Thursday, August 25, 2022

OPEN BORDERS TO KEEP WAGES DEPRESSED KEEPS WORKING! - THE NAFTA DEMOCRATS AT WORK ON YOUR WAGES! - San Francisco Leads Nation in Year-to-Year Decline in Wages

Though Biden has routinely claimed that NAFTA created jobs in Delaware and the U.S., NAFTA helped to eliminate nearly 17,000 American jobs due to soaring trade deficits and China’s entering the World Trade Organization (WTO) in his home state. NAFTA, alone, eliminated about 1,200 American jobs in Delaware due to the U.S.-Mexico trade deficit.

KPIX Special Report: San Francisco's Tenderloin – A State of Emergency

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDDtKERvF4M

American Workers Wouldn’t Stand A Chance With Bygone Joe Biden

https://townhall.com/columnists/kenblackwell/2019/05/04/american-workers-wouldnt-stand-a-chance-with-bygone-joe-biden-n2545848



San Francisco Leads Nation in Year-to-Year Decline in Wages

By Terence P. Jeffrey | August 24, 2022 | 11:57am EDT

  
(Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
(Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

(CNSNews.com) - San Francisco, California, led all of the nation’s 355 largest counties with the biggest decline in average weekly wages from the first quarter of 2021 to the first quarter of 2022, according to data released today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

San Mateo County, which sits just south of the City and County of San Francisco, had the second largest decline in average weekly wages.

The average weekly wage in San Francisco dropped by 9.1 percent from the first quarter of 2021 to the first quarter of 2022.

 

Even so, the average weekly wage in San Francisco was still $3,393—the second highest in the country after New York County (Manhattan), New York, where the average weekly wage was $4,064.

San Mateo County saw its average weekly wage drop by 9.0 percent from the first quarter of last year to the first quarter of this year. It hit $3,300.

In addition to San Francisco and San Mateo, only four other counties among the nation’s 355 largest saw their average weekly wages drop from the first quarter of last year to the first quarter of this year—and two of them (Santa Clara and Sonoma) were also in the Bay Area.

 

Another was in the suburbs of Washington, D.C.

Montgomery County, Maryland saw its wages drop by 5.9 percent from the first quarter of last year to the first quarter of this year. Santa Clara County, California saw its wages drop by 3.8 percent; Sonoma County, California saw its wages drop by 0.8 percent; and Will County, Illinois saw its wages drop by 0.1%.

The largest year-to-year increase in wages occurred in Peoria County, Illinois, where the average weekly wage climbed by 25.8 percent from the first quarter of last year to the first quarter of this year.

The second and third largest increase in wages were in Elkhart County, Indiana (16.6 percent) and Benton County, Arkansas (16.4 percent).  


Offshoring production to Mexico has proven cheaper for corporate executives. Where American workers earn $30 an hour, Mexican workers earn about $3 an hour in comparison — a 90 percent cut to wages that has expanded the profit margins of hundreds of former American manufacturers.

What's more, Mexico generally benefits from shipping its surplus uneducated population to the states to take the pressure valve off the potential for unrest. Corrupt Mexican officials often reap "fees" from letting illegal migrants from other countries as well as their own pass through their territory. MONICA SHOWALTER


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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N2NcF0Ru1CI


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15 Reasons Why The United States Is Going To Hell In A Handbasket





Data: Climbing Rent Prices Hitting American Middle Class Hardest

A sign advertises an apartment for rent along a row of brownstone townhouses in the Fort Greene neighborhood on June 24, 2016 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. According to a survey released on Thursday by real-estate firm RealtyTrac, Brooklyn ranked as the most unaffordable place to live …
Drew Angerer/Getty Images
2:43

The cost for rent is skyrocketing, putting more pressure on Americans, recent data from the Bank of America Institute showed.

Fox Business reported Tuesday:

Median rent payments for Bank of America customers surged 7.4% in July from the previous year, up from 7.2% in June, according to a new report from the Charlotte-based bank. Although skyrocketing rents are squeezing Americans across the income spectrum, middle-income and younger workers are feeling the biggest pinch.

Rising rents are a concerning development because higher housing costs most directly and acutely affect household budgets. Roughly 34% of households are renters, according to Census Bureau data, but that figure is even larger for lower- and middle-income families. More than half — roughly 52.6% — of households with family income that is below the national median of $31,133 are renters.

The institute said, “Significant increase in rent prices can have meaningful impact on household financial situations, particularly for middle and lower income households,” according to its report dated August 18.

Per the institute, every income group was suffering under rising rent with the percentage year over year in median rent the largest for those with annual incomes between $51,000 and $150,000.

Meanwhile, inflation and crime emerged as the main worries going into the midterms, a Rasmussen Reports survey found this week.

“There is a consensus across the board, as most Democrats, Republicans, and independents identify inflation as a concern,” according to Breitbart News.

In addition, Americans were slammed with higher food prices last month despite President Joe Biden’s White House claiming inflation ran at zero throughout that time.

As if that was not enough, inflation also bore down on parents raising children, per the Brookings Institution.

The left-wing institution’s analysis showed it could cost over $300,000 to raise a child in the current economic climate “which works out to an average of $18,271 per year to raise a child born after 2015,” according to Breitbart News.

“As Breitbart News has documented, inflation has increased significantly under President Joe Biden since the start of his presidency. The result of this has meant a higher cost of living for American families due to rising expenses in gas, food, and housing, among other items,” the report said.

Mass layoffs at Ford: Ruling class launches new stage in offensive against jobs

Amid an explosive geopolitical crisis, the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and militant struggles of workers for higher wages, the ruling class is responding with increasingly ruthless attacks on jobs.

On Monday, Ford Motor Company revealed plans to lay off 2,000 salaried workers and 1,000 contract employees, effective September 1. The cuts will take place in the US, Canada and India, with a “significant percentage” of them in Michigan, according to a company spokesman.

Last month, Bloomberg reported that Ford was planning as many as 8,000 layoffs this year, targeting white-collar workers and positions in its internal combustion engine business. “We absolutely have too many people in some places, no doubt about it,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said at an auto conference in February.

The salaried job cuts are a prelude to a wider attack on workers’ jobs. The global auto giants are engaged in a furious effort to dominate the market for electric vehicles and other new technologies and are restructuring their operations internationally, slashing costs and seeking to extract even more profit from workers.

Stellantis (formed from the merger of Fiat-Chrysler and the PSA Group) has already carried out indefinite layoffs this year at its Belvidere Assembly plant in Illinois and the Warren and Sterling Stamping plants in Michigan, and is planning to cut the second shift at its Windsor, Ontario, plant by the end of 2022.

Ford, meanwhile, previously announced that it would be ending production at its factories in Saarlouis, Germany, and Chennai, India, provoking enormous anger among workers in both locations, including wildcat plant occupations in the case of Chennai. In Europe, Ford has been testing out a definite strategy to shed labor costs. It has worked with the trade unions to pit workers at different plants in a fratricidal competition to see who will accept the most concessions, dangling the promise of investments in EV production in return.

Although the shift towards EVs has been a significant factor in the restructuring of the auto industry, the attacks on autoworkers’ jobs are part of a broader process underway throughout the world economy. The ruling class, feeling itself increasingly under siege, is initiating a deliberate jobs massacre, as it seeks to counteract a growing movement among workers internationally against exploitation and the disastrous impacts of the pandemic and soaring inflation.

Fifty percent of US executives surveyed in early August said that their companies are reducing headcount, according to professional services firm PwC. Nearly half also said they were either implementing hiring freezes, rescinding job offers or reducing or eliminating signing bonuses.

Mass layoffs have spread most quickly in the tech industry, the subject of frenzied speculative investment in recent years, with at least 38,000 job cuts as of mid-August, a Crunchbase News tally found. Layoffs have taken place at both America’s largest tech giants, including Apple, Microsoft, Meta (Facebook’s parent) and Twitter, as well as a wide range of online businesses, such as Carvana, Peloton, Wayfair, Shopify, Netflix and others. Management at Google’s Cloud business unit told employees that if sales and productivity were not up next quarter, “there will be blood in the streets,” Business Insider reported earlier this month.

There are signs that job cuts are now spreading beyond the tech sector to major retail firms as consumer spending slows. Walmart was reported to be laying off 200 corporate staff at the beginning of August, while Best Buy has been cutting hundreds of jobs at its stores after lowering its sales forecasts in July.

The attacks on workers’ jobs are taking place despite a surge in corporate profitability since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, with enormous sums being continually funneled to Wall Street and super-rich investors. General Motors announced last week that it was restoring its quarterly dividend and increasing its share repurchase program from $3.3 billion to $5 billion, following Ford’s moves to restore its dividend last month.

Mass layoffs are building even as workers’ real wages continue to decline year-on-year, eaten up by inflation which has been substantially accelerated by the US-NATO proxy war against Russia. In July, real average hourly earnings in the US fell 3 percent compared to the year before, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

The Federal Reserve, along with the central banks of many other advanced economies, has begun swiftly raising interest rates, aiming to trigger an economic slowdown and mass layoffs.

While this action is taken in the name of “combatting inflation,” the central bank is totally uninterested in doing anything to address the cost-of-living crisis.

The overwhelming factor driving the increase in prices, according to an April 2022 study by the Economic Policy Institute, has been corporate price-gouging that feeds directly into profit margins. The study found that rising corporate profits contributed six times more to rising prices than rising labor costs.

Real hourly earnings wages for a typical worker have collapsed. But instead of doing anything to prevent price-gouging by corporations, the Fed is working to further fuel corporate profits by reducing workers’ bargaining power through artificially increasing unemployment.

With increasing signs of a global recession, the aim of the financial aristocracy is to place the full burden of its socio-economic crisis on the backs of workers, using the threats of unemployment and destitution as its cudgels. In a recent survey conducted for Bloomberg News, nearly two thirds of respondents said they didn’t feel comfortable asking for a raise and that employers have more leverage, a 5 percent increase from January.

The efforts of the ruling class to make the working class pay for a crisis it has no control over and is not responsible for, and to even use it as an opportunity to increase workers’ exploitation, is of a piece with the policies of the bourgeoisie for the past two and a half years. The ruling class responded to the COVID-19 pandemic by engineering a bailout of trillions of dollars. Measures to slow, let alone stop, the spread of the virus, insofar as they conflicted with capitalist profit interests, were successively abandoned, resulting in more than 20 million deaths worldwide and countless more debilitating infections.

But all the catastrophic experiences of the past two years—the pandemic, skyrocketing inflation, increasingly unbearable working conditions—have at the same time generated profound social anger and grievances in the working class, with ever-growing sections of workers being drawn into strikes and other struggles.

This incipient movement is beginning to find its voice. In the auto industry, Will Lehman, a Mack Trucks worker and socialist, is running in the elections this year for president of the United Auto Workers. Lehman has centered his campaign on demands to abolish the massive, pro-corporate union bureaucracy and to construct a powerful network of rank-and-file committees to fight for what workers need, winning growing support among workers fed up with decades of union-imposed concessions.

Rank-and-file committees, democratically controlled by workers, are required to organize a fight against any and all job cuts. Instead of layoffs and hiring freezes under conditions of widespread understaffing in manufacturing, logistics, health care and education, good-paying jobs must be massively expanded, wages dramatically raised and working conditions improved. To the extent that there is any slowdown in production, it must be combined with a reduction in working hours with no loss in pay, so that workers are not forced to labor 80 hours a week or more.

Moreover, in opposition to the reactionary nationalism promoted by the trade unions, an international perspective and organization are absolutely indispensable if workers are to carry out an effective fight against job cutting and other attacks by the transnational corporations. Such an organization exists in the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees, which has connected workers in a growing number of industries.

Above all, the working class must respond to the growing jobs massacre on the basis of its own interests and program, consciously thought through. Such a program must take as its aim the establishment of workers’ democratic control of production, so that society is run to meet human need, not the profit interests of a wealthy few.

“We want our pound of flesh”: US railroaders press for strike action after pro-company ruling by Biden’s Presidential Emergency Board

Hundreds of railroaders have contacted the WSWS over the past week with their thoughts about the PEB ruling and the potential for strike action. Add your voice to theirs! Contact us by filling out the form at the bottom of this article. All comments will be kept anonymous. We will continue to publish statements from workers in the coming days.

A Norfolk Southern freight train makes it way through Homestead, Pa. on April 27, 2022. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

* * *

“Workers want their pound of flesh from the railroads”

The World Socialist Web Site received the following letter from an Indiana Norfolk Southern worker :

“It was supposed to be the company’s turn. For years, we’ve had concession after concession. We were told we had to take it now because profits were down and the companies were hurting, and the unions said we’d get it when profits are there. Now profits are here … but health care is going up. The carrier is getting rewarded. Premiums are uncapped, which is unprecedented. It is a slap in the face when the carrier says we’re grossly overpaid. They make $1 billion in a quarter, it’s a drop in the bucket for them. When the PEB was announced, nothing happened to railroad stocks. This was a win for the carriers.

“The PEBs always seem for the carriers. Now it’s supposed to be a more worker-friendly environment and they still rule on the carrier’s side. Railroads can’t hire because of the lifestyle. Many railroads deny personal days claiming ‘needs of service’ while eliminating a quarter of the workforce.

“If you roll over personal days, you can only cash them out but can’t use them. Some people had 100 days denied. They want you to mark sick to lose the paid day off, which makes you lose your attendance bonus. With the attendance policy, the PEB didn’t touch it. But they also said, to go back to local level since they couldn’t do it on this level. No, it’s because of the election year.

“During the pandemic we were considered Federal Subcontractors since we haul military freight. But we don’t have the same rights as Federal Subcontractors. We have paid sick days denied, unlike the 15 sick days paid we’re supposed to receive. How can the PEB go against that?

“More people will quit. Some people are waiting for the contract. [Two decades ago], you’d start out at $65,000, and now new workers now start at $52,000. Why!? You can work at other places, why would anyone work with that pay? If you’re lowest man you have no “time off,” you get the worst of it. At $52,000 no wonder they can’t hire people. Then the railroads say the $5000 bonus is helping which is a lie. In my yard there are 18- and 20-year-olds working for Norfolk Southern.

“We saw the statement from the companies on how profits come from capital investments and risk. People are making t-shirts and stickers and placing them all around the job site.

“I’m frustrated and surprised by Biden. I never trusted him; the Democrats always say they’re pro-union but side with the company.

“The higher ups in the union say they will ‘negotiate’ this. But Congress will rubber stamp this. When we talk about striking, you look at the 1800s, when it wasn’t about following the law but what was right. People are leaving and railroads say this job is not for them or they found another opportunity.

“Our phones ring every day. I've gone to work all parts of the day. We had call windows in the 2015 contract for our yard. But the NLRB shut us down even though it’s put in the pay scale and it’s a violation. But we were told, unless both sides agree to it, it’s only an option.

“This [PEB] is an attack on the middle class workers. Supposedly the Biden administration is pro-union, but not allowing us to strike even for 10 minutes. Obama even waited until the 11th hour to sign the PEB. Biden signed it on the Friday before the deadline, which surprised me. Now the people who should be talking are quiet. The unions are quiet except for [SMART-TD President] Ferguson, who was forced to say something because workers are frustrated. BLE have yet to make announcement, even Biden is silent.

“Workers are the only ones talking. BLE is maybe hanging back because they’re swamped, but honestly, they say vote blue and you’ll be taken care of. Then they called for the PEB even before the company. Next point should’ve been to strike. Why ask for a PEB? I believe it’s because of the election. Now they’re like, ‘we have s*** on our face,’ now workers are mad. With the pandemic, attendance policy, workers want a pound of flesh from the railroads.”

“I’ve lost relationships and friendships to this job”

The WSWS also continues to receive extensive comments from workers about the toll which the railroads has taken on their lives. One railroad worker from the Great Plains writes:

“I am the father of a 5-year-old boy. I have been working for the railroad for 4 plus years now. The job is okay I can’t complain about working hard for my paycheck. But with this job I’ve lost relationships and friendships, not to mention if I want to spend time with my son and watch him grow up I have to sacrifice sleep and any overtime they are offering.

“I’ve moved twice and can’t even afford to save money for a house. I can barely afford a 2-bedroom apartment in not even an okay area. Every year rent and bills go up with no raise. I’m forced to cut from my savings and can’t even afford to go on vacation. Getting 2 weeks vacation with no personal time, I am forced to use my vacation days for doctors and school appointments.

“Giving us a $1,000 yearly bonus is a slap in the face that will just be taken when they decide to increase our insurance because of the no cap they proposed. There are a lot of people leaving and they are trying to hire more people because of it. Now posting jobs that give hiring bonuses that are insane like $12,500 for someone to work in my craft. How about reward your people that you have that are staying with a fair wage and benefits and PTO?

“It’s just ass-backwards, making me feel like I need to go elsewhere and waste the time I have given them. It’s all about greed and the rich just getting richer and us blue collar workers getting the leftovers. Soon there will be no middle class and I do believe that’s what they want.”

“It is time to fight back and make a stand the companies and the government”

railroader from the East Coast wrote: “Disgusted is not the word! I have been with the railroad for almost 12 years and during that time it has progressively gotten worse year over year. We are treated like the lowest of the low and are basically told to shut up and just do what we say! We are told to break FRA [Federal Railroad Administration] rules on a daily basis but if we make the smallest infraction, we are in deep trouble. We average working between 65-70 hours per week. So whoever lied and said that we average 32 hours per week has no clue! I never get to see my family because of this lifestyle.

“As for this proposal. It is junk. I say strike! It is time to fight back and make a stand against these draconian companies and government that think we are stupid. I honestly believe they are all in cahoots. Company, Union, and Government. I am over it all! If something doesn’t change, I will be another statistic and find another line of work!”

Norfolk Southern worker told us what the ultimate goal of the railroads is: “Cindy Sanborn with Norfolk Southern and other railroad executives want and desire more automation which that will inevitably mean more market share profitability. American railroads do not appreciate any of their workers. If a contract employee went into management, he or she would still be undervalued and still be a no contributor.

“The only reason to have a manned freight train is for liability purposes so rail executives will not have to face disciplinary action if a train derails. To avoid this, Automation is what rail executives want. That means no labor disputes, no pay raises, no health care, and no arbitration. That’s what American corporations want. They despise workers.”

Another railroader sent us the following: “The Railway Labor Act is illegal and should be removed immediately.

“The IBEW issued a statement over the weekend that the PEB gave us 72 of what we were asking for. They must be doing corporate math. It doesn’t take a scholar to figure out we were screwed once again. They are never willing to put up a fight but always willing to cave at the first offer. I can’t remember a contract that I would consider was fair from this company.

“Our brothers and sisters of the IBEW need to band together and go forward with a STRIKE ACTION! All unions need to continue to stand strong as one. If a WILDCAT is necessary, so be it, a nationwide walkout, absolutely. We contribute nothing, so when we all stand together we’ll see how this goes.”

BILLARY CLINTON AND 'CREDIT CARD' JOE BIDEN WERE THE CLOWNS WHO PERPETRATED NAFTA!

Since the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was enacted and China entered the World Trade Organization (WTO), nearly five million American manufacturing jobs have been eliminated from the American economy — 3.4 million of which are due to U.S. free trade with China. The mass elimination of working- and middle-class jobs and depressed U.S. wages due to NAFTA and China’s entering the WTO have coincided with a 600 percent increase in trade deficits.

Apple CEO Tim Cook, the architect of the multinational corporation’s China outsourcing scheme, was one of the biggest proponents of the amnesty for 4.4 million illegal aliens while Big Agriculture donors lobbied lawmakers to pass the farmworker amnesty (ONE-THIRD OF ALL FARM WORKERS END UP ON WELFARE AS SOON AS THE ANCHOR BABIES START COMING).

Chris Hedges | NAFTA Was CRIMINAL!

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1-104JMiZes&list=WL&index=5

 

Chris Hedges | NAFTA, Clinton, and Obama BETRAYED Americans... and Joe Biden was right there with the worst of them!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qryblALiqOI

Biden defended the wealthy in his speech to the donors but begged them to be aware of wealth inequality

 

COME VISIT BEAUTIFUL NARCOMEX. WATCH A BEHEADING OR TWO, SEE LIVE JOURNALIST MURDERED IN THE STREETS, AND PEOPLE HANGING FROM BRIDGES.

https://mexicanoccupation.blogspot.com/2022/08/come-visit-beautiful-narcomex-see-live.html

Fentanyl Seizures Tripled Nationwide in July, Enough to Kill 469 Million People

What's more, Mexico generally benefits from shipping its surplus uneducated population to the states to take the pressure valve off the potential for unrest. Corrupt Mexican officials often reap "fees" from letting illegal migrants from other countries as well as their own pass through their territory. MONICA SHOWALTER

 

So, while we in America are getting a fair number of sex traffickers; mountains of fentanyl; low skilled, illegal workers who drive down wages; and more welfare mouths to feed, the Latin Americans who come here mostly want to work and mostly hew to traditional western, Christi                                   ANDREA WIDBURG

 


American Workers Wouldn’t Stand A Chance With Bygone Joe Biden

https://townhall.com/columnists/kenblackwell/2019/05/04/american-workers-wouldnt-stand-a-chance-with-bygone-joe-biden-n2545848

 

Ken Blackwell

 

 

When President Trump promised to bring back American manufacturing, he wasn’t just talking about union workers. He was describing an economic agenda that benefits all workers.

According to the latest figures from the Labor Department, the manufacturing sector just posted its biggest wage gains in over a decade — a clear sign that the President’s economic policies are making a real difference for working families.

The employment cost index, which measures employee wages and benefits, rose by 0.9 percent for the manufacturing sector in the first quarter of 2019, with salaries and wages increasing by a full percentage point — even faster than the value of job-related benefits.

The last time manufacturing wages rose so much in a single quarter was in 2008, when wages also rose 1.0 percent between January and March.

Those wage gains are impressive, but they’re not surprising. Over the past two years, America has experienced an historic economic boom marked by the lowest unemployment rate in half a century, fueled by a pro-growth agenda that includes major middle-class tax cuts, deregulation, and targeted counter-tariffs to protect American workers against unfair trade practices by foreign competitors.

As a direct result of this effective economic strategy, labor productivity is also increasing at a faster rate than it has in almost 10 years.

Between the surging value of American workers and the fact that there are now more job openings than job seekers, last quarter’s wage gains were practically inevitable.

As remarkable as our recent economic progress has been, however, the Democrats want to eliminate President Trump’s policies and replace them with a radical agenda that would return us to the lethargic economy of the Obama years.

Democrat presidential frontrunner Joe Biden, for instance, is reviving decades-old liberal appeals to labor unions, declaring that his economic agenda will champion big labor.

“I make no apologies: I am a union man, period,” Biden told members of the Teamsters union, arguing that “the American middle class was built … by unions.”

While it’s true that unions played a key role in America’s economic development a century ago, circumstances have changed dramatically since Franklin Roosevelt’s day. Industries that used to be dominated by unions, such as manufacturing and construction, are increasingly dependent on non-union labor, necessitating a more comprehensive approach to economic policy that looks out for the interests of all workers.

President Trump adopted just such an approach, focusing his efforts on unleashing the potential of American workers and businesses by removing government-imposed impediments such as high tax rates and unnecessary regulations, rather than trying to use the federal government to pick winners and losers.

As a result, wages are growing significantly faster for nonunion workers in goods-producing industries — in the manufacturing sector, for instance, wages increased 1.1 percent for nonunion workers last quarter, but only 0.4 percent for unionized employees.

While Trump’s innovative economic agenda is designed to improve the lives of all American workers by sparking private sector growth, Biden and his fellow Democrats are stuck in an outdated way of thinking that views certain kinds of workers as more important than others. That’s exactly why the 2020 election is about more than just determining who wins the presidency — it’s about defending our newfound prosperity from those who seek to take it away.

 

Across the board, American workers are winning thanks to President Trump’s economic policies. Biden’s pro-union agenda is just an outdated relic of a bygone era. Workers wouldn’t stand a chance with bygone Joe Biden.

 

1993 Joe Biden Said NAFTA Would Help U.S. Chrysler Workers – Years Later They Were Laid Off

 

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/05/03/1993-joe-biden-said-nafta-would-help-u-s-chrysler-workers-years-later-they-were-laid-off/


JOHN BINDER

Former Vice President and Senator Joe Biden (D) was one of the earliest cheerleaders for the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which helped to eliminate nearly five million U.S. manufacturing jobs.

During a Senate floor speech in November 1993, Biden said that NAFTA would, specifically, increase jobs and production for American workers employed at Chrysler’s Newark, Delaware plant by opening up the Mexican market.

“Chrysler expects to sell 5,000 more cars to Mexico from their Newark, DE, plant by the end of the decade,” Biden said. “Without NAFTA, Chrysler will have to manufacture more cars in Mexico to meet the requirements of pre-NAFTA laws.”

Years later, in 2007, those American workers at the Newark Chrysler plant were laid off as the plant closed down. At the it’s height, about 5,700 American workers were employed there. When the plant closed, around 700 to 1,100 Americans were left without jobs.

Many of the U.S. workers blamed the unfair foreign competition that they had been subjected to because of free trade and multilateral agreements like NAFTA, which made it easier for corporations to readily outsource American jobs to Mexico.

“Everybody here is mad, upset, the whole gamut of emotions,” a 15-year employee told the Associated Press at the time. “People feel like they got the carpet yanked from underneath them. They feel like there’s really nothing out there for them after this. The economy is really bad, so it’s a hard thing.”

“Half of Congress is buying foreign cars,” another longtime Chrysler worker said. “They should be mandated to buy American cars. If they don’t, how patriotic is that?”

Offshoring production to Mexico has proven cheaper for corporate executives. Where American workers earn $30 an hour, Mexican workers earn about $3 an hour in comparison — a 90 percent cut to wages that has expanded the profit margins of hundreds of former American manufacturers.

Though Biden has routinely claimed that NAFTA created jobs in Delaware and the U.S., NAFTA helped to eliminate nearly 17,000 American jobs due to soaring trade deficits and China’s entering the World Trade Organization (WTO) in his home state. NAFTA, alone, eliminated about 1,200 American jobs in Delaware due to the U.S.-Mexico trade deficit.

 

 

John Binder  @JxhnBinder

 

Biden in 2007 defended NAFTA, which helped eliminate nearly 5M American manufacturing jobs since 1994:"NAFTA wasn’t the problem." https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/04/30/flashback-joe-biden-in-2007-job-killing-nafta-not-the-problem/ …