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The Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 07.15.2008
SAN DIEGO — Republican presidential candidate John McCain, in one of his strongest endorsements of free trade, called himself "an unapologetic supporter of NAFTA," an agreement that many Americans feel has cost them jobs.
"I reject the false virtues of economic isolationism," McCain told the National Council of La Raza, a major Hispanic organization. "Any confident, competent country and its government should embrace competition," he said. "It makes us stronger."
The Arizona senator has often defended free trade, but Monday's speech was among his most detailed and full-throated commentaries.
"Lowering barriers to trade creates more and better jobs, and higher wages," he said. "It makes goods more affordable for low- and middle-income consumers."
Citing his recent visits to Colombia and Mexico, McCain said he understands "how vitally important it is to the prosperity and security of our country to strengthen our trade, investment and diplomatic ties to other countries in our hemisphere." He said he fully supports the North American Free Trade Agreement, the Central American Free Trade Agreement and the Colombian Free Trade Agreement.
Congress approved NAFTA with partners Mexico and Canada in 1993, and the agreement with six Central American nations in 2005, but it has blocked the agreement with Colombia.
"I believe a hemispheric free-trade agreement is a worthy and necessary goal whose time has come," he said of a proposal he unveiled during the campaign.
Acknowledging that some Americans do lose jobs "to foreign competition," McCain said he has proposed "a comprehensive reform of our unemployment-insurance and worker-retraining programs."
"And for workers of a certain age who have lost a job that won't come back," he said, "if they move rapidly to a new job, we'll help make up the difference in wages between their old job and the new one."
McCain's Democratic opponent, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama, has been much cooler to free-trade agreements and wants to revisit some aspects of NAFTA.
McCain said he has earned the trust of Hispanic voters by championing an immigration bill that nearly killed his presidential bid. Obama, he said, failed to take a similar stand on the politically explosive issue of illegal immigration.
Obama has criticized McCain for turning against his own immigration bill.
Reminding the group that Congress failed twice in the past three years to overhaul the nation's immigration laws, McCain said he did not want to try a third time until the government can "prove we have the resources to secure our borders and use them."
Election
2008
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