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Here is the response I got back about why she voted for CAFTA.
Dear Mrs. Plut:
Thank you for contacting me regarding the Dominican Republic-Central America Free Trade Agreement (DR -CAFTA). It is good to hear from you.
On August 5, 2004 the United States, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and the Dominican Republic signed the Central America Free Trade Agreement. To date, only El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala have ratified the treaty. I voted in favor of the implementing legislation that passed the Senate on July 1, 2005, and passed the House on July 27. In order for this agreement to be enacted, legislation must be passed by all participating countries.
As a supporter of international trade, I also agree that labor, environmental, and transparency issues must be properly addressed. I will continue to encourage the Administration to seriously consider these issues during all potential trade negotiations. I will also work to ensure that Americans affected by DR-CAFTA have the resources to compete and thrive in our transitioning world economy.
As you may know, DR- CAFTA defines rules that would govern market access of goods, services, government procurement, intellectual property, investment, labor, and the environment. It is a regional agreement within which all parties would be subject to a similar set of obligations and commitments, but with each country defining its own separate schedules for market access. Under this agreement, 80% of US consumer and industrial exports and half of US farm exports to Central America would become duty-free immediately. For the other nations involved with DR- CAFTA, 100% of non-textile and non-agricultural goods would enter the US duty-free immediately. All remaining trade would have tariffs phased out over a period of 5-20 years, while sensitive products would have the longest delay before tariffs would begin phasing out.
Now more than ever, Washington State is dependent on international trade. As a Senator from the single most trade dependant state in the country, I am always looking for ways to ensure that Washington’s workers can compete fairly in the world market. While our state, national, and world economies continue to change I will continue to fight for policies that keep us strong at home and competitive abroad.
Thank you again for contacting me on this important and very controversial vote. Please keep in touch.
Sincerely,
Patty Murray United States Senator
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