dean's approach "would mean we couldn't sell a single car anywhere in the world," Kerry said in Detroit. That's wrong; Dean's stance, which roughly parallels that of the United Auto Workers and most Democrats in Congress, is hardly a recipe for auto-industry decline. Even Bill Clinton told a 2000 World Economic Forum gathering that labor and environmental issues had to be treated more seriously in trade agreements.
What's bizarre about the Kerry-Dean dust-up is that both backed NAFTA in 1993--as did Senators Bob Graham and Carol Moseley Braun. Dean and Kerry also united for normalized trade with China and supported fast-track legislation designed to hasten development of a Free Trade Area of the Americas. Now that Dean is positioning himself to compete in Midwestern states hard hit by factory closings, he complains that "our free trade policies have also had the effect of hollowing out our industrial capacity and, most worrisome, undermining our own middle class." Backers say Dean is evolving. But watch out, Clinton made fair-trade noises while seeking labor endorsements in 1992 only to emerge as NAFTA's champion in 1993.
Subscribe Now!
The only way to read this article and the full contents of each week's issue of The Nation online is by subscribing to the magazine. Subscribe now and read this article -- and every article published since for the past five years -- right now.
There's no obligation -- try The Nation for four weeks free.
- Get The Nation at home (and online!) for 75 cents a week!
- If you like this article, consider making a donation to The Nation.

Buzzflash
del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook
Newsvine
Reddit