Rachel Maddow takes on corporations defending child and forced labor

As Sirota and Maddow note, the report in Inside US Trade stated that:

Business groups are worried by the potential effects of provisions
banning the import of all goods made with convict labor, forced labor,
or forced or indentured child labor that were included in a customs
bill sponsored by Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) and
Ranking Member Charles Grassley (R-IA)...

These groups are examining the ramifications of the bill's
provisions, especially in light of the bill's requirements that a newly
created office in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) annually
report to Congress on the volume and value of goods made with child
labor, forced labor or convict labor that have been stopped at the
border.

Business sources say this reporting requirement could cause DHS
to more actively seek out imported products made with child labor,
forced labor or convict labor...

One source did expect a push from lobbyists closer to the
Finance Committee markup of the bill, and speculated that U.S. industry
groups and foreign governments could form ad hoc coalitions to help
send a united message.

The sad fact is that even in 2009, it is hardly a new story that US corporations are lobbying against provisions to stop forced labor and child labor. 

Just last year, there was a provision in the Farm Bill that would have provided a method which producers of agricultural products could use to certify that their products are free of child labor or forced labor.  Big agribusinesses like Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland quickly made their way around Capitol Hill to lobby against this provision.  In response to an action alert we sent out in April 2008, Cargill e-mailed our supporters stating that one of their primary reasons for opposing the provision was that: "This program will not provide the market incentive needed to encourage its commercial adoption."  In other words, Cargill would prefer to profit off the market incentive of forced child labor.

Unfortunately for Cargill and their allied businesses, the provision did pass in the 2008 Farm Bill.  However, the version that passed establishes a Consultative Group to determine the basis for a certification program while the original language would have by-passed this process and included in the provision the key components of a certification program that businesses should use to ensure their imported products were not made using forced or child labor.  There is a lot more information about this provision on ILRF's website here.

Recently, the US Department of Agriculture released the names of the people who will be part of the Consultative Group established through that Farm Bill provision and they include ILRF's Executive Director, Bama Athreya.  The Consultative Group has a big task on its hands as the US Department of Labor released a new "List of Goods Produced by Child or Forced Labor" in September that includes 122 products from 58 countries.  That list clearly showed that the use of forced labor and abusive child labor is widespread globally and it is closely linked to a large number of products we buy every day in the US.

These major corporations that profit enormously from the sweat of the most exploited workers have lots of resources and connections to gut any kinds of protections for workers and the environment.  It's up to workers, consumers and the media to expose them when they take actions like these.  Let's continue to demand policies with real teeth to finally put a stop to horrific labor rights abuses and hold these companies accountable for their abuses!

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Comments

re: Rachel Maddow takes on corporations defending child and forc

I think Rachel should be careful for what she wishes for.

For when 'we the people' give the Government the power to break corporations apart for being too successful the question should be asked "where will they draw the line?" Shouldn't that be the goal of a corporation, to succeed financially at a high level, or should the goal be to just make enough to not be considered too large and successful by the government.

The problem was not corporations getting too large, the problem was government thinking it was a good idea to bail them out! Let them fail! As painful as that would have been some other corporation would have bought them up for pennies on the dollar and we would have picked ourselves up eventually, lessons would have been learned and our great-great-great-grandchildren wouldn't be paying for this bailout and borrowing nonsense! Can we really expect to borrow our way out of debt?

No offense but I think Rachel would do well to spend a little less time preaching and a lot more time learning, but it is hard to listen and learn when your mouth is always open. This is not middle school, the loudest and most sarcastic is not the smartest. Usually they are just the most obnoxious.

The part about forced labor I agree totally with, those who endorse that should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. But let the free market work, that is why immigrants come here with a dream and it is what has made the United States of America the GREATEST nation on earth!!!