
__________________________________________________________________________________
PRESS STATEMENT
Textile Industry and Labor Officials
Urge House and Senate
to Reject Job-Destroying Haiti and AGOA
Provisions
December 8, 2006
Embargoed until 11:30 AM ET
WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. textile industry and the labor union UNITE HERE urged the House and Senate to reject the Haiti and AGOA provisions contained in H.R. 6406. Elements of Congress have been pushing to attach these provisions to tax and trade legislation in this week’s lame duck session of Congress. Industry leaders and labor officials decried attempts to railroad these proposals through the House and Senate without hearings or adequate consultation with the textile sector.
Textile industry leaders and labor officials also thanked the Republicans and Democrats in the House and Senate that have been working hard to highlight the concerns of the textile industry during this lame duck session of Congress.
Textile Industry
Quotes on the Haiti/AGOA Legislation
National Council of Textile Organizations (NCTO) President Cass Johnson said, “We would like to thank U.S. Senator Elizabeth Dole, U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham and members of the House Textile Caucus for their strenuous efforts to stop this job-destroying trade legislation. We are proud of the firm, principled stands they have taken on behalf of workers and on behalf of fair and balanced trade.”
We continue to urge the congressional leadership to reject any backroom deal that will send U.S. jobs to foreign countries like China. When China wins and U.S. workers lose because of a backroom deal made at 2:00 AM in the halls of Congress, then that is a sad day. It is also shows that leadership has failed to grasp the message sent by voters worried about outsourcing and trade giveaways on Election Day. The ultimate irony deal is that in its eagerness to sacrifice U.S. jobs to help Haiti, all the U.S. Congress has accomplished is to make Haiti a transshipment point for apparel from China at the expense of the entire Western Hemisphere. CAFTA trade legislation will mean little for the textile and apparel industries in this region if Haiti becomes law,” Johnson added.
Noting that nearly three million U.S. manufacturing jobs have been lost since 2001, American Manufacturing Trade Action Coalition (AMTAC) Executive Director Auggie Tantillo said, “Congress should reject these proposals because they will cost thousands of U.S. manufacturing jobs and drive up the foreign trade deficit.”
“No hearings have been held on these measures. No vetting has been done. No formal debate has occurred. All that is going on is a blatant attempt to ramrod ill-advised legislation through Congress to favor foreign special interests in countries like China at the expense of the U.S. textile industry and its workers. This is the very type of ‘business as usual’ that voters repudiated in November’s election. We thank U.S. Senator Lindsey Graham, U.S. Senator Elizabeth Dole and members of the House Textile Caucus for their efforts on behalf of the U.S. textile industry and its workers,” Tantillo continued.
“Instead of trying to pass bills that will export more U.S. jobs to foreign countries, Congress should be focusing its efforts on trade partners like China who cheat by manipulating their currency and on countries that use a value-added tax to subsidize their exports and to unfairly tax imports of U.S.-made products,” Tantillo concluded.
“The Haiti bill alone jeopardizes several hundred million dollars in U.S. textile and apparel exports to Haiti and the CAFTA countries. If passed, the third-party country fabric and labor provisions will turn U.S. textile and apparel trade with Haiti from a two-way street to a one-way road,” said National Textile Association (NTA) President Karl Spilhaus.
UNITE HERE labor union General President Bruce Raynor said, "Less than a month after voters sent a clear signal by retiring many supporters of these sham trade deals, this lame duck vote will only put more workers at risk in this country, while ignoring the well-documented sweatshop conditions endured by Haitian and African workers. We want trade agreements that take labor standards and enforcement seriously."
Quick Facts About
the Haiti/AGOA Bills
HAITI (HOPE)
AGOA
Quick Facts About the U.S. Textile Industry
CONTACT:
Lloyd Wood – Director of
Membership and Media Outreach
(202) 452-0866 or lwood@amtacdc.org
Cass Johnson – NCTO President
(202) 822-8025 or cjohnson@ncto.org
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