CAFTA Vote Story
by Kent Snyder (The Liberty
Committee)
July 29, 2005
When the
official 15-minute period ended, CAFTA had gone down to
defeat,
180 "nays" to 175 "yeas." But the House leadership was so
politically
driven to get what they wanted, they broke the House rules:
they simply violated the
time limit in order to keep twisting arms and making deals
until they finally had
bought or coerced enough votes to pass CAFTA nearly an hour
later.
"Twist some Republican arms until they break in a thousand
pieces."
That statement by Representative Jim Kolbe (R-Arizona)
describes the
Republican leadership's rabid determination to get the U.S.
House to pass the
Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) -- no matter
what.
The vote that began late Wednesday night finally ended just
after
midnight onThursday morning, July 28. But Mr. Kolbe's
statement doesn't begin to tell the whole truth. Here's some
of what he left out.
Because President Bush and the House leadership knew the vote
would be
razor close, the day of the vote began with the president
making a rare
appearance on Capitol Hill to speak before a closed-door,
members-only meeting of
House Republicans that morning. He even brought Vice President
Cheney and
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice with him.
And the arm-twisting began.
"The last-minute negotiations for Republican votes resembled
the wheeling and dealing on a car lot. Republicans who were
opposed or undecided were
courted during hurried meetings in Capitol hallways, on the
House floor and at
the White House. GOP leaders told their rank and file that if
they wanted
anything, now was the time to ask, lawmakers said, and members
took advantage of the opportunity by requesting such things as
fundraising appearances by Cheney and the restoration of money
the White House has tried to cut from agriculture programs.
Lawmakers also said many of the favours bestowed in exchange
for votes will be
tucked away into the huge energy and highway bills that
Congress is scheduled to
pass this week before leaving for the August recess." -- The
Washington Post, July 28, 2005.
Yet despite all the bribes and threats (one congressman
estimates at least $47 billion in pork, and probably much
more), the Republican establishment would later that night
fail to get the U.S. House to pass CAFTA when the
legitimate15-minute voting period would expire. CAFTA would be
stopped fair and square.
But even though House Republican leaders preach the importance
of good
morals, and run for office on "family values," their game plan
already included
buying votes and breaking the rules to get what they wanted.
Before the CAFTA debate even began Wednesday evening, House
Majority Leader Tom DeLay stated, "It will be a tough vote,
but we will pass CAFTA tonight." A bold prediction by Mr.
DeLay, considering that the vote was too close to call, and he
knew it. But when you have the power to break the rules and no
qualms about doing so, you can
afford to make such predictions.
Two hours of debate on CAFTA ended in the U.S. House at 10:59
p.m.
Wednesday night. Representative Ray LaHood (R-Illinois),
speaker pro tempore, then ordered a 15-minute vote -- at the
end of which CAFTA had been defeated! But with the vote kept
open for more than one hour after it began, the "final" vote
tally was 217 in favour to 215 against, with two not voting. Or
was it? We were led to believe that the two members who didn't
vote, Jo Ann Davis (R-Virginia) and Charles Taylor (R-North
Carolina) who were already on record as going to vote "no" and
would have defeated CAFTA, had been persuaded to remain
silent. Mr. Taylor's was a key vote from a textile state that
everyone was watching.
Republican leaders "spent much of [the] time wrestling with
about 10
rebellious but 'undecided' Republicans, pleading and
pressuring one after another to
vote or the agreement." -- New York times, July 29, 2005. The
herd mentality
dictates that if you can break key resistance, the rest will
follow.
But on Thursday, the day after the vote, I received a
telephone call
from a talk radio host in Congressman Taylor's district. He
told me he had asked Mr. Taylor that morning why he didn't
vote against CAFTA as he had pledged. The talk radio host told
me "Taylor said he had voted 'no'...but somebody changed it
and Mr. Taylor was furious." "'I voted NO,' Mr. Taylor
announced in a terse statement
on Thursday, saying the House clerk's written log showed his
vote...." -- New York
Times, July 29, 2005.
So, the Republican leadership claimed their razor-thin
victory. OnThursday,
presidential press secretary Scott McClellan bragged, "And on
the
Central American Free Trade Agreement, last night's vote was a
real victory for
the American people...." Well, Scott...that's what Bill
Clinton told us about
NAFTA in 1993.
See how your U.S. representative voted. If he voted against
CAFTA,
please thank him. If he voted for CAFTA, please express your
opinion.
Thousands of you throughout the country worked hard to protect
U.S.
sovereignty from the globalists' agenda. It is hard work.
Sometimes it seems thankless -- but we are stronger for every
effort we make. Next time, a hair's breath loss like this
could be a narrow victory. Don't give in and don't give up.