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229 lines
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229 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
***** Reformatted. Please post.
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CLINTON/GORE ON TRADE
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To win in global markets, America needs an economic
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growth plan that provides every person and every
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firm with the means to be more productive. We need
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a trade policy that puts people first by investing
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in ourselves. Bill Clinton and Al Gore's Nations
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Economic Strategy invest in the ongoing education
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of the American people, in the productive equipment
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that gives our workers the tools to compete, and in
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the economic infrastructure that binds our markets
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and our business together. It also recognizes that
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America needs companies that invest in the future,
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profit from change and treat their workers as full
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partners.
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When our workers and firms do their part to be
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competitive, we must have an Administration that
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does its part to ensure that we have open markets
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for their goods and services. We need a new trade
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and competitiveness program. A Clinton/Gore
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Administration will stand up for American workers
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by standing up to countries that don't play by the
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rules of free and fair trade. Given a chance,
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American farmers, workers and businesses can
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out-compete anybody.
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The Clinton/Gore Plan
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Promote world growth
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To promote world growth policies in the post-Cold
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War era, we must be economically strong at home.
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President Bush's weak economic record has deprived
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him of the authority he needs to insist that Japan
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adopt expansionary policies to reduce its $100
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billion trade surplus, and to ensure that Germany's
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high interest rates do not cripple growth
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throughout Europe. A Clinton/Gore Administration
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will hold all advanced countries accountable for
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doing their part to promote world trade, end unfair
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trade practices and open markets.
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Support a strong "Super 301"
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This is the provision of U.S. trade law that has
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helped pry open foreign markets. Our competitors
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must know that we won't stand for unfair trade
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practices that prevent our farmers, workers and
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businesses from selling products aborad and
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creating jobs at home. We have had plenty of empty
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promises on trade; what we need now are results.
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North American Free Trade Agreement
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Bill Clinton will support a free trade treaty with
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Mexico, but only if it has adequate protection for
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workers, health and the environment on both sides
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of the border. A Clinton/Gore Administration will
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support a free trade policy that puts people first.
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We just have strong transition strategies that
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ensure that workers benefit from a more open world
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trading system.
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General Agreements on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
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America needs leadership to break the logjam and
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get the Uruguay Round finished. President Bush's
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ill-fated trip to Japan and his poor performance at
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the G-7 summit demonstrate that our trade policies
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suffer from a lack of Presidential leadership.
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Bill Clinton and Al Gore will ensure that the
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Uruguay Round opens markets for agriculture,
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services and in particular manufacturing; protects
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our intellectual property; and takes a tough stand
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against unfair trade practices. The United States
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need to continue to promote free trade that aims to
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raise - not lower - standards for health, safety,
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and the environment. No trade agreement should
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preclude the United States from enforcing
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non-discriminatory laws and regulations affecting
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health, worker safety and the environment. Bill
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Clinton and Al Gore will not allow the Uruguay
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round to alter U.S. laws and regulations through
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the back door.
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Economic Security Council
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A Clinton/Gore Administration will create an
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Economic Security Council, similar to the National
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Security Council, to coordinate American
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international economic policy.
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MFN with China
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The Bush Administration erred by extending Most
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Favored Nation trade status to the People's
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Republic of China before it achieved documented
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progress on human rights. We should not reward
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China with improved trade status when it has
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continued to trade goods made by prison labor and
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has failed to make sufficient progress on human
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rights since the Tiananmen Square massacre.
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Reform the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative
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Bill Clinton will issue an executive order banning
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trade negotiators from cashing in on their
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positions by serving as representatives of foreign
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corporations or governments. He will rededicate the
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Office of the Trade Representative to serving the
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country - not selling out for lucrative lobbying
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paychecks from foreign competitors.
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Create a civilian DARPA
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Bill Clinton and Al Gore will create a civilian
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advanced technology agency modelled on the Defense
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Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). America
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can no longer afford to get the Nobel Prizes while
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our competitors get the profits. A civilian
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technology agency will bring businesses and
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universities together to develop cutting-edge
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products and technologies, to move our ideas into
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the marketplace where they can create jobs for our
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people. The new agency will increase America's
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commercial R&D spending, and focus its efforts in
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crucial new technologies such as biotechnology,
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robotics, high speed computing and environmental
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technology.
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Incentives for manufacturing innovation
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* Provide a targeted investment tax credit to
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encourage investment in the new plants and
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productive equipment that we need here at home
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to compete in the global economy.
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* Make permanent the research and development
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tax credit to reward companies that invest in
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ground-technologies.
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* Help small businesses and entrepreneurs by
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offering a 50 percent tax exclusion to those
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who take risks by making long-term investments
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in new businesses.
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Standing up for America's workers
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* Require every employer to spend 1.5 percent of
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payroll for continued education and training,
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and make them provide the training to all
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workers, not just executives.
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* Bring business, labor, and education leaders
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together to develop a national apprenticeship
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program that offers non-college bound students
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training in valuable skills.
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* Provide all Americans with affordable, quality
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health care.
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* Limit deductions for outrageous executive pay.
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Companies will be allowed to deduct bonuses
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for employee ownership and profit sharing for
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all employees, no just executives.
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* End tax breaks for American companies that
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shut down their plants here and ship American
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jobs overseas.
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The Record
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* From 1979 to 1991, there was 142 percent
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increase in the number of Arkansas companies
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exporting products. Nearly 75 percent of
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those companies had less than 200 employees.
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* Bill Clinton made numerous trade missions to
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Europe and Asia to negotiate expanded markets
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for Arkansas products.
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* Senator Gore has insisted that other
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governments dismantle barriers which unfairly
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block access to their markets.
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* Gore does no believe the long-term solution to
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our country's competitiveness problem is a
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blanket policy of protectionism. Senator Gore
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has fought to invest in the research and
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development of new technologies, to rebuild
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our crumbling infrastructure, to better
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educate our children and to retrain our
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workers.
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* Senator Gore introduced and steered into law
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the High Performance Computing Act of 1990, to
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create a national high- speed computers, and
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making those computers accessible to people
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who otherwise would not be able to take
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advantage of their power and speed. It was
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the result of more than a dozen years of work
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by Gore.
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* Gore joined a number of his Senate colleagues
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in June 1991 to introduce comprehensive
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package of legislation to strengthen our
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manufacturing base. They will help us
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establish a federal manufacturing policy to
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develop and commercialize critical
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technologies and sharpen our ability to turn
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inventions into affordable, usable products.
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* Gore supported the fast-track process for the
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negotiation of a U.S. Mexico Free Trade
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Agreement, but final approval of NAFTA is
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dependent on its protection of American
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workers and support of enforceable
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environmental standards.
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