Massachusetts Sen. Kerry contended Wednesday that he and Edwards have almost identical Senate records on trade votes and propose essentially the same remedies for improving trade agreements. "We have the same policy on trade," Kerry said in Dayton. "He voted for the China trade agreement. So did I. We both of us want to have labor agreements and environment agreements as part of a trade agreement." Edwards begs to differ. In a conference call with reporters Wednesday, the North Carolina senator insisted that "it's clear that Senator Kerry and I have a very different record on trade."
In fact, while there are differences, the two are broadly similar on the issue.
Edwards and Kerry both voted to grant China favorable trade treatment, for example, and both call for including terms that protect labor and the environment in all future trade deals. However, the two split on a May 11, 2000, Senate vote on a trade pact for Africa and the Caribbean. Kerry supported it; Edwards opposed it. In addition, Edwards voted against two trade agreements last year, one with Singapore, the other with Chile. Kerry didn't vote on either. In a statement in the Congressional Record, Kerry commended both deals but said they failed to include adequate enforcement of worker rights.
The biggest trade issue dividing the two is the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, the 1993 pact with Mexico and Canada. Kerry voted for it. Edwards wasn't in the Senate in 1993; he said now that he opposed NAFTA. "I don't know where he registered his vote," Kerry said archly, "but it wasn't in the Senate."
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Despite Edwards' empathy for the unemployed and working poor, Kerry fared better in Wisconsin among low-income voters and voters without a college education, according to surveys of voters as they exited polls. Kerry won among voters in income groups from $15,000 to $50,000 and among voters from families who considered their financial situations worse. Edwards won among voters who thought the national economy was "good or excellent," while Kerry won among those who thought it was "not good or poor."
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/politics/7983361.htm
Main Entry: arch
Function: adjective
Etymology: 1arch-
1 : PRINCIPAL, CHIEF <your arch opponent>
2 a : MISCHIEVOUS, SAUCY b : marked by a deliberate and often forced irony, brashness, or impudence
http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary?book=Dictionary&va=archlyThat mischievous, saucy Kerry!