![]() John McCain, talking to reporters Friday aboard his campaign bus en route to Cleveland, favors free trade.
LM Otero / the associated Press
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Osmose Utilites Foremen Health Care ADMINISTRATOR General Border States Electric Warehouse Associates Mechanical Pioneer Landscaping Diesel Fleet Mechanics General Independent Fire & Safety Fire Suppression Systems inspector Health Care Project Insight Asst Program Coordinator Driver/Transportation DRIVERS NationProtectionism isn't solution, McCain tells Ohio autoworkersThe Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 06.28.2008
LORDSTOWN, Ohio — John McCain on Friday told auto-workers in an economically depressed area of Ohio that he supports free-trade agreements that many of them feel cost jobs, but also government investment to help produce the electric cars of the future.
His confession and commitment followed a tour of a General Motors factory that produces the gas-thrifty Chevrolet Cobalt. Company officials recently announced they will add a third shift — and 1,400 workers — in August so they can build the cars 24 hours a day.
GM has also announced plans to build in 2010 the Chevrolet Volt, a vehicle it says will travel 40 miles by battery power and have a range-extending power source to reach 640 miles.
McCain praised both developments as he also made the pitch for an energy strategy that calls for more oil production, development of a revolutionary automotive battery pack, and conservation by the U.S. government.
"We must develop vehicles such as are being developed here," the Republican presidential contender told employees attending a town-hall meeting just steps from the assembly line. "We can lead again in the automotive industry, and that can lead to thousands of jobs."
The Mahoning Valley is a Democratic stronghold that blames its economic woes on the kind of free-trade policies that McCain supports.
The region lost 16,600 jobs from 2000 through 2007, almost all of them in the manufacturing sector. Democrat Hillary Rodham Clinton visited the same GM factory in February to announce a plan to reduce the influence of special interests on government decision-making.
While McCain received a respectful welcome from a largely union audience, one employee firmly asked him about trade pacts such as the North American Free Trade Agreement and the Central American Free Trade Agreement — both of which workers believe have triggered job shifts to Canada, Mexico and Central America.
McCain supports the agreements, but Democratic rival Barack Obama has threatened to unilaterally reopen NAFTA if labor and environmental concessions are not made.
The worker who asked the question, 37-year-old Raymond Francisco, moved his family to Ohio after GM closed the sport-utility-vehicle factory where he worked in Linden, N.J.
"I don't believe that every trade agreement is totally fair, and we do have mechanisms in these agreements where you can bring suit where unfair practices exist," McCain told Francisco. "I would say that if and when we conclude additional free trade agreements, perhaps we could do a better job of setting up and implementing mechanisms that would address unfair or violations, basically, of the free trade agreements that we make."
McCain added: "But I do believe that there are some realities of life, and that is that when we practice protectionism and we erect barriers to the products from other countries, they do the same to us, and then it leads to economic consequences. I think that was the case in the 1930s. I think that our protectionism and isolationism led from a recession to a deep depression."
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