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Trade and Jobs Key to Victory for Bernie Sanders

New York Times Original article ›

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The March 8, 2016 Democratic debate in Florida following Sanders narrow win in Michigan and Clinton's wide margin win in Mississippi primaries

03/09/2016

This debate organized by Univision used some Spanish for viewers and focussed on immigration issues. Both candidates for the U.S. Democratic presidential nomination attacked each others record on immigration. Sanders saying Clinton told New York Governor Spitzer not to move ahead with giving drivers licenses to illegal immigrants, an action Sanders had taken in Vermont. Sanders narrow win in Michigan had energized his campaign, and Clinton with the larger delegate count appeared unruffled.

Grouped Articles

In the Democratic Debate, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders Clash on Immigration

New York Times 03/09/2016

Trade and Jobs Key to Victory for Bernie Sanders

New York Times 03/09/2016

NAFTA, Trans Pacific Trade Agreement, and free trade- shifting sentiment of the working class in America against trade that leads to loss of manufacturing jobs

03/09/2016

The sentiment against loss of manufacturing jobs as a result of trade agreements and free trade is strongest in midwestern states such as Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, which have seen the loss of manufacturing jobs hurt their economy. Especially hurt are younger less educated workers who see their job prospects diminish and wages drop. Bernie Sanders narrowly won the Michigan primary against Hillary Clinton by bringing up this issue in a barrage of ads.

Grouped Articles

After Michigan Loss, Hillary Clinton Sharpens Message on Jobs and Trade

New York Times 03/09/2016

Trade and Jobs Key to Victory for Bernie Sanders

New York Times 03/09/2016

Simmering for Decades, Anger About Trade Boils Over in ’16 Election

New York Times 03/29/2016

Why Trade Critics Are Getting Traction

Wall Street Journal 03/30/2016

Donald Trump Lays Out Protectionist Views in Trade Speech

WSJ 06/28/2016

Bernie Sanders: Democrats Need to Wake Up

The New York Times 06/28/2016

Trans-Pacific Partnership Trade Agreement- winners and losers

04/07/2011

A study by Prof. Petri of Brandeis University, shows economic output going up by 0.4% by 2025 or $77 billion for the U.S. as a result of the TPP agreement. Biologic drugs, with long term patent protection, software engineering services, high tech industry are the winners, losers are the Detroit auto industry facing higher imports, light manufacturing in textiles and paper, and some heavy manufacturing sectors. Douglas Irwin of Datmouth and other experts say it is not clear how much of the benefit will affect consumers and businesses in the U.S. Most of the tariff cut gains are already made and import duties as a percentage of total imports are down to 1.4% today. Experts say 4/5th of the benefits for the U.S. are not from tariff cuts but from new rules for trade in services, and new rules for investment and commerce. The agreement brings together Pacific area countries, including Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Chile, and Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam. Agriculture is protected in Canada especially in Quebec, and in Japan, which means tough negotiations to open up this sector. Politically the TPP is a response by the U.S. and Japan to the Infrastructure Investment Bank set up by China with support from Europe and India.

Grouped Articles

Pacific Trade Deal Likely to Have Narrow Reach

Wall Street Journal 08/01/2015

Auto-Parts Dispute Taps the Brakes on Pacific Trade Deal

Wall Street Journal 09/04/2015

Why You May Soon See More Goods Labeled ‘Made in Vietnam’

Wall Street Journal 10/19/2015

Utah Senator, Crucial Ally for the Pacific Rim Trade Deal, Is Now Its Main Hurdle

New York Times 11/12/2015

McConnell warns that trade deal can’t pass Congress before 2016 elections - The Washington Post

Washington Post 12/11/2015

Trans-Pacific Trade Pact Would Lift U.S. Incomes, but Not Jobs Overall, Study Says

New York Times 01/25/2016


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