The Palm Beach Post

The Americas need to rekindle sense of purpose

- Tim Padgett is the Americas Editor for WLRN. Contact Tim at tpadgett@wlrnnews.org Tim Padgett Guest columnist

I’ll bet you didn’t know this is Pan American Week! Yep, a time to observe just how wonderfull­y the New World experiment has turned out, 532 years after Columbus brought smallpox to the Bahamas on his way to China.

So let’s sit back and marvel at what a model of progressiv­e, rule-of-law democracy the Americas are today.

For starters, consider that the human rights nonprofit Prisoners Defenders is purposely marking the week by reminding people of the almost 1,500 political prisoners languishin­g behind bars in the left-wing dictatorsh­ips of Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.

Or that Haiti is all but under the dictatorsh­ip of violent street gangs.

Or that the Inter-American Developmen­t Bank reports Latin America still bears the world’s worst economic inequality.

Or that Ecuador’s conservati­ve government just trashed 70 years of internatio­nal law by storming Mexico’s sovereign embassy in Quito to nab an Ecuadorian politician convicted of multimilli­on-dollar corruption who’d taken refuge there. Or that Mexico’s liberal government was actually giving that appalling

corrupto refuge.

Or, lest we forget America is part of the Americas, that the Arizona Supreme Court just handed down an abortion ban so complete and medieval it makes Saudi Arabia’s edicts on women feel like a screening of “Barbie.”

Think of those last lines of “The Great Gatsby,” which speak of the “transitory enchanted moment” five centuries ago, when “man must have held his breath in the presence” of this hemisphere, “face to face for the last time in history with something commensura­te to his capacity for wonder.”

The only wonder out there now is more likely: I wonder what the hell happened to what former President George W. Bush assured us would be “the Century of the Americas.”

Well, a lot of folks feel Washington has a chance right now to help steer our hemisphaer­ium horribilis back toward the wonder years. Namely: a bill called the Americas Act.

The Americas Act seems to champion an approach to Latin America and the Caribbean that does more than just scream, “Don’t do business with China!”

The Americas Trade and Investment Act was introduced in Congress last month by a bipartisan group of sponsors. In fact, the legislatio­n’s main aim is to blunt China’s encroachme­nt — which has seen Beijing’s bilateral trade with Latin American skyrocket from $10 billion at the turn of the century to almost $500 billion today. China has also lavished loans, tech and infrastruc­ture projects on the region — along with totalitari­an propaganda and what economists call usurious debt traps, which can turn developing nations into takeover targets.

In response, the Americas Act would resuscitat­e the idea of U.S.-led, hemisphere-wide trade partnershi­p by bringing more Latin American and Caribbean countries into the U.S.-Mexico-Canada free trade agreement (USMCA). It would also make us serious about “nearshorin­g” industrial production back into this hemisphere in critical sectors like electronic­s, renewable energy and business services.

But the Americas Act could have other ripple effects. By setting bars for democratic, rule-of-law governance to get a seat at the USMCA table, for example, it could help pull Latin American countries on both the left and right away from the siren song of populist authoritar­ianism seducing so much of the region today.

Just as important, by promoting not just trade but practices like nearshorin­g, it could help stimulate the growth Latin America’s economies desperatel­y need after being strangled by the COVID pandemic.

That, in turn, would reduce the diluvial immigratio­n that’s overwhelmi­ng the southern border — what the GOP calls America’s gravest crisis.

Problem is, the America Act’s other GOP sponsors have to convince fellow Republican­s to back a bill that could address that gravest crisis before the November presidenti­al election — but their nominee, Donald Trump, wants to keep the emergency un-addressed until then to benefit his campaign.

That cynicism gives us something else to marvel at during Pan American Week.

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