http://www.counterpunch.org/2016/08/25/obamas-campaign-for-tpp-could-drag-down-the-democrats/
August 25, 2016
How much is President Obama
willing to harm the Democratic Party in order to win approval for the deeply
unpopular Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) “trade” agreement? We may soon find
out.
On Tuesday, Politico
broke the story that the White House will be “making an all-out push to win
passage of the deal in the lame duck session of Congress, organizing 30 events
over the congressional recess.” The effort will be designed to put pressure not
only on Democratic members of Congress, but also on swing Republican votes, by
lobbying important business interests in their districts.
This is pretty big news for
the 2016 elections but it seems to have gotten little to no coverage in major
media outlets. The TPP has become a major issue in these elections, with Donald
Trump highlighting his opposition, and Hillary Clinton — who had previously
supported the agreement — vowing to oppose it “before and after” the election.
(Bernie Sanders also had a major impact
on the debate, and possibly on Hillary’s change of position, during the primary
season). This agreement is especially despised among the white working class
voters who have made up the major swing vote in most of the presidential
elections of the past four decades.
Trump is far behind Hillary in
the polls, and it seems unlikely that President Obama would have launched a
public campaign of this magnitude for the TPP in the heat of an election
season, if the race were looking like a serious contest. But there is more at
stake: millions of potential Republican voters will stay home in November if
Trump is losing by a wide margin. Many others will stay home simply because
they don’t like him. But many of these disaffected voters could be rallied to
the polls if they think that Hillary, and her party, are going to bring them
another failed “trade” agreement. (On the other side, some potential Democratic
voters could abstain or switch sides for the same reasons). All this could make
the difference between the Democrats taking the Senate, and in a big enough
landslide, even the House of Representatives.
Why is Obama willing to risk
so much to get the TPP passed this year? Many press reports insist that it is
because he wants it for his legacy. It is strange to think that he would want
such an unpopular agreement for his legacy. There are less flattering reasons
that seem much more plausible.
The “fast-track” legislation
that allows Congress only an up-or-down vote on the TPP, considered essential
to its passage, was approved
in June 2015 by just a 10 vote margin in the House of Representatives.
Only 28 Democrats voted with their president, and they have since come under
increasing pressure not to repeat their vote for the TPP. Meanwhile, nine
Republicans who voted for fast-track have publicly stated that they will
vote against the TPP.
So it is looking like a very
close vote. (For procedural and political reasons, Obama will not bring it to a
vote unless he is sure he has the necessary votes). Now let’s look at one
special group of Representatives who can swing this vote: the actual lame
ducks, i.e., those who will be in office only until January 3rd. It depends
partly on how many lose their election on November 8, but the average number of
representatives who left after the last three elections was about 80.
Most of these people will be
looking for a job, preferably one that can pay them more than a million dollars
a year. From the data
provided by OpenSecrets.org, we can estimate that about a quarter of these
people will become lobbyists. (An additional number will work for firms that
are clients of lobbyists).
So there you have it. It is
all about corruption, and this is about as unadulterated as corruption gets in
our hallowed democracy, other than literal cash under a literal table. These
are the people whom President Obama needs to pass this agreement, and the
window between November 9 and January 3 is the only time that they are
available to sell their votes to future employers without any personal
political consequences whatsoever. The only time that the electorate can be
rendered so completely irrelevant, if Obama can pull this off.
But that is still a big “if,”
because we still have elections, and Obama has to consider what his campaign to
pass the TPP will do to the Democratic Party — or at least he should. On the
other side he has most likely gotten the message that a failure to go all out
for the TPP would cause some big money to shift from the Democratic to the
Republican party. The most powerful corporations in the country, as well as
many actors in the “national security state” want this agreement very badly. It
is a coalition of everybody who is anybody. Except for the people.
It’s ironic because one of the
main purposes of the TPP, like previous “trade” agreements including the World
Trade Organization, is to bind the United States to a set of rules that our
political leaders would have difficulty putting into law in the US. These
include raising pharmaceutical prices by strengthening and lengthening patent
protection; allowing corporations to sue the government for regulation that
infringes on their profits; and undermining public health and environmental
protection, and financial regulation. So by corrupting democracy for this one
big, lame-duck vote, our politicians can undermine and limit democracy for many
years and even decades to come.
In the next few months, we
will see who wins this historic battle.
This column originally
appeared in The Hill.
Mark Weisbrot is co-director of
the Center for Economic and Policy Research, in Washington, D.C. and president
of Just Foreign Policy. He
is also the author of Failed:
What the “Experts” Got Wrong About the Global Economy (Oxford
University Press, 2015).
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