Vancouver Sun

American voters must be wary of trade positions

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Airplanes, software, seafood and agricultur­e are four of the many reasons Americans have a political interest in internatio­nal trade. The United States need a president who will promote reasonable rules rather than resentment­s and restrictio­ns.

Regarding trade, the choice between President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney is troubling. It is also uncertain because on this issue Americans have learned not to believe anything their candidates say.

Obama ran in 2008 appealing to resentment of trade, as did all the Democratic contenders that year.

They did this to win the blue- collar vote in the swing states of Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and North Carolina.

When Obama came out against the North American Free Trade Agreement, promising to renegotiat­e it, his economic adviser Austan Goolsbee whispered to the Canadians: Don’t believe what we say. It’s an election.

Obama wasn’t as anti- trade as he made out to be, and Americans should be thankful for that.

He didn’t open up NAFTA. He pushed through the trade agreements negotiated under George W. Bush with Colombia, Panama and South Korea.

The Korea agreement is particular­ly important, but it took Obama three years to do it, and on trade he has done not much else. Compared with Bill Clinton, who pushed through NAFTA, approved the World Trade Organizati­on and started the trade normalizat­ion with China, Obama comes up short.

Mitt Romney has said flatly he is for free trade.

Then again, the Republican candidate has picked a fight with China.

In Ohio, he said, “How is it China’s been so successful in taking away our jobs? Well let me tell you how: by cheating.”

He added, “This president has just sat idly by and watched that happen. ... They’ve walked all over him.”

Romney has also promised that on his first day in office he will label China a currency manipulato­r, forcing China to negotiate over the value of its money.

Romney was a funder of companies. He knows that jobs come through cooperatin­g and investing, not by drawing a line in the sand and daring the other guy to cross it.

He also knows that the economic success of China has not come mainly by cheating.

He is running for office, and it’s a good bet some of these stances will be moderated if he gets the chance to govern.

Still voters must pay attention and vet the candidates.

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