Bill Text: IL SR1224 | 2015-2016 | 99th General Assembly | Introduced
Bill Title: Calls upon elected officials in the U.S. Senate and U.S. House of Representatives to oppose the Trans-Pacific Partnership and any similar trade deals if they fail to restructure the misguided and failed policies of the past.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 2-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2016-07-31 - Pursuant to Senate Rule 3-9(b) / Referred to Assignments [SR1224 Detail]
Download: Illinois-2015-SR1224-Introduced.html
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1 | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, U.S. trade deals for the past 25 years have been | ||||||
3 | corporate-driven, incorporating
rules that skew benefits to | ||||||
4 | economic elites while requiring working families to bear the | ||||||
5 | brunt of
such policies; and
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6 | WHEREAS, The growing trade deficits, driven by the North | ||||||
7 | American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA),
China's accession to the | ||||||
8 | World Trade Organization, and the U.S.-Korea Free Trade | ||||||
9 | Agreement,
have displaced 700,000 jobs, 3.2 million jobs, and | ||||||
10 | 75,000 jobs respectively; and
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11 | WHEREAS, U.S. employment in manufacturing dropped by 5 | ||||||
12 | million from 2000 to 2015; and
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13 | WHEREAS, Jobs lost due to trade devastate families and | ||||||
14 | entire communities and can
permanently reduce lifetime | ||||||
15 | earnings for hundreds of thousands of workers; and
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16 | WHEREAS, The long decline of the American manufacturing | ||||||
17 | base, exacerbated by bad trade
policies that reward | ||||||
18 | outsourcing, has undermined our economic security and poses a | ||||||
19 | direct
threat to our national security; and
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20 | WHEREAS, The offshoring of manufacturing and service jobs |
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1 | deprives local and state
governments of sorely needed revenues, | ||||||
2 | jeopardizing the livelihoods of millions of public
servants, as | ||||||
3 | well as construction workers whose jobs depend upon | ||||||
4 | infrastructure building, repair,
and maintenance; and
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5 | WHEREAS, Under NAFTA-style trade rules, the U.S.'s annual | ||||||
6 | trade deficit has increased
dramatically from $70 billion in | ||||||
7 | 1993, the year before NAFTA went into effect, to more than $508
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8 | billion in 2014; and
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9 | WHEREAS, The disproportionate voice of powerful global | ||||||
10 | corporations in the formation of
U.S. "free trade" agreements | ||||||
11 | has advanced an agenda that undermines the public interest and
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12 | threatens democracy; and
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13 | WHEREAS, NAFTA, and all but 2 of the U.S. trade deals that | ||||||
14 | followed it, includes special
legal rights for foreign | ||||||
15 | investors, known as "investor-to-state dispute settlement" or | ||||||
16 | ISDS, that
allow foreign firms to bypass state and federal | ||||||
17 | courts to challenge state and local laws,
regulations, and | ||||||
18 | administrative and judicial decisions in international | ||||||
19 | tribunals; and
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20 | WHEREAS, Foreign investors have already used NAFTA's ISDS | ||||||
21 | provisions to challenge
decisions regarding local building | ||||||
22 | permits, environmental regulations, and state bans on toxic
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1 | chemicals and decisions of state courts; and
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2 | WHEREAS, Climate change and environmental degradation | ||||||
3 | threaten communities across the
globe and ISDS provisions in | ||||||
4 | the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) may expose nations | ||||||
5 | enacting
policies to fight climate change to ISDS cases that | ||||||
6 | undermine these efforts; and
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7 | WHEREAS, Promoting economic growth with equity in Illinois | ||||||
8 | requires an approach that
reforms the entire trade negotiation | ||||||
9 | process to ensure that the voices of workers, farmers, small
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10 | businesses, families, and communities are heard and their | ||||||
11 | interests addressed; and
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12 | WHEREAS, The TPP has been negotiated in secret, effectively | ||||||
13 | shutting state and local
governments out of the process, | ||||||
14 | limiting our ability to influence its rules to ensure the | ||||||
15 | people of
Illinois can participate in the benefits of trade; | ||||||
16 | and
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17 | WHEREAS, Given the enactment of fast track trade | ||||||
18 | negotiating authority, states, localities, and
their citizens | ||||||
19 | will have no opportunity to correct shortcomings in the TPP | ||||||
20 | because its text will not
be made public until it is final and | ||||||
21 | can no longer be improved; and
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1 | WHEREAS, Repeating old mistakes in negotiating new trade | ||||||
2 | agreements such as the TPP
represents a missed opportunity to | ||||||
3 | strengthen our economy, reduce income inequality, and
promote | ||||||
4 | sustainable growth; therefore, be it
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5 | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE NINETY-NINTH GENERAL | ||||||
6 | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we call upon our | ||||||
7 | elected officials in the U.S. Senate and U.S. House of | ||||||
8 | Representatives to oppose the TPP and any similar trade deals | ||||||
9 | if they fail to restructure the misguided and failed policies | ||||||
10 | of the past; and be it further
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11 | RESOLVED, That we call upon our
elected officials in the | ||||||
12 | U.S. Senate and U.S. House of Representatives to support new | ||||||
13 | trade deals
such as the TPP only if they do the following: | ||||||
14 | (1) protect and promote traditional state and local | ||||||
15 | prerogatives and authority under our
federal system, | ||||||
16 | including by ensuring that states and localities will not | ||||||
17 | be required to
comply with certain commitments, including | ||||||
18 | any restrictions on preferences for local,
state, or U.S. | ||||||
19 | goods or services, without prior informed consent of the | ||||||
20 | legislature or local
lawmaking body; | ||||||
21 | (2) ensure balanced trade and address the excessive, | ||||||
22 | job-killing U.S. trade deficit; | ||||||
23 | (3) include enforceable rules against currency | ||||||
24 | manipulation, which countries such as China
and Japan have |
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1 | used to tilt the playing field in their favor; | ||||||
2 | (4) exclude investor-to-state dispute settlement | ||||||
3 | (ISDS) and other provisions that favor
foreign companies | ||||||
4 | over domestic ones and undermine public choices; | ||||||
5 | (5) ensure that countries cannot undercut U.S.-based | ||||||
6 | producers with weaker labor and
environmental laws and | ||||||
7 | enforcement; | ||||||
8 | (6) ensure that the U.S. will engage in robust | ||||||
9 | enforcement of trade rules, including labor and
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10 | environmental rules; | ||||||
11 | (7) include strong rules of origin to promote economic | ||||||
12 | growth and job creation in the U.S.; | ||||||
13 | (8) promote high standards of protection for | ||||||
14 | workplaces, products, and natural resources
rather than | ||||||
15 | promoting a race to the bottom; and | ||||||
16 | (9) put the interests of people and the planet over the | ||||||
17 | interests of private profit; and be it further
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18 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
19 | delivered to the President pro tempore of the U.S. Senate, the | ||||||
20 | Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, and each member | ||||||
21 | of the Illinois congressional delegation.
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