STAND UP FOR STEEL
Stand Up For Steel
2007 BSIC Reports
USW Reacts to U.S. Trade Commission Vote on Hot-rolled Steel; Tariffs Retained on China, India, Indonesia, Others
USW Calls on U.S. Trade Commission to Uphold Steel Tariffs
We Can’t Afford To Ignore Unfair Trade
Saving Steel in the USA
Domestically-Produced Steel Critical to National Defense and Security
USW Decries Trade Commission Decision Revoking Orders on Unfairly Traded Steel Imports
SUFS Radio Spot on Proposed Pension Bill
Labor-Management Coalition Strongly Opposes Senate Legislation That Threatens Workers’ Benefits, Company Pension Plans
Labor-Management Coalition Reaches Agreement on Pension Reform
China’s Iron and Steel Exports Soaring
USW Vice President Tom Conway Testifies at the International Trade Commission
Global Overcapacity
Bush Dumps Tariffs
New Poll Shows Strong Support for Steel Tariffs



Bush Dumps Tariffs

Surrendering To European Blackmail, President Bush Breaks His Word

President Bush's decision to lift steel tariffs in December is "clear evidence of capitulating to European blackmail and a sorry betrayaln Steelworkers and steel communities," said International President Leo Gerard.

"In his rush to appease the Europeans and Japanese," Gerard said, "Mr. Bush willfully ignored the fact that damage to the American steel industry and American steel communities continues to this day, even with the tariffs in place."

Gerard cited five major bankruptcies that have occurred since the tariffs were imposed, raising the total number of bankruptcies to 42 since the steel crisis began in 1998. During the crisis 17 of these companies have liquidated, wiping out the healthcare benefits of more than 208,000 Steelworker retirees.

"The President's complete lack of mettle in calling the WTO's bluff ignores the continuing damage being done," Gerard said. "His unwillingness to defend U.S. trade laws is an affront to all American workers, but it's especially insulting to workers at Weirton Steel in West Virginia, Rouge Industries in Michigan, WCI Steel and Republic Engineered Products in Ohio, and EVTAC Mining in Minnesota, all of whom have seen their companies go bankrupt while the tariffs have been in place."

President Bush could have challenged the WTO's ruling, which he could have done under Section 129 of U.S. trade laws. Under this provision, the President could have referred the WTO's decision to the International Trade Commission (ITC). The WTO would then have been obliged to withhold sanctions while the ITC considered how it might address the objections to the tariffs raised by the Europeans and Japanese.

The President Blinked

"Our trading partners obviously engaged the administration in a game of guts poker," Gerard said. "Instead of telling them to ‘bring it on,’ the President blinked."

"It is particularly galling for the President to have capitulated," he said, "when the Europeans have not even agreed to lift the safeguard protections on their steel markets that were imposed in the wake of U.S. tariffs being implemented."

Gerard said the President's decision closed the door on the Section 129 option, which he had requested jointly with U.S. Steel Chairman and CEO Thomas J. Usher, Wilbur Ross, Chairman and CEO of International Steel Group, and Nucor CEO Dan DiMicco in a letter to Bush.

The Administration's call for monitoring and licensing are "public relations fig leaves which, in and of themselves, acknowledge the very real possibility that the global overcapacity in steel - which the Administration has done nothing to arrest - will lead to more surges and dumping," Gerard concluded.

Lifting the tariffs will have especially dire consequences for hundreds of thousands of Steelworker retirees who have already lost their healthcare benefits, and thousands more who could lose theirs if the more recent bankruptcies lead to liquidations.

No Help for Retirees’ Health Care

"The President's steel plan urged us to work for a consolidation in the industry," Gerard said. "That consolidation is far from complete, and the business plans that were developed for the consolidation that has already taken place were based on groundbreaking negotiations our union spearheaded to make those purchases possible, and on the prospect of a three-year tariff.

"A major success in those negotiations was the creation of Benefit Trusts that would direct some of the industry's profits toward helping to pay at least some of the costs of healthcare for retirees who had their benefits wiped out by the liquidation of companies they had worked for.

"The President's decision to lift the tariffs not only diminishes the potential for future industry profits, it minimizes the chances that more than 200,000 retirees will see their skyrocketing healthcare costs defrayed by the Benefit Trusts.

"It is deeply disturbing," Gerard said, "that the President was unwilling to stand down the Europeans, because steel is just the canary in the mine shaft. Failure to stand by our trade laws will throw open the door for more American manufacturing jobs to take gas - on top of the 2.4 million that have already been wiped out."