Costa Ricans could reject U.S. trade pact

WASHINGTON — The White House said Saturday that if Costa Ricans vote against joining a U.S.-Central American free trade agreement, the Bush administration will not renegotiate the deal.

The Costa Rican government scheduled a referendum today on the accord. A newspaper poll published Thursday showed that voters were poised to reject it. Much of the opposition stems from requirements under the pact that Costa Rica open its telecommunications, services and agricultural sectors to greater competition.

The White House also suggested it may not extend trade preferences now afforded to Costa Rican products and set to expire next September.

“The United States has never before confronted the question of extending unilateral trade preferences to a country that has rejected a reciprocal trade agreement,” White House press secretary Dana Perino said.

Costa Rica is the only one of the six Latin American signatories to the trade deal, known as CAFTA, that has yet to ratify it. The deal is in effect in the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador.

A minimum of 40 percent of Costa Rica’s 2.6 million voters must participate for today’s vote to be valid.

The White House urged Costa Ricans to recognize the benefits of the agreement. It would “expand Costa Rica’s access to the U.S. market, safeguard that access under international law, attract U.S. and other investment and link Costa Rica to some of the most dynamic economies of our hemisphere,” according to the statement.

But Perino also warned about the implications of turning down the pact.

“If the free trade agreement is rejected, the United States will not renegotiate the agreement signed by the government of Costa Rica as it is part of an agreement with a broad group of Central American countries,” she said. “The United States has never renegotiated a free trade agreement that has been approved by the Congress.”

She said she issued the statement to “dispel any confusion that may have been created by communications from other sources in the United States.” She did not say who these sources were.

A senior administration official said the reference was to some Democratic members of Congress and union leaders.

“Voters in Costa Rica should be aware that many of those assuring Costa Rica of continued access to the U.S. market have consistently opposed measures that would open the U.S. market to goods from Costa Rica and other countries, whether through trade agreements or through trade preference programs,” Perino said.

Similar remarks earlier in the week from U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab elicited a complaint from Sens. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and Bernie Sanders, I-Vt. In a letter to Bush sent Friday, they urged him “to make it clear that the United States is not threatening retaliation against the people of Costa Rica for exercising their right to vote.”

“Barriers to access of Costa Rican goods will not change if Costa Rican voters reject CAFTA,” they wrote. “Costa Rica is the oldest democracy in Latin America and the United States has had a very strong and friendly relationship with this country throughout history. That relationship will continue regardless of the outcome of Sunday’s vote.”

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