Hoffa
Says Bush Again Turns His Back On Workers
April 7, 2008
(Washington, D.C.) –
Teamsters General President Jim Hoffa said
Monday he will strongly oppose the trade agreement with Colombia that the Bush
administration is sending to Congress.
“This trade deal is an
insult to every American who works for a living,” Hoffa said. “Workers are
feeling the pain of the trade deals that began with NAFTA. They’ve been
disasters.
“The Teamsters, the Change
to Win federation and the entire labor movement will work tirelessly to defeat
this job-killing trade deal that never should have been negotiated in the first
place,” Hoffa said.
The proposed deal with
Colombia is especially repugnant to U.S. labor unions as Colombia is the most
dangerous country in the world for union members.
More than 2,500 union
members have been murdered by Colombian death squads since the 1980s. There have
been more than 400 murders since President Uribe took office five years ago. Yet
the Colombian government has done very little to effectively stop death squads
from murdering workers for trying to form unions.
Congress will now have 90
legislative days to act on the Colombia trade deal. The Democratic leadership
has made its position clear: Until the union killings in Colombia stop and the
murderers are brought to justice, this deal should not be brought to Congress.
“Workers don’t need trade
policies that kill jobs,” Hoffa said. “In Pennsylvania alone, 1,583 plants,
offices and warehouses have closed since NAFTA took effect because of trade.
These trade deals must be stopped.”
Hoffa is about to embark on
a five-city tour of Pennsylvania to talk about jobs, the economy, the nation’s
failed trade polices and Sen. Barack Obama’s positions on these and other issues
affecting working families.
Founded in 1903, the
International Brotherhood of Teamsters represents 1.4 million hardworking men
and women in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico.