The Denver Post

Let’s root for Koch Brothers

- By Joe Nocera

Never in a million years did I expect to write these words:

Thank goodness for the Koch brothers!

I know, I know: Their political and policy networks were enthusiast­ic funders of Tea Party candidates. They back climatecha­nge deniers. They oppose government aid across the board — even when that aid might create jobs or help the impoverish­ed. Their bought-and-paidfor think tanks have helped move Congress and the country significan­tly to the right.

But unlike so many people who once viewed themselves as principled conservati­ves — unlike, say, Larry Kudlow — the Kochs and their network’s key executives have not abandoned their principles to curry favor with this unprincipl­ed president. One of the few areas where President Donald Trump has longstandi­ng, consistent views is trade. Those views are so utterly wrong-headed that they will lead to economic disaster if they can’t be stopped. With most Republican representa­tives and senators sadly supine, the Kochs seem to me the only ones out there with the clout and the money to act as a countervai­ling force.

On Sunday, during the Koch network’s annual gathering of major donors, Charles Koch, 82, gave a rare news conference, which he used in part to criticize Trump’s obsession with tariffs. According to Bloomberg News, he told reporters that the greater the level of trade restrictio­ns, the greater the risk of severe economic fallout. “Every nation that’s prospered is one that didn’t engage in trade wars,” he said.

Then on Monday, Tim Phillips, the president of Koch’s primary political organizati­on, Americans for Prosperity, announced that it would not support Kevin Cramer, a Republican congressma­n from North Dakota who is running for Senate against a vulnerable Democratic incumbent, Heidi Heitkamp. Although the refusal to back Cramer was not linked to Trump’s trade policies, Phillips’s point could hardly be missed: Candidates who supported Trump policies over the Kochs’ objections won’t get the group’s money. They’ll have to decide

whether to side with free trade — or with Trump.

I can’t remember a time when free trade wasn’t Republican dogma. It was the Democrats — at least some of them — who sought protection­ist policies like tariffs to keep jobs from moving to China or Mexico. But the Republican­s were right; free trade has been a boon to the world, creating prosperity and a robust middle class in countries that were once basket cases.

Why, for instance, has the number of unauthoriz­ed immigrants coming from Mexico fallen so drasticall­y over the past 15 or 20 years? Because, thanks to the North American Free Trade Agreement, Mexico now has an economy that provides good jobs. Mexicans no longer feel that they have to move to the U.S. to have a decent life. What’s more, for all the talk about the hollowing out of manufactur­ing jobs, free trade has also helped the U.S. The obvious benefit is low prices. The less obvious benefit is jobs. Yes, jobs have been lost in the Midwest. But they have been more than made up for as U.S. exports have increased.

What Trump doesn’t understand — and Koch does — is that low tariffs are the foundation of the modern world economy. It’s true that every country has a sector it wants to protect for political reasons: lumber in Canada, agricultur­e in Europe, cars in Japan, internet companies (among other industries) in China, tobacco (yes, tobacco) in the U.S.

Trump believes that erecting tariffs on, say, steel will force manufactur­ers to turn to American steelmaker­s. But it won’t; the supply chain infrastruc­ture can’t be easily untangled — if it can be unwound at all. The only thing it will do is force companies from Coca-cola to Caterpilla­r to charge more.

To the surprise of absolutely no one, Trump lashed back against the Koch brothers Tuesday morning in a pair of tweets, borrowing from the Steve Bannon playbook to label them “globalists” and a “total joke in real Republican circles.”

I doubt the Kochs will be deterred by a few insulting tweets from the president. The Koch network has already announced a major media campaign on behalf of free trade that will start soon. During his news conference, Charles Koch noted that the U.S. was far from a worst case scenario, largely because an out-andout trade war was still a long way off — and was still preventabl­e.

True enough. Last week, European Commission President Jean-claude Juncker, met with Trump and appeared to talk him out of a trade war with Europe, at least for now. But there is still China, where talks are underway but is as likely as not to engage in a trade war.

A major trade war will wreak havoc on our economy, and would likely lead to a major recession. So join me please in rooting for the Kochs, no matter what your politics. If they can use their money and power to force Republican­s to abandon the president and stand with free trade, they will have done the country a very big service.

 ??  ?? Joe Nocera is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering business.
Joe Nocera is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering business.

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