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Why on Earth Are Hillary and Obama Supporting Pro-Corporate Trade Deals?

By Joshua Holland, AlterNet. Posted November 13, 2007.


It's a perfect blend of bad policy and losing politics.
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With the announcement that Hillary Clinton will join Barack Obama in supporting a new trade deal with Peru that passed in the House last week -- the first in a series of "free-trade" deals that are based on the deeply unpopular NAFTA model and being pushed through Congress by the Bush administration -- the divide between the two Democratic front-runners and the American electorate couldn't be clearer.

There's certainly no constituency for it within the universe of Democratic primary voters -- all of the Peruvian and most American unions oppose it, as do key environmental and anti-poverty organizations -- and it certainly won't win any "swing" voters to the party or make the Democratic brand more popular in any battleground states.

I asked Todd Tucker, research director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, who really stands to benefit from the deal. He didn't hesitate before rattling off a dozen multinationals including Citigroup, Occidental Petroleum and Wal-Mart, all of whom, according to Tucker, have "put their full might into getting the Peru deal passed, including showering millions in congressional campaign donations since January alone." Tucker told me their wish list includes "privatized social security systems for Citi, rainforest-destroying oil extraction for Occidental, and a push to Wal-Mart's efforts to buy out Peru's retail sector, just as they did in Central America just days after Bush signed [the Central American Free Trade Agreement]." In addition, General Mills, (and the Grocery Manufacturers Association PAC, which supports it) wants the deal to go through because it grows most of its canned veggies in Peru (decimating onion, asparagus and pea farmers in the United States) and is now moving its processing facilities down there. Citibank, along with other financial services firms, wants the deal because it would allow the firm to sue the Peruvian government for damages if progressive activists succeed in reversing a disastrous social security privatization scheme that's screwed over millions of Peruvian retirees.

The rest of the field has come out in opposition to the Peru agreement, and one candidate, Dennis Kucinich, has gone so far as to call for abolishing the WTO. But like Obama and Clinton, Joe Biden, Christopher Dodd and Bill Richardson are all enthusiastic, self-described "free traders." It's John Edwards, considered a distant third in the race by the punditocracy, who is making the Peru deal into an issue that he hopes will speak to the candidates' overall judgment as well as their concern for issues of economic justice. "Like the failed free trade agreements before it," he said in a statement, "the Peru Agreement puts the interests of the big multinational corporations first, ahead of the interests of American workers and communities."

Supporting the NAFTA model does speak to the candidates' judgment. Obama said that he'd vote for the Peru deal because "it contained the labor and environmental standards sought by groups like the AFL-CIO," but the AFL-CIO released a statement saying that, because of "several issues of concern to working families," the AFL-CIO "is not in a position to support the Peru FTA." "Labor and environmental protections" are a scam -- Tom Donohue, head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said that his members were "encouraged" by assurances that the deal's labor provisions "cannot be read to require compliance."

Obama went on to insult the intelligence of a crowd of New Hampshire residents by explaining: "We cannot draw a moat around the U.S. economy because China is still trading, India is still trading." But objecting to these new NAFTA-style deals has nothing to do with moats. We already have a treaty with Peru, and 150 other countries, that established a rules-based trading system, complete with a dispute-resolution process. It's called the WTO, and fair trade activists -- many of whom also happen to make up a large chunk of the Democratic party's base -- already object to that institution's consistently giving too much to investors without paying more than lip service to protecting other stakeholders. No real Democrat should talk about "moats" when we have binding trade deals in place covering 98 percent of the planet.


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See more stories tagged with: democrats, trade, barack obama, hillary clinton, election 2008, nafta, peru

Joshua Holland is an AlterNet staff writer.

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This criticism of Ms. Clinton is
Posted by: Rune on Nov 13, 2007 12:32 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
so last week! I am sure Obama will find a way to contort his way into speaking out of both sides of his mouth, too, in due time.

But given that both Clinton and Obama are using teams of staff and consultants to reach out and grab some of that big corporate money that has so thoroughly corrupted both of the major parties, is there really any doubt that either will deliver the goods for the globalization gnomes of industry, regardless of their lame attempts to leave doubts about their true intentions? And now that most people buy into some form of the trickle down myth as their best hope for not being penniless and/or homeless in the foreseeable future of credit collapse and worldwide capital consolidation, just how much juking will they really need to do, anyhow?

If you vote for the corporate candidates, you get the corporate agenda. Simple, huh?

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» Amen to that! Posted by: skoog5600
» RE: Amen to that! Posted by: Lector
» RE: Amen to that! Posted by: solrev
» RE: Amen to that! Posted by: skoog5600
» RE: Amen to that! Posted by: Brian70
Speaking of the Democrats....
Posted by: Tom Degan on Nov 13, 2007 2:44 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With Democrats Like These....

'nuff said.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY

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» Ultimate Deal Breaker..... Posted by: CatDad
» RE: Ultimate Deal Breaker..... Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Ultimate Deal Breaker..... Posted by: Joshua Holland
Why?
Posted by: jlohman on Nov 13, 2007 3:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Follow the money! They are as corrupt as the R's.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: Why? Posted by: Knot_Rich
Always Low Principles, Always...
Posted by: gazooks on Nov 13, 2007 4:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... in the makings of a ticket with deep roots in Arkansas. There should be no surprise to the commitment to the Status Quo by the real pretenders to the throne.

It's why they're called the powers that be, no one in sincere opposition has a chance without their endorsement and their money.

It's also why we'll have a forever war.

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Vote Kucinich
Posted by: blondesprite on Nov 13, 2007 4:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
He is the only candidate listening to voters! You want the same (single payer) healthcare plan that our Congressmen and women have, vote Kucinich. You want an end to the illegal and corrupt Iraq War, vote Kucincih. You want Cheney and Bush held accountable, vote Kucinich. You want an equitable education plan, vote Kucinich. You want jobs based on a greener economy, vote Kucinich. You want an end to NAFTA and WTO, vote Kucinch.
You want an end to the tax cuts for the richest 1% of billionaire Americans, safe bridges, safe pipelines, safe toys, safe mines, safe food, safe pensions, safe working conditions and a stable, healthier America for our grand children, vote Kucinch.
He is our only hope!

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» RE: Vote Kucinich Posted by: CatDad
» RE: Vote Kucinich and UFO's. Posted by: aka_bozo
Obvious question deserve obvious answer
Posted by: Perfectclue on Nov 13, 2007 4:24 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Liberalism is a class ideology, corporate ideology, that like conservatism, are both supporters of class policies, imperial policies, which reflect the failure of Western democracy, by its degeneration into a class Republic, class democracy whose only degenerative process over time meant Nazi Germany, the corporate state, which is now the norm for global class rule and American Empire.

The two parties are class parties, with a class hierarchy who filter out democratic discussions, like the corporate media and its manipulative class whore/thugs, like Tim Russert who marginalize Kucincih because he does not support their imperial corporate policies. The corporate media anoints corporate whores/thugs, servile class elites, just as the democratic pary does.

Both parties support "free", corporate fascist economic policies, and fascist foreign imperial policies. Both are complicit in the criminal policies of aggression, tortrure, class dictatroship, illegal invasions, occupations, like the rogue states of Israel and America. The Western class states, are liberal class whores who follow and appease the same imperial policies of American empire and Zionist fascist policies. This generic class corruption is the outcome of the historical subordination of the middle layers by class forces, the commercial captialists, who put property rights above human rights, hence slavery for profit, or the industrial classes who use slave labor, upaid labor to keep 75 percent of the world in poverty, while a handful of billionairs live like the aristocracy under feudal rule, the very Enlightenment, revolutioanry liberal thinkers, whose goal was the overthrow of class rule.

We must see the failures of Western democracy, as class regimes, with their class ideologies, class hierarchies, and class Empire, as the same generic class corruption of all oligarchies before it. The ancient Greeks understood this generic corruption on cvil society, and invented the words oligarchy, plutocracy, (class) Republics, (class) "tyrants- dictatorship to describe the class subordination of all middle layers, political and intellectual, into deformed, servile class elites, unable to defend democracy, instead defending privilege,exclusive standards, class standards, instead of inclusive social and democratic values.

Such is the natrue of our generic historical class rot, and class history, we must turn the page into civil socieites that have fully functioning middle classes, that operate on a truly social principle of wealth, as false claimed by all class societies, including corporate fascism, and as a middle class uncorrupted, without oligarchies to deform them, corrupt them would in fact reproduce the inherent moral center, and social center, of all values, instead of the class forces that stand to the right of this social center, and falsely call it the "left", or even the "extreme left". This is typical of the history of middle class ideological distortion, having corrupted ideology. Obama and Hillary, and corporate democrats are only carrying on the class liberal agenda of a class regime, and reflect the early betrayal of class despotism over democracy.

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» Fun with words Posted by: Illiteratilumen
Electability
Posted by: Axiom69 on Nov 13, 2007 5:54 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I really think this could be the election for a 3rd party candidate. This country is ripe for it. It seems to me that both the Republicans and Democratic voters are fed up with Washington and the status quo of corporate and special interest bribery. The problem is both sides avoid the better candidate and vote for a smuck just because they perceive the smuck to be "electable". It's a self fullfilling prophesy. We won't elect a good candidate because he or she is unelectable. He or she would be electable if we'd friggin' vote for them! Too bad there wasn't a grass roots (voter) dialouge between the left and right where we could put aside some differences and elect somebody that could actually unite this country and unlock the partisan gridlock in Washington that has become the norm.

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» RE: lectability Posted by: Lector
» RE: lectability Posted by: solrev
Why On Earth Should Anyone Be Surprised?
Posted by: Blueprelude on Nov 13, 2007 5:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Obama is a member of the Hamilton Group, a group of free-trade-and-imperialism-friendly politicians. Hillary is just continuing Bill Clinton's stellar betrayal of American labor with the original NAFTA. I will vote third party for the office of president in November, 2008. I will NEVER vote, as an Illinoisian, for Obama again.

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Da..Who's Surprised?
Posted by: Andie927 on Nov 13, 2007 6:03 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Nice to see more evidence in black and white, but this isn't 'Shocking' news. Hillary came right and said early on in the campaign that 'she thinks Lobbyists represent People'! Maybe 'HER' kinda people, nobody I know!
Barak voted FOR the Bankrupcey Bill, and what Corporate Lobbyists Wrote that Bill?
SUPPORT EDWARDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!tHE ONLY CANDIDATE for Public Campaign Financing, & DOING IT!!

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» lobbyists DO represent people Posted by: reevolve
» RE: Da..Who's Surprised? Posted by: moontime
duh
Posted by: zooeyhall on Nov 13, 2007 6:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Why on Earth Are Hillary and Obama Supporting Pro-Corporate Trade Deals?"

Easy---they're feeding at the same corporate hog trough as all the rest.

Especially Hilary--check out her connections to WalMart.

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» RE: duh Posted by: Joshua Holland
skingk
Posted by: skingk on Nov 13, 2007 6:27 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Jlohman's right (below). Follow the money. A friend of my father's was a homicide detective who said "when things don't make sense, follow the money". Well, Dems like Clinton and Obama getting paid by the corporate elite doesn't make sense, and the environment, treasury, civil rights, etc are going to continue to get murdered if either gets elected.

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"...they can make some donors happy without paying a price."
Posted by: Sojourner on Nov 13, 2007 7:44 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As was the case during the NAFTA struggle, although Bill Clinton vetoed it 3(?) times before he signed it, it was clear that Americans did not care much about it.

Yet one way to reduce the immigration pressures is for the countries south of the border to have stronger economies and more jobs there at home.

It is absolutely essential that we be able to compete with the European Union. One way to do so is to develop the economic potential of the western hemisphere.

Incidentally, I say bravo to Hugo in Spain. Show me a man who can make a king say, "Shut up" and I'll show you a man I admire. Royalty is so yesterday. I know Juan Carlos is only a figurehead. Hugo is a working politican. The difference between figureheads and workers is what our future is all about.

Yes, if both Hillary and Barack are in favor of taking advantage of Central America, of keeping the status quo of the rich as rulers there, it is a severe deficiency. Unless the US can accommodate itself to rising expectations south of the border, we are headed for growing conflict.

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As I was walking from St. Ives
Posted by: saywhat on Nov 13, 2007 7:57 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I was walking from St. Ives
I met a man and someone’s wife.

Kits, cats, sacks, and lies,
How many were going to St. Ives?
Answer: Two;
Big corporation and big pharma money.

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otto
Posted by: otto on Nov 13, 2007 8:13 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for another good article, Josh... pushes me closer to the Edwards camp, and of course, Kucinich, if people would wake up and look beyond his physical appearance. So much of it seems to boil down to greed on every level ; when we ALL look to the interests of EVERYONE - the common good, liberty and justice for ALL (even in other parts of the world!) - things will be much better.

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Why isn't Edwards getting more traction?
Posted by: war_on_tara on Nov 13, 2007 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I can't figure it out. He did so well in '04 in Iowa & NH - I thought he'd be right up there by this point. Why always a distant third now?

I'm sure HRC's support is shallow & can evaporate quickly. But why is Obama seen as the alternative?

Any chance Edwards can turn it around?

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» Yes, He CAN! Posted by: JackieGiles
» RE: Yes, He CAN! Posted by: UP58
What is graft? I'll take dopy socialists peasants for 200, Alex.
Posted by: aka_bozo on Nov 13, 2007 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Democrats know they've got a lock on your guy's vote. You're in the same position the dumb-ass mean white males are in, except you don't like it and they do (of course, the mean whites agree with their fascist party, generally).

Who else you liberals (socialists, progressives, leftists, whatEVER, neo-WHATEVERS) going to vote for instead? Ron Paul?

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» They can't vote for Ron Paul Posted by: dover23
» Ideology matters Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: aka_bozo
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: dover23
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: dover23
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: dover23
» RE: Ideology matters Posted by: Joshua Holland
» Paul in isolation? Posted by: aka_bozo
» A better argument against Paul Posted by: HeroesAll
The commercial media connection
Posted by: ScottP on Nov 13, 2007 9:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Much is made of how the corporations push the "free trade" agenda through campaign contributions. But it seems like a bigger factor is how they (or to be more precise, the executives of the corporations) push the agenda through the media, which they control even more tightly through their advertising budgets. Candidates like Kucinich who oppose the agenda are highly unpopular with executives who sit at the top of the corporations siphoning off millions of dollars a year into their private accounts.

The executives expect the media to find any mistake populist candidates make and amplify and repeat it on the headlines, while making sure to cover up mistakes made by candidates who will further enrich them. Media companies that are not successful at that will not receive advertising dollars, and will either go out of business, be bought up by others that will rework them to follow the plan, or struggle survive in the small indy media market. Over time the big media outlets have evolved to do well at pleasing the executives and facilitating their further enrichment.

If you have a desire to have politicians represent the majority rather than the powerful, then you have to either get the majority to turn off the well financed media outlets or at least give most of their attention to non-commercial information sources. As long as they get any substantial portion of their information from the commercial sources, they will be tricked into supporting the favorites of the wealthy and powerful.

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Stupid Question, Stupid Answer
Posted by: pdxstudent on Nov 13, 2007 9:58 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Holland asks a stupid question ("Why are Hillary and Obama supporting Pro-Corporate policies?"), not in the sense that it was without warrant and shouldn't have been asked, but in the "stupidly-obvious" sense. Likewise, the answer is not irrelevant, but nonetheless the stupidly-obvious one: Because Hillary and Obama are Pro-Corporate!

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» RE: Stupid Question, Stupid Answer Posted by: Joshua Holland
» No, my point ... Posted by: Joshua Holland
» Someone else said it better Posted by: HeroesAll
» No they did not Posted by: matti
» RE: No they did not Posted by: Joshua Holland
» For starters,... Posted by: matti
» RE: For starters,... Posted by: Joshua Holland
» 2008 specifically Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Stupid Question, Stupid Answer Posted by: Joshua Holland
» RE: Stupid Question, Stupid Answer Posted by: Joshua Holland
Typical DLC-Think
Posted by: NoPCZone on Nov 13, 2007 10:43 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
HR Clinton is a triangulating power-hungry beltway insider that would do just about anything to get to power. Just like her husband, who gave us NAFTA, she loves the money and is little more than a Repugnican-lite.

I've been watching this chick all my life, coming of age in Arkansas. BillHillary came to power while I was in HS and have plagued my entire adult life.

Begone HRC and take all the DLC types with you. It's time to come out of the closet and admit what you really are-
A Repugnican in Democratic clothing.

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» RE: Typical DLC-Think Posted by: CatDad
» RE: Typical DLC-Think Posted by: Jefferson's Guardian
Hillary Like Bill is controlled by Big Money
Posted by: drblack on Nov 13, 2007 10:45 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hillary and Obama are more interested in power and money then in helping American Individuals.
Bill Clinton was the poster child for help big monsy at the expense of the American Individual.
Bill was just so likable and compared to Reagan, bush, and Bush 2 was a much better President.
Why do you think we are continuously being told that these two are the front runners?
I have polled almost 1000 people and only a handful support these candidates. In my very Democratic area Edward's is getting more support and people do know Kucinich...they are also supporting Paul because they value Freedom and Restoration of the Constitution.
Hillary has ALWAYS been in it for Hillary and both the money and influence of the corporate interests are easier tools to power then being honest and having a truly Progressive message of Freedom and Prosperity for the American people.
Obama has become the same if he was not being groomed by the corporate interests from the very start .

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» The Clinton's.... Posted by: CatDad
Eh...
Posted by: LordJacor on Nov 13, 2007 12:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article misses a gargantuan point. Are not countries that are worse off than ourselves such as Mexico and Peru the very countries we NEED better trade agreements with. Why? Read on.

It has nothing to do with them being BETTER or HARDER workers than us. And the article completely missed the point in saying they are somehow more technologically advanced than us. The problem is that they are LESS technologically advanced or educated than us. How can this make sense?

This means they pay their employees dirt to work in sweatshop factories. THESE are the countries where our factories are going. Not the most technologically advanced countries throughout Europe. If we do not establish better, more firm trade agreements with this country amongst other countries, we will continue to lose factories as our corporations move their operations elsewhere. And that more than anything serves to hurt the American people.

But thank you for succesfully turning this into a volatile issue. You are exactly right that this needs attention. You just got the reasons why all wrong. Thanks for assuming.

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» Small correction Posted by: HeroesAll
» RE: Small correction Posted by: Joshua Holland
Citizens™ Of The World Choose Bananas
Posted by: eddie torres on Nov 13, 2007 2:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a nation of chumps and chimps, you get the leadership you deserve, not the leadership you wish for.

The new economy is the War On The Poor, and the conga-line of Congressional leadership (both parties) escapes accountability for this Brave New Economy gravy train because the hyper-opaque legislative earmark system isn't open to public scrutiny and the Congressional ethics system is clogged up with weaker subordinates too stupid to steal competently.

More importantly, free trade deals are a lesser battle in the bigger campaign: removing obstacles to large flows of unregulated capital through the myriad offshore tax havens of Central American, Caribbean, and European islands. The subsidiaries of the biggest beneficiaries of NAFTA/CAFTA/PFTA are swapping transfer prices, tax exposure, and fraudulent debt instruments amongst themselves with zero transaction tax, but still charge full transaction fees to inflate the quarterly revenue numbers that justify CEO bonuses and perks.

And it all starts with bananas...

Felicity Lawrence and Ian Griffiths point out in a Guardian story on corporate tax avoidance:

"In some years the banana companies have paid an effective tax rate as low as 8%, even though the standard rate in the US where they have their headquarters and file their full accounts is 35%."

Here's the kicker:

"About 60% of world trade now consists of internal transfers within transnational companies, according to the OECD."

In other words, 60% of world trade takes place for the benefit of corporate ownership, quarterly revenue, and tax management purposes. The other 40% is for the benefit of... the banana eaters.

If the true beneficiaries of free trade agreements are the transnational companies, how does one become a citizen of Dole, Del Monte, or Chiquita? Eat more bananas? Nope. Buy more banana companies.

Just cash in your $7.7 billion stake in Blackstone Group in and you're ready for Citizenship™.

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Xcellent article here points to (again) the failure of the main stream press
Posted by: Drclaw on Nov 13, 2007 2:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks Joshua! I may not always agree with you, but I never feel like I am wasting my time when I read your pieces. I'll contrast your work with that of the feckless NYT, where one of today's pieces (can't seem to find now) is a fluffy little deal telling us how Obama maintains he has been supporting blue-collar workers for as long as he's been around. He's consistent, you see, in contrast to Hillary who really just triangulates. Of course, the article completely fails to mention that both of these stiffs are in favor of this trade agreement. That might require some actual work on the part of the reporter. Personality driven, useless crap as usual. No wonder we are in trouble.

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