TOPEKA, KS – While hosting
The Jim Cates Show on AM-1440 KMAJ this morning, Congresswoman Nancy
Boyda (Kansas Second District) unveiled major new legislation that she
has authored and plans to introduce into the U.S. House of
Representatives later this week.
Boyda's bill, the NAFTA Accountability Act, requires the United States
to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). If the
negotiations do not produce specific, concrete improvements, the bill
calls for America to withdraw from NAFTA.
Rep. Boyda said, "Practically every politician in Washington has
said that NAFTA has its share of problems. Even supporters admit that
NAFTA is deeply flawed, but nobody has had the guts to fix the
problem."
The bill finds that, since NAFTA was enacted, the American trade
deficit with Mexico and Canada has climbed to $919 billion.
Outsourcing has devastated the U.S. manufacturing base and cost
America over a million living-wage jobs, and poor border security has
contributed to the illegal importation of methamphetamine, cocaine,
and marijuana from Mexico.
Rep. Boyda's legislation requires the President to renegotiate NAFTA
to correct trade deficits, currency distortions, and agricultural
provisions. If five specific conditions are not certified by the end
of 2008, the bill calls for the United States to withdraw from NAFTA:
(1) gains in U.S. jobs and living standards (by
the Secretary of Labor)
(2) increased U.S. domestic manufacturing (by the Secretary of
Commerce)
(3) improved health and environmental standards, with respect to
food imports and to U.S.-Mexico border areas (by the Secretary of
Agriculture, the Administrator of the Food and Drug Administration,
and the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency)
(4) reduced flow of illegal drugs from Mexico and Canada (by the
Attorney General)
(5) Mexican democracy and human freedoms (by the President)
The bill also expresses the sense of the
Congress that, until these conditions are met, the president should
not engage in negotiations to expand NAFTA to include other countries,
and fast-track authority should not be renewed with respect to the
approval of any such NAFTA expansion.
Rep. Boyda added, "NAFTA is dragging down our economy, weakening
our borders, and devastating our manufacturers. After fourteen years,
it's time to either fix NAFTA or get the heck out of it."