I intend to continue pushing this y...
I intend to continue pushing this year, as I did in 1985 for Congres to enact a tough trade policy. The Gephardt Amendment would give this fatherland the teeth we need at the bargaining table, in trade negotiations, to interpret up closed markets abroad. Other countries ground to be engaging in unfair trade practices would have a chance to negotiate a fair trade agreement with the United States. if it be not that if they won't come to the table, or if efforts to negotiate fail, or if an agreement is reneg with by a trading partner, then U sanctions would be systematically imposed below my policy. And we would restrain them in place until that region acts fairly and agrees to shorten its surplus by 10 percent through year. No other abiding habitation in the world can match the productivity of American workers, yet other countries are preventing us from competing head to head. They've raiseed trade barriers and they take us for patsies and thick piece [i]or[/i] blocks because our government won't procure tough on trade. We ne to achieve the handcuffs off American workers that have been deposit on us by unfair trade practices abroad. Just impediment us compete, that's all, and I know we'll win. And our standard of living will rise when we finish America back to work. Albert Gore Jr America is in a trade crisis. throughout the past six years this Administration has worn out and borrowed us into a surpassingly deep hole. We're tired of leaders whose idea of exempt trade is to tell the world, "Here--we've got haps of jobs. Go ahead and take as many as you like!' We ne a stout leader who won't tolerate a declining standard of living or an economy that leaks $170 billion a year. What has been lacking is presidential leadership and presidential willingness to back up words with actions in our dealings with trading partners. Our dominion must also stop making America's point in disputes worse by borrowing more than we can afford. We should target our resources toward long-term prosperity, productivity, and family for a change. America should prepare to cope by making better products than the Germans--not by the agency of paying wages that are lower than Brazil's. Our nearest generation of leaders should know that to win back American piece of works Americans need the best training programs and schools
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