For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
April 4, 2002
President Calls on Senate to Pass Trade Promotion Authority
Remarks by the President on Trade Promotion Authority
Benjamin Franklin Room
The Department of State
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you, Mr. Secretary. I'm glad I caught
you before you packed your bags. (Laughter.) This morning, I sent the
Secretary on a very important mission, a mission of peace. And there's
no doubt I sent a great man to go accomplish that mission. I'm proud
of your service to our country, Colin, and thank you for inviting us to
this beautiful hall.
I want to thank you all for coming, as well. I appreciate so very
much the opportunity to talk about the values and interests of America,
and the fact that open trade is in our nation's interest, and open
trade helps us all adhere to values that we share -- common values.
Values that call for respect of human rights and values that believe in
the worth of each individual, and values that hold democracy and
freedom dear.
I believe strongly in trade. I believe not only is trade in my
nation's interests, I think trade is in the interest of those nations
who struggle with poverty, that desire a route out of poverty. As
Colin mentioned, I was in Monterrey, Mexico recently, we were in
Monterrey, Mexico.
I said there in Monterrey that this country of ours will provide
aid, we're pleased to do so and proud to do so. But direct aid is
small in comparison to the benefits of trade. And that not only would
we provide direct aid, but in return we expect our friends to adopt the
habits that will encourage stability and peace and human rights. And
there's nothing better to encourage those habits than trade.
And trade is important for American workers, too. Lost in the
debate on trade here at home is the fact that many people are able to
find better jobs as the result of an active trade policy in the United
States.
And so we're here to talk about a way to make sure that our nation
trades and our nation works with other countries in the world to
trade. In order for that to do so, the United States Senate must past
trade promotion authority. I need that authority.
Every day we go by without the authority is another day we are
missing opportunities to help our economy, to help our workers, to help
our country, to relate to our friends around the world. If the Senate
acts to give me trade promotion authority -- and I expect them to do
so -- I will use it to expand commerce and work for higher-paying
jobs for American workers.
And so today, I urge the Senate leadership to lead, to act, and to
get this bill to my desk.
I want to thank Secretary Don Evans, who's the Secretary of
Commerce, for being here. He's my close friend. We spent a lot of
quality time in Midland, Texas, together. He's now representing the
commercial interests of our country. And I'm proud of the job he
does. And I want to thank John Walters for being here, as well. John
is in charge of making sure that the United States drug policy not only
is clear, but works. And that drug policy says we'll work with our
neighbors to interdict drugs. But in order for a drug policy to be
effective, all of us in this country must make it clear to our young
that drugs destroy their hopes and opportunities.
I want to thank members of the diplomatic corps who are here.
Particularly, I want to thank the Prime Minister of Peru.
Bienvenidos. It's nice to see you again, sir, and thank you for
coming.
I have spent a lot of time with members of the ambassadorial
corps. I'm a better person for it. I see many friendly faces here. I
want to thank you all for coming to support this initiative.
See, I hope -- I wish members of the United States Senate were
here to see the members of the diplomatic corps who showed up for
this. They're here because they understand the importance of trade.
They're here because they understand the benefits of trade to their own
people.
I also want to thank the U.S. exporters who are here, America's
business leaders and people who understand the benefits of opening up
markets. I know that many of you have worked hard to help advance
trade around the world, and for that we're grateful. And we've done a
lot last year, we really have. As Colin mentioned, we helped launch a
new global -- a round of global trade negotiations in Doha. We helped
bring China and Taiwan into the World Trade Organization. And that's
good, that's important to recognize and to welcome both countries, both
the Republic of Taiwan, and of course China, into the World Trade
Organization. It's positive, it's a positive development for our
country.
We've worked hard to have a free trade agreement with Jordan, and
bilateral trade agreement with Vietnam. We reinvigorated trade
negotiations of the free trade area of the Americas in Quebec City, as
Colin pointed out. I thought those were very constructive discussions
we had with your leaders. It was my chance to -- my first chance to
meet them. And it was -- an interesting thing about that meeting, by
the way, is that every country in our hemisphere was represented,
except one. We welcomed every country into the meeting, that had
democratically-elected leadership. One notable absence, I might add:
Cuba, they don't democratically elect their leader.
And the first, most important thing we discussed, besides
preserving democracy in our hemisphere, was trade -- how to encourage
more free trade. And that was a positive development.
We're also in negotiations now with Chile and Singapore on free
trade agreements, and so we're now making good progress. But we've got
to continue the momentum. I need the support of Congress on two urgent
matters: trade promotion authority and the Andean trade preference
act. Both are awaiting action in the Senate. Both sit waiting for the
Senate to act. And both are essential to the economy of the United
States.
The Trade Promotion Authority, sometimes members of Congress and I
think people don't pay much attention to the issue, don't really
understand how it works. The Trade Promotion Authority gives the
executive branch the right to negotiate trade agreements. But Congress
has the final authority to approve the agreements. It's not by
granting me TPA that all of a sudden they dealt themselves out of the
mix; quite the contrary. They passed it, they dealt themselves into
the mix. They have a chance to ratify, up or down, a treaty.
But the good thing about TPA is it allows me to negotiate, or my
administration negotiate, and then Congress gets to vote on the terms,
up or down. And that's important for the nations represented in this
world. It gives them confidence to negotiate a treaty with the United
States without it being fine-tuned by numerous experts on the Hill, on
what is right or wrong about trade.
It's important to have a platform for trade; and TPA provides
that. Five presidents before me, Republicans and Democrats, have had
this advantage in trade negotiations -- five of them. For two
decades, trade promotion authority was a bipartisan commitment. It
wasn't a political issue. It was a commitment, because it represented
our national interest in expanding foreign markets. Those years saw
many successes, and during the '90s, about one-quarter of our economic
growth came as a result of exports. Our two major trade agreements,
NAFTA and the Uruguay Round, have improved the average standard of
living for Americans.
As importantly, NAFTA improved the average standard of living for
Mexico and Canada. You see, the best policy for the United States is
to hope our own neighborhood is prosperous. A prosperous and vibrant
Mexico is good for the United States. You want your neighbors to do
well. You want your neighborhood to be peaceful and prosperous, and
NAFTA helped do that.
The other thing that's interesting about trade, is people think
about trade and they think, well, trade is only good for big companies,
only the multinational companies benefit from trade. I don't believe
that's true. I know that since the role of governments to create an
environment in which the entrepreneur can flourish and realize his or
her dreams, that trade opens up opportunities for the entrepreneur.
And here's one example.
Excel Holdings is a company based in Leesburg, Virginia. We've got
the owner here, which I'm about to name him here pretty quick. And I
can see his wife and two -- and son and daughter, I might add. Their
job -- let me just say, last year, they signed a $35 million contract
with a Mexican distributor. Excel's product serves an important
purpose, as it can produce up to 5,000 gallons of purified drinking
water each day.
Today, Excel maintains distributors in 13 countries. The owner, a
fellow who came to the United States from Egypt, Hisham Fawzi, he's
with us. Hisham, thank you for coming. Here's a guy who had a dream,
he wanted to build and own his own company. That's an important part
of the American experience, owning your own business, coming up with a
good idea and working hard to see to it that the good idea works.
His idea, obviously, included markets around the world. In order
for his business to succeed, he needed trade in more markets. There
are thousands of entrepreneurs in America who benefit from trade.
Trade is not just good for mega-corporate America. Trade is very good
for farmers and ranchers and entrepreneurs, like our guest here today.
I want to thank you for coming and thank you for working hard to
realize the American Dream. And good luck in your business.
(Applause.)
In eight years since the TPA, the trade promotion authority,
expired, we have missed a lot of opportunity in America. And it's
cost -- and when you miss opportunity, it tends to affect the average
worker in our country.
More than 150 regional free trade and customs agreements exist
throughout the world; the European Union is party to 31 of them; Mexico
is party to 10; the world's largest economy is party to three. While
we've been marking time, our competitors have been working, and they've
been signing agreements. While we have been delaying, they've been
trading.
Listen, I don't fault our trading partners for making progress. As
a matter of fact, I would expect our trading partners to work hard to
make progress. But what we need to do is to engage in competition
ourselves. You see, when Americans -- when there's a level playing field, we can compete. We're good
at it. Fearful people build walls around America. Confident people
make sure there are no walls.
And I am confident. I'm confident in America products, I'm
confident in American entrepreneurs, I'm confident in the American
worker, I'm confident in the American know-how, I'm confident in
America's farmers, I'm confident in America's ranchers. And we need to
be a trading nation. (Applause.)
And I'll submit agreements to Congress, when I have this authority,
that will be in our nation's best interests. And we'll work hard to
make sure we have good trade agreements that benefit both America and
our trading partners. And if Congress doesn't like it, they can turn
it down. But I need the authority. It's in our country's interest
that I have the authority.
And it's also in our interest to bring confidence to countries
around the world, to realize we're serious about it when we speak --
countries in our own neighborhood. I mean, trade promotion
authority will help us establish the Free Trade Agreement of the
Americas. And that's going to be in our country's interests, in our
neighborhood's interests to do that as well.
The other thing that's important about trade for our country to
understand is that people who trade with America benefit. Trade is just
not a one-way street. It is a positive relationship. It's important
for Americans to understand that by trade, we help people and we help
poor people, and we help people get lifted out of poverty.
Listen, we're a compassionate nation. There are a lot of people in
our country who deeply care about Africa and countries in Africa, who
deeply care about South America and Central America. These are
countries that are fine countries, work hard, but they're poor
countries.
And if you're concerned about helping people help themselves, we've
got to trade with the developing world. And the facts are fantastic.
The trade with the African nations as a result of AGOA has been $1
billion worth of new commerce. It's the beginning of what we all hope
is a prosperity, a boom in prosperity in parts of the world that have
not been prosperous.
Oh, there's a lot of talk I hear about labor and environmental
agreements. A prosperous nation is one more likely to take care of its
workers. And a prosperous nation is one more likely, much more likely,
to be able to afford the technology necessary to protect the
environment.
And then, of course, trade creates the habits of freedom. If you
welcome trade into your country, it creates the notion of freedom. It
gives people, consumers, the opportunity to demand product, which is
part of a free society. It creates an entrepreneurial class, which is
a part of a free society.
And the habits of freedom begin to create the expectations of
democracy and demands for better democratic institutions. Societies
that open to commerce across their borders are more open to democracy
within their borders. And for those of us who care about values and
believe in values -- not just American values, but universal values
that promote human dignity -- trade is a good way to do that.
It's a heck of a lot easier to promote human dignity and human
rights through trade than it is through lectures. And it's very
important for us to always remember that a -- as I mentioned earlier,
a prosperous neighborhood, a democratic neighborhood and a peaceful
neighborhood is in our nation's interests.
As a matter of fact, in all due respect to nations from around the
world, the best foreign policy starts with making sure your own
neighborhood is prosperous and safe and sound. And I -- as Colin
mentioned, we have just come back -- or a while ago came back from a
meeting with our friends in Central America and our friends in the
Andean nations. And we had very constructive dialogue, but let me tell
you what I heard.
I heard fine, democratically-elected leaders who are troubled by
the fact that the United States Congress cannot yet respond to their
simple desire to trade, their desire to expand and extend the Andean
trade preference act.
It is important for these nations -- and all you've got to do is
ask the Prime Minister or the ambassadors from the four countries with
whom I met -- ask them the facts. That's what I ask the Senate to
do. What does the Andean trade preference act mean to nations that
protect and defend democracy and, at the same time, fight off
narco-traffickers? Trade in this instance not only is important for
their economies, it is important for their security. It is important
that these nations be given market access so they can develop products
other than coca, that the workers in their countries are not prone to
need to work in the narcotics industry.
If we're serious about dealing with narcotics, not only will we
work to reduce demand, as John Walters is going to do, but we've got to
work in a constructive way, in a real way, with the Andean nations.
And that means not only to work on interdiction, but it means helping
these nations through trade, and develop substitute products --
products that can be substituted for the quick buck in narcotics.
I hope Congress understands that. I hope Congress understands that
the Andean trade preference act is a crucial part of making sure that
our hemisphere is democratic and free and stable and secure. The
United States Senate needs to affirm America's trade leadership, and
bring both measures I've talked about today -- the trade promotion
authority, and the Andean trade preference act -- to the floor by
April 22nd.
Now, I've talked to enough members of the Senate, as have my staff,
to know that there's enough Republicans and Democrats to pass both
bills. And therefore the time of delay is over. On April 22nd I'd
like to see the debate, and get them passed. These bills are good for
America, these bills are good for our friends. The time of delay must
end.
And by approving these measures, and other measures such as the
generalized system of preferences, and an enhanced African trade bill,
we will stand squarely with our friends in the world, recognizing that
when we work together and when we trade together, the whole world can
be more prosperous. We've got to seize the moment.
As you know, we fight off incredible terror. And we will. You
don't have to worry about this administration. We're determined, and
we're going to win against terror. And we've also got to fight off
poverty and despair and hopelessness. And one way to do that is to
encourage trade.
I want to thank you all for giving me a chance to come and share my
thoughts. May God bless not only America, but all the nations of the
world. (Applause.)