Obama's agenda for change and the 2009 Summit of the Americas
- Opinión
Barack Obama's electoral victory represents hope for change in the US relations with Latin America, but he will have to work against time to showcase the new policy direction at the Fifth Summit of the Americas, to be held in Trinidad and Tobago in April next year, write Rick Arnold and Manuel Pérez-Rocha.
Barack Obama's electoral victory represents hope for a change in direction for US relations with
The pundits may not be giving the 44th President and his team enough credit when it comes to their ability to multi-task. With expectations so high, Obama will need to move on various fronts simultaneously to be seen to be working at fulfilling the hopes that have been raised. These next few months will be important ones to be able to demonstrate to all the other countries in the American continent -,from
The new Obama administration will need to recognize that the largest economies in
Begin the change in North America by re-opening NAFTA
Obama's implementation of his campaign promise of opening up the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) will be a step in a positive direction given the adverse effect that this unfair deal has had on workers and small farmers in Mexico, Canada, as well as in the US. Since Obama started his campaign for the presidential nomination of the Democratic Party he declared that NAFTA and other free trade agreements would need to be amended to make sure that enforceable labor and environmental provisions prevailed. This has been echoed by the Democratic Party in its "Renewing America's Promise" document. Of particular interest in this document is the intention to "Recommit to an
Contrary to some suspicions, Obama's promise to amend NAFTA may prove to be more than electoral double-speak. After the November 4th elections the following has been added to Barack Obama's webpage: "Amend the North American Free Trade Agreement: Obama and Biden believe that NAFTA and its potential were oversold to the American people. They will work with the leaders of
This commitment by Obama to renegotiate NAFTA has been welcomed by civil society in all three signatory countries. In
Stop the extension of the SPP to the rest of the continent
To make things more challenging, there is more to change than NAFTA. Since 2005 when the ‘three amigos' - Bush, Martin and Fox - met in Waco, Texas and announced the SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America), it has served as an undemocratic mechanism for the expansion of corporate power and the extension of the North American perimeter for the US ‘war on terror'. Legislatures as well as civil society have been totally excluded from any input into the SPP while 30 corporations that form the North American Competitiveness Council (NACC) dictate "recommendations" to the governments via their secretive "prosperity" and "security" working groups.
So far the SPP has meant a myriad of regulatory convergence measures (often to the lowest standard available); deeper deregulation in areas untouched by NAFTA; increased pressure on Mexico to open up its strategic energy industry to foreign investors, and on Canada to speed up its volume of oil exports from tar sands. In terms of security the SPP has resulted in stepped up militarization of borders, and in security measures like the Merida Initiative by which the US aids the Mexican government with half a billion dollars yearly (for three years) for military training and equipment. In a related measure
On September 2008 as the global economic crisis was grabbing the headlines, Bush called on Heads-of-State and government officials from 11countries from the American continent present in
The PPA bears many of the hallmarks of the SPP. According to the Mexican Action Network on Free Trade, the PPA is "based on two similar components to the SPP: on one hand an economic, mercantile and financial agenda covered by the term ‘prosperity', and on the other a ‘security' agenda of enhancing military and police powers to combat terrorism, narcotraffic, illegal migration, etc.." The PPA, like the SPP, is little more than an attempt to justify economic deregulation and to promote an escalation of militarism in the region (i.e. the return of the moth-balled US IV fleet to Latin American waters).
Now, in the run up to the
Obama should give the Bush FTAA 'plan B' a quick burial
The Bush administration is making a last ditch attempt to re-package "free trade" through the PPA, employing the now familiar rhetoric that "this initiative will provide a forum where leaders can work to ensure that the benefits of trade are broadly shared. It will deepen the connections among regional markets." However Bush still conveniently ignores the evidence that past attempts at opening up markets has actually led to regional disintegration and provoked an increase in inequality and poverty in the region.
The PPA is a highly divisive strategy designed to defeat the process of Latin American integration. Bush said about the PPA that "this initiative is open to all countries, as participants or observers, in the
Other actors throwing their support behind the PPA are the World Bank and the IDB. Despite the financial crisis of epic proportions in the
"Yes we can" - change for the
Hemispheric-wide resistance to the first attempt by the
According to Obama, "what's good for the people of the
The 2009 IV Peoples' Summit in Trinidad and Tobago
During April 17-19, 2009 the IV Peoples Summit will be taking place in Port of Spain, Trinidad (while the Heads-of-State are simultaneously meeting at the V Summit of the Americas).The message of a 'change agenda' for the hemisphere will be brought to the island nation by social movements coming from all points in between Alaska and Tierra del Fuego. A key focus for discussions during the People's
In conjunction with the Hemispheric Social Alliance [2], social movements present in Trinidad and Tobago will be providing a ‘change agenda' that in large measure will likely be echoed by representatives from many of the newly elected governments in Latin America and the Caribbean. The V Summit of the
Notes
[1] The countries that have signed the PPA are Canada, Chile, Colombia Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Panamá, Perú and the United States
[2] The Hemispheric Social Alliance is a 10 year old network with national, regional and sectoral chapters. In the North American region the members are Common Frontiers in
Copyright © 2007 Alliance for Responsible Trade
- Rick Arnold is the Coordinator of Common Frontiers Canada; Manuel Pérez-Rocha is an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies and participates with the
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