The Progressive Populist Moment Has Arrived
February 2004
Tom Hayden AlterNet
It's been a remarkable shift after the past decade of Democratic
catering to corporate interests and conservative voters, Only one
year ago, candidates John Kerry, John Edwards and Richard Gephardt
had voted for the Iraq war resolution, and Gephardt alone, among
the leading contenders, opposed pro-corporate trade agreements like
NAFTA.
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When Howard Dean's populist candidacy demonstrated the strength
of Democratic anti-war sentiment, Kerry and Edwards changed course
and opposed the Bush Administration's $87 billion war
authorization. With Dennis Kucinich, Al Sharpton and Carol
Mosely-Braun already anti-war, that isolated Gephardt as the last
hawk until his defeat in Iowa.
But Gephardt's once-lonely advocacy of 'fair trade, not free
trade' -- the position of the AFL-CIO and the Citizens Trade
Campaign -- caught fire in the Iowa primaries where activists like
former Congress member Jim Jontz of national Americans for
Democratic Action (ADA) were generating daily pressure at the
caucus level.
Not only Iowans but voters across multiple primary states were
outraged by millions of manufacturing job losses which they blamed
on trade agreements which the Democrats had promoted just a decade
before. On the 10th anniversary of NAFTA, the proponents were
embarrassingly silent. No one wanted to admit that eccentric
billionaire Ross Perot was more right than wrong in 1994. Now
Democratic voters in states like South Carolina, Missouri, Arizona
and Wisconsin overwhelmingly preferred candidates critical of the
Democrats' own trade agreements. Even key Democratic insiders, like
Mickey Kantor who wrote the Clinton Administration's pro-investor
rules of trade, were admitting that it was now 'correct to
challenge some of the rules.' (NYT, Jan. 31, 2004)
The climactic moment in the re-birth of a populist Democratic
Party came on the eve of the Wisconsin primary. John Kerry reversed
his previous course to declare that 'I will not sign a trade
agreement like the Central American Trade Agreement or the Free
Trade of the Americas Act that does not now embrace enforceable
labor and environment standards.'
Howard Dean said 'We've globalized the rights of big
corporations to do business anywhere in the world. We did not
globalize human rights, labor rights and environmental rights, and
we need to do that.'
John Edwards added to the chorus: 'These environmental and labor
standards in the text of the agreement, not in a side agreement, in
the text of the agreement that can be enforced, really matter.'
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