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To: YlangYlangBreeze who wrote (67932)2/25/2000 6:45:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 152472
 
Friday February 25, 4:30 pm Eastern Time
Unionists quit Clinton trade panel over China deal
(Adds White House reaction)
biz.yahoo.com
WASHINGTON, Feb 25 (Reuters) - AFL-CIO labor federation President John Sweeney and two
other union leaders resigned from a White House panel that advises President Bill Clinton on trade
policy to protest a key trade pact with China, the group said on Friday.

White House spokesman Joe Lockhart urged Sweeney and the others to reconsider.

Sweeney announced his resignation before the White House's Advisory Committee on Trade Policy
and Negotiations was expected to endorse the trade agreement, which calls on Beijing to open a
wide range of markets, from agriculture to telecommunications.

The pact is a crucial step for China to join the World Trade Organization (WTO), which sets global
trading rules.

The AFL-CIO and other labor unions, traditionally allied with Clinton's Democratic Party, have
singled out the landmark trade agreement for attack, demanding that China improve labor and human
rights before joining the Geneva-based WTO.

In his resignation letter, Sweeney accused business leaders on the panel of pushing through a
pro-China agenda over the objections of labor and consumer groups.

''We are not willing to put up with a role that consists entirely of writing minority dissents to reports
that do not give adequate weight to workers' legitimate and urgent concerns,'' Sweeney said.

Business leaders on the advisory committee support the trade pact with China and said they
expected the panel to endorse it. The committee includes 27 corporate representatives, far
outnumbering three from labor unions, and one each for environmental and consumer causes.

Two other labor leaders resigned along with Sweeney -- President Jay Mazur of UNITE! and
President Lenore Miller of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union.

''The president takes the advice of Mr. Sweeney and other labor leaders and believes it's very
important in crafting our overall trade policy,'' Lockhart said. ''This group is an advisory group, and
we believe that it's quite important that (labor is) heard within this group, so we hope he'll
reconsider.''

Sweeney's resignation comes despite improved ties with the White House on other trade issues.

At Sweeney's urging, Clinton proposed during global trade talks in Seattle that the WTO take
worker rights into account in trade negotiations. The proposal drew fire from developing nations, and
contributed to the collapse of the Seattle talks.

Vice President Al Gore, the front-runner for the Democratic presidential nomination, won AFL-CIO
support by promising to include labor and environmental provisions in future trade accords if elected
president.

In exchange for China's reduction of trade barriers, the White House says the Republican-controlled
Congress must grant Beijing favorable access to U.S. markets through the so-called permanent
normal trade relations (NTR) status.

Permanent NTR would guarantee Chinese goods the same low-tariff access to U.S. markets as
products from nearly every other nation. China currently benefits from this status only on a
year-by-year basis.