David Sirota of The Huffington Post was shocked at reading a column in Thursday’s Washington Post business section by Steve Pearlstein about Democrats on Wall Street.
“The problem is that, when you scratch the surface, the free-trade members of the Democratic establishment turn out to be more committed to Part A of the formula, more globalization, than they are to Part B, making sure the benefits from globalization are widely shared. For them, it’s really not a package deal. And if push comes to shove, which it always does in trade politics, they’d welcome more globalization even without the compensatory social policies. How do I know this? Because they said so. At the conference’s closing session, I asked former Treasury secretaries Robert Rubin and Larry Summers and former deputy Treasury secretary Roger Altman if any of them would be willing to support the idea of a ‘time out’ on new free-trade initiatives until there was some tangible progress toward greater economic security for U.S. workers. To a man, they recoiled at the idea.”
“Pearlstein describes the powerful moment America finds itself in – we have enough economic power to actually create a race to the top, instead of fueling a race to the bottom. But only if our government actually starts representing ordinary citizens, rather than Big Money.”
Read more here.
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