John Edwards 2008: What’s not to like

November 16, 2007

“Product Liability”

(CNN) — “Rep. Dennis Kucinich of Ohio took a direct shot at fellow White House hopeful former Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina at Thursday’s CNN Democratic presidential debate.

“In the last debate, Hillary Clinton was criticized by John Edwards for some trade-related issue,” said Kucinich. “But the fact of the matter is, John, you voted for China trade understanding that workers were going to be hurt. Now, you’re a trial lawyer, you knew better.”

When given the chance to respond, Edwards said, “I’m not sure what being a trial lawyer has to do with it.”

Kucinich quickly shot back “product liability.”

CNN Political Ticker 11/15/07
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2007/11/15/kucinich-and-edwards-spar/

November 15, 2007

Unions balk at Edwards track record

In 1998, while running for the Senate, Edwards did not come out in favor of repealing right-to-work laws in North Carolina, and he has only opposed a national right-to-work law. While North Carolina is hardly considered to be a labor stronghold, the former senator’s record and his relationship with some unions in the state were used by some unions to judge him as unworthy of an endorsement.

The International Association of Fire Fighters (IAFF), which endorsed Sen. Chris Dodd (Conn.), said Edwards’s unwillingness to advocate a repeal of the right-to-work measure was a sticking point for the membership when it was seriously considering supporting the former senator’s bid.

“How do you walk picket lines and be for right-to-work?” Jeffrey Zack, an IAFF official, said. “It’s surprising that it wasn’t disconcerting to more people.

“Ultimately, at the end of the day, it’s results. It’s not what you say. It’s results.”

Edwards has also come under fire for his support for normalizing trade relations with China after he was elected to the Senate and for voting for fast-track authority for the president. Edwards has said since that he regrets both votes, and Wednesday he told the UAW in Iowa that he would reverse trade policies.

Members of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) were clearly impressed with Edwards when he addressed the group this summer, but members from North Carolina and his past positions on trade and right-to-work were ultimately what led them to endorse Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) instead, officials said.

“He walked out of there completely convinced he had our endorsement,” IAM official Rick Sloan said. “What he failed to realize was the jury was still out.

“I think he makes an exceptional closing argument. If that was all the jury ever heard, he’d win every time. But it’s not.”

Sloan said Edwards appeared to be “the natural for us,” but the former senator made some missteps with the North Carolina IAM members who worked to elect him, and his support for normalizing trade with China and right-to-work in his home state cost him.

“These days he’s sounding like Johnny Tremain helping a modern-day Paul Revere going around saying, ‘The Chinese are coming, the Chinese are coming,’ ” Sloan said. “Well, they are — by his gold-plated invitation.”

Sloan added that in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, IAM members who worked for U.S. Air in Charlotte, N.C., were losing their jobs in the wake of lost revenues and corporate cutbacks.

“When our guys were getting laid off after 9/11, he came down and met with the company” instead of the workers, Sloan said.

“Our guys in North Carolina worked really hard to get him there and then didn’t see much of him,” Sloan said, adding that the right-to-work issue is “the highest priority for the labor movement.”

The Hill 11/15/07
http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/unions-balk–at-edwards-track-record-2007-11-15.html

November 14, 2007

Kucinich calls out Edwards on China Trade

Filed under: 2008 Primary, China, China Trade Relations, Trade — is @ 1:05 pm
WASHINGTON, D.C. – “Made in China” has become a health and safety warning label for American consumers following the recalls of tens of millions of Chinese-made toys, but the “real warning label should say ‘Made in Washington, D.C. by corporate lobbyists’ because the life-threatening hazards of these products were either ignored or brushed off by members of the Congress seven yeas ago,” Democratic Presidential candidate Dennis Kucinich said today.

And, at least one then-member of the Senate, John Edwards, who has been railing lately in favor of higher safety standards for Chinese-made products, defended his 2000 vote supporting expanded China trade with the famously reported comment, “it does us no good to pretend that these remedies are perfect and that people will not be hurt.”

“Senator Edwards knew seven years ago that people would be hurt, so why did he vote for China trade?” Kucinich asked. “How credible is his newfound consumer protectionism and his campaign advocacy for trade reform to save American jobs?”

Kucinich, D-OH, noted that Edwards, who became a millionaire as a trial lawyer with considerable expertise in product liability matters, “knew better than any other member of the Senate what the risks were in sending U.S. manufacturing jobs to a country with almost no labor standards, no health and safety standards, and no environmental standards.”Beyond that, Kucinich pointed out, Edwards’vote in favor of the 2000 China trade agreement has resulted in the loss of more than 973,00 manufacturing jobs and more than 1.2 million jobs total, according to studies released by the AFL-CIO.

“If he knew then that this trade agreement would hurt people and put Americans out of work, he had a moral responsibility to vote against it,” said Kucinich, who has a perfect record in his votes against unfair trade agreements. “Like his now-regretted vote in favor of the resolution that led to the Iraq war, his votes on trade issues raise questions of judgment.” “When candidates stand in front of a union audience or in front of the cameras, they bemoan the three millions jobs that have been lost because of ‘free trade’ agreements,” Kucinich noted. “When they had a chance to vote as a member of Congress, they strongly supported those agreements. That means they voted against American workers, and, as recent events have shown, against American consumers.”

http://www.dennis4president.com/go/newsroom/%91made-in-china%92-hazards-began-with-%91made-in-washington,-d.c.%92/

October 31, 2007

Edwards called on China trade vote

Filed under: 2008 Primary, China, China Trade Relations, Trade — is @ 12:05 am
Imports from Peru last year amounted to $5 billion, only 0.03 percent of all U.S. imports. In comparison, China accounts for 16 percent of U.S. imports — nearly $288 billion worth of goods last year. China is running neck and neck with Canada as the top source of U.S. imports.While Edwards talked about what he sees as excessive CEO pay in his Des Moines speech, he did not mention China at all, alluding only to “ensuing the safety of imported food and drugs” without mentioning any specific country.

Later Thursday, in a meeting with 200 voters in Boone, Iowa, he said, “We’ve got these trade deals that cost Americans millions of jobs, and what do we get in return? Millions of dangerous Chinese toys.”

That line got a good reaction from the crowd.

Edwards didn’t tell them what he himself had said seven years ago when he voted for the China trade deal.

snip

While the China trade legislation included an “anti-surge” proviso designed to stem a flood of imports, Edwards was quite candid in 2000 in acknowledging that “it does us no good to pretend that these remedies are perfect and that people will not be hurt.”

He touched on a classic problem of international trade policy: the hurt is highly concentrated among some workers in higher-wage countries — while the benefits of trade (lower prices, greater variety of goods) are broadly diffused over many millions of consumers.

snip

As he explained his vote on Sept. 19, 2000, Edwards, then a senator from North Carolina, told the Senate, “Trade between U.S. companies and the Chinese will likely explode in the coming years, generating jobs and revenues in this country. It could easily be the keystone in the continuing prosperity of this nation.”

snip

The 2002 vote to authorize President Bush to invade Iraq has become a mea culpa moment for Democratic presidential contenders. Edwards has ostentatiously confessed what he now sees as his error in that vote.

But the 2000 China vote hasn’t become a cause for repentance and confession.

MSNBC 10/30/07
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21536832/

June 4, 2007

China: “No more important relationship”

“There is no more important relationship that America has than our relationship with China,” Edwards said in a 2006 speech before the Asia Society in New York after returning from a trip to China. Edwards appears to believe that the United States must accept that China is becoming a major world power, and that its relationship with the United States does not necessarily have to be tense. In Edwards’ analysis, Chinese leaders “want the world to be a stable, relatively tranquil place” so that they can focus on further expanding their economy.As a senator in 2000, Edwards voted for the U.S.-China Trade Relations Act, which normalized trade relations with China.

Council on Foreign Relations
http://www.cfr.org/publication/13521/candidates_on_us_policy_toward_china.html

May 6, 2007

Reversals on war, education and Yucca Mountain

Democrat John Edwards, his party’s 2004 vice presidential nominee, underwent a tough grilling Sunday on ABC’s This Week about his evolution from what host George Stephanopoulos called “hawkish new Democrat” to “ultra-liberal.” Click here to see a video clip.

Stephanopoulos said Edwards has changed his mind about a number of positions he supported when he was a senator from North Carolina — starting with the Iraq war but also including bankruptcy reform, free trade with China, the No Child Left Behind education law and storing nuclear waste at Yucca Mountain in Nevada.

A few of their exchanges:

• Edwards has called his 2002 vote to authorize the Iraq war a mistake. He was asked about a Boston Globe report that he urged privately in 2004 that he and nominee John Kerry stand by their votes and not admit to making a mistake. Edwards said that when the election was over and he had time to reflect, “I thought it was my personal responsibility to be honest.”

• Edwards said he did not remember saying his vote for No Child Left Behind was a mistake. He said the law “needs to stay in place” but it should be changed because “the testing regimen is too intrusive.”

• Stephanopoulos said Edwards criticized offshore tax shelters in the 2004 election but went to work the next year for an investment group with hedge funds incorporated in the Cayman Islands, which get tax breaks. “I learned about this after the fact. I didn’t know it at the time,” Edwards said. He said he remains opposed to offshore tax shelters and would try to eliminate them as president. He said his pay from the Fortress Investment Group will be on his next financial disclosure report.

• Edwards did not address the trade, bankruptcy or Yucca Mountain issues on the show. Nevada has moved to the beginning of the nomination process with caucuses scheduled Jan. 19. Majorities there oppose the nuclear waste repository.

USA Today On Politics 5/6/07
http://blogs.usatoday.com/onpolitics/2007/05/edwards_grilled.html

October 31, 2006

“I think they want a leader or leaders who understand that fear”

Filed under: 2008 Primary, China, National Security, Speeches, Terrorism — is @ 1:50 pm
LESLIE STAHL: Well, he’s left a lot of meat on the table for you. I have one final question before I turn it over to you because there are lots of threads out there which I would love to follow up on but I’m leaving them for you. I have one final question before the audience takes over. You did run in 2004. I’m wondering what you learned about yourself and about the necessities of leadership and what changes in yourself you intend to present to the public if you run, when you run. [LAUGHTER] When you run!

SENATOR EDWARDS: Thank you for all those caveats! It’s impossible to overstate the impact of going through — as a candidate — a national election. I ran for both the nomination. John Kerry won the nomination. Then I was picked by him to run with him as the Vice-presidential candidate. There is a maturation process that occurs from being in the spotlight constantly, eighteen hours a day. What I learned is that there is a natural tension between politics and leadership. And America desperately needs leadership today, much more than it needs politics. And that means having someone who has a clear idea of who they are, a clear set of convictions, a clear view of what America’s role in the world is and should be, and is willing to stand behind it. And I think that that, because of the uncertain times we live in, because of the insecurity and uncertainty that many Americans feel - it’s not fear. I think that that’s overstatement. I think for most Americans it’s not fear. But there is an uncertainty, an uneasiness about what’s happening, in the world particularly. And I think they want a leader or leaders who understand that fear and are willing to stand strong and clear on their behalf. And I think that we have plenty of politicians. What we need are leaders.

Speech to Asia Society 10/31/06
http://www.asiasociety.org/speeches/06ny_edwards.html

February 20, 2004

“He’s admitted he made a mistake on China”

ATLANTA — Senator John Edwards never misses a chance to tell people he is the “son of a mill worker,” recalling the days before many manufacturing jobs in the South were sent overseas.And to draw a sharp distinction between himself and Democratic front-runner John F. Kerry, Edwards often reminds audiences he opposed the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993, while Kerry voted to pass it — setting in motion new economic forces that labor leaders believe have cost Americans jobs.But as Kerry is quick to point out, Edwards never had to vote on NAFTA; he was still working as a lawyer then. And during his five years in the Senate, Edwards has been more flexible on trade than his rhetoric suggests: In 2000, he supported solidifying trade relations with China, swayed by technology, furniture, textile and tobacco firms in his home state of North Carolina who sought to sell their products to Chinese consumers. His North Carolina GOP colleague, Republican Senator Jesse Helms, opposed it.Two years later, Edwards initially backed giving President Bush broad “fast-track” powers to negotiate future trade agreements. Only when a provision protecting the textile industry was stripped out did Edwards oppose it.Yesterday, as a war of words over trade practices heated up on the campaign trail, Edwards described trade as a “moral issue” during a speech in New York.

Noting that US firms have sought intellectual property rights abroad, Edwards said: “We’re asking that human rights be taken just as seriously.”

The Kerry campaign fired back almost immediately. In an e-mail labeling Edwards “Mr. Johnny Come Lately on Trade,” the Kerry campaign pointed out that Edwards did not highlight trade in a major economic speech last year. A separate Kerry memo accused Edwards of changing his mind four times on fast-track, noting that Edwards “voted FOR the China trade deal, even while acknowledging that he thought jobs would be lost.”

snipKerry and Edwards have nearly identical positions on future trade deals: They would insist that enforceable human rights, labor, and environmental standards be written into the body of any agreement. However, their records do differ. Edwards has recently voted against trade deals with Chile, Singapore, the Caribbean, and Africa, while Kerry supported them all.

Speaking in New York City yesterday morning, Edwards set forth his guiding principles on trade, saying every future agreement would have to create US jobs, contain human rights and environmental protections, and contain mechanisms to punish nations flouting those rules.

But on the major trade accords of the recent past, Edwards’s record is hardly that of an antitrade firebrand, as the China and fast-track examples illustrate. In those two cases, local trade concerns — driven by the powerful North Carolina textile industry — shaped his ultimate positions.

Edwards never publicly commented on NAFTA when it was pending before Congress. In 1998, as Edwards ran for the Senate, he said he had “serious reservations” about NAFTA when asked by reporters, but rarely spoke out against it unprompted. With the North Carolina economy humming along back then, NAFTA and trade were not big political issues.

snip

Last summer, Gephardt, the Missouri Democratic congressman who recently dropped out of the race, criticized Edwards for supporting the China trade deal. At the time, a mass closing of 16 textile plants had enraged many in North Carolina.

But in 1999, just before the China trade deal, North Carolina businesses sold $245.2 million in products to China, the state’s 16th-largest foreign customer.

In addition, Edwards said at the time that exposure to trade would help democratize China.

Boston Globe
http://www.boston.com/news/politics/president/edwards/articles/2004/02/20/trade_issue_close_to_home_for_edwards/

February 19, 2004

Kerry: ‘We voted for the China trade agreement’

Filed under: 2004 Primary, China, China Trade Relations, Trade — is @ 1:45 pm
Kerry, still the prohibitive favorite in the race after winning 15 of the first 17 contests, brushed off suggestions that Edwards was making inroads in the race by pointing out their differences on trade.

“We have the same policy on trade. Exactly the same policy,” said Kerry, who has been criticized by Edwards for supporting the North American Free Trade Agreement. “We both voted for the China trade agreement.”

John Edwards
Asked if Edwards, who was a trial lawyer when NAFTA was approved by the Senate in 1993, was being disingenuous in saying he opposed NAFTA, Kerry replied: “Well, he wasn’t in the Senate then. I don’t know where he registered his vote, but it wasn’t in the Senate.”

The Massachusetts senator also rejected suggestions that Edwards’ working class roots gave him a better understanding of what it was like to lose a job.

“If where you come from was a qualification for president, we’d never have had Franklin Roosevelt or John Kennedy,” he said.

China Daily 2/19/04
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-02/19/content_307395.htm

August 5, 2003

China trade to become dominant economic policy issue in the US

The trend reaches far beyond the textile industry or Kannapolis - a community whose name means “city of looms” but which is shedding 5,000 Pillowtex jobs. Manufacturing businesses from electronics to furniture and fishing lures are closing their doors or moving production to China.

The rapid erosion of well-paying jobs has wide implications for the economy. Consider that the US trade deficit with China is now running at an annual rate of $120 billion - a record single-country amount that is larger than America’s entire trade deficit only six years ago.

“This will become the dominant economic policy issue in the US [over] the next five years,” says Don Straszheim of Straszheim Global Advisors in Santa Monica, Calif.

Indeed, China’s export push is already becoming a front-burner issue in Washington. Congress has asked everyone from think-tank experts to Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan for answers to the problem. Three members of the president’s cabinet on a cross-country jaunt to promote the Bush economic plan have gotten an earful from angry businesspeople trying to compete with Chinese imports made by workers getting 50 cents an hour. The loss of jobs to imports is almost certain to be a recurring theme in the Presidential campaign next fall and beyond.

The numbers are eye-opening. Chinese exports soared 22 percent last year. And it’s not just low-cost towels. Exports of computer and telecom products are growing 60 percent annually. While American firms have struggled, Chinese companies reported profits rose in the first quarter by 56 percent from the previous year.

snip

Sen. John Edwards says he will try to secure $38 million in federal aid, and Sen. Elizabeth Dole is opening an office in town to take questions. But workers are leery: “We don’t want questions answered, we want a paycheck,” says Mr. Rogers.

Christian Science Monitor 8/5/03
http://www.csmonitor.com/2003/0805/p01s02-usec.html

Older Posts »

Blog at WordPress.com.