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DESCRIPTION:3/29/25 Panel: Trade War, Unions & The Working Class In Mexcio, Canada & 
 The US\n\nUFCLP International Workers Panel 3/29/25 2PM EST/1PM CST/11AM 
 PST\n\nTrade War, Unions & The Working Class In Mexcio, Canada & The 
 US\n\nThe growing trade war between the US, Canada and Mexico threatens the 
 jobs and lives of millions of workers on all sides of the border. \nThis is 
 also a critical issue for not only auto workers but transporation workers. 
 This panel will have voices from Mexico, Canada and the United States and 
 look at the effect of these tariffs, the position of labor and what working 
 people need to do to unite and defend themselves. Trade wars have also led 
 to world wars and the danger of that is growing as 
 well.\n\nSpeakers:\nFrank Hammer, UAW president 909 retired\nIsrael 
 Cervantes, Former GM worker Mexico\nJohn Palmer, IBT VP At Large\nTony 
 Leah, Canada UNIFOR GM worker retired\nGabriel Prawl, ILWU Local 52 Past 
 President &  Seattle  A. Philip Randolf Institute Chapter 
 President\nMexican Auto Worker\n\n\nWhen: Mar 29, 2025 2PM EST/1PM CST/11AM 
 PST\n\nRegister in advance for this 
 meeting:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/9jLYmhJfQ5qhRrc6ttzJJQ\n\nSponsored 
 By\nUnited Front Committee For A Labor 
 Party\nwww.ufclp.org\ninfo@urclp.org\n\n\nTrump's Tariffs & Trade War  On 
 Chinese Built Ships Will Harm US Longshore & Teamsters At Small Ports & 
 Escalate Inflation\n\n\nTrump wants to build more ships in the United 
 States. It’s not so 
 simple.\n\nhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2025/03/23/trump-shipbuilding-fees-china/\n\nThe 
 administration aims to counter China’s dominance of commercial 
 shipbuilding.\n\nMarch 23, 2025 at 6:00 a.m. EDTToday at 6:00 a.m. 
 EDT\n\n\n\nLevying multimillion-dollar fees on Chinese container ships 
 would create congestion at ports such as this one in Long Beach, 
 California, said Joe Kramek, president of the World Shipping Council. 
 (Kirby Lee/AP)\n\nBy David J. Lynch\n\nPresident Donald Trump appears set 
 to broaden his attack on global economic integration by imposing new 
 multimillion-dollar fees on the Chinese container ships that bring many 
 foreign goods to U.S. shores.\n\nThe proposed fees are intended to counter 
 what the administration describes — echoing its predecessor — as unfair 
 Chinese trade practices that have given Beijing a chokehold on the 
 construction of commercial vessels.\n\nPart of a broader White House 
 strategy to revive U.S. shipbuilding, the levies threaten the system of 
 oceangoing trade that has developed over the past quarter-century — and 
 could result in a repeat of the supply chain disruptions the nation 
 suffered during the pandemic.\n\nBy charging Chinese-owned or -built 
 vessels each time they dock at a U.S. port, the administration hopes to 
 discourage ocean carriers from buying more ships from China. The U.S. 
 government would spend some of the tens of billions of dollars raised 
 through the fees on subsidizing a commercial shipbuilding industry that has 
 fallen into disrepair.\n\nGenerous government support, including tax 
 incentives, would enable revitalized U.S. shipyards to fill orders that now 
 go to facilities in China, South Korea or Japan, according to the 
 administration. U.S. exporters also would be required to meet targets for 
 shipping their goods on U.S.-flagged vessels, rising from almost nothing to 
 15 percent of the total in seven years.\n\nBut maritime specialists call 
 hopes for a Lazarus-like revival of U.S. shipbuilding unrealistic, saying 
 it would require decades of consistent federal support. Imposing hefty fees 
 on Chinese ships now, before American-made alternatives exist, would only 
 raise freight costs and snarl global supply chains, they said.\n\n“It 
 appears to be written by people who have absolutely no idea how the 
 maritime supply chain works,” said Lars Jensen, chief executive of 
 Vespucci Maritime, a consultancy in Copenhagen. “The container lines will 
 adjust and cut out the smaller ports. The consequence is going to be 
 massive port congestion in the larger ports.”\n\nThe shipbuilding 
 initiative, which includes the creation of a new White House office, 
 represents another element in Trump’s frontal assault on trade orthodoxy. 
 Coupled with his plans for the most extensive tariffs in nearly a century, 
 it would reorient global commerce in an “America First” 
 direction.\n\nU.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer has proposed a 
 complex menu of fees targeting Chinese ships, scheduled to be the subject 
 of a public hearing by his agency on Monday.\n\nOne levy applies to each 
 port call by a Chinese ocean carrier; a second would be assessed based on 
 the percentage of Chinese-built ships in a carrier’s fleet; a third 
 depends upon the percentage of the carrier’s future orders that have been 
 placed with Chinese shipyards.\n\nThe measures are needed “to create 
 leverage to obtain the elimination” of Chinese maritime industry 
 dominance, USTR says, suggesting the president may be prepared to negotiate 
 with Beijing.\n\nIf the new port fees are imposed, the three major ocean 
 carrier alliances, which collaborate like airline industry partnerships, 
 would probably try to avoid the extra costs by reassigning Chinese-made 
 container ships from U.S. routes to serve Europe, analysts said.\n\nSome 
 vessels that would be subject to the fees could dock at Canadian or Mexican 
 ports rather than unload at American wharves — costing American 
 dockworkers and truck drivers.\n\nThe port of Long Beach has 
 computer-controlled cargo cranes. (Ringo Chiu /Sipa USA/AP)\n\nSmaller 
 carriers with long-term leases to operate Chinese-made ships could face 
 ruin, said Hans Laue, president of Gisholt Shipping in Weston, Florida. 
 Among those affected would be regional U.S. carriers that ply the waters 
 between South Florida and gulf ports or Caribbean ports such as Jamaica, 
 the Cayman Islands and the Dominican Republic.\n\n“They have hundreds, if 
 not thousands, of people working in the U.S., and they would be immediately 
 wiped out,” he said.\n\nSome vessel operators already are trying to 
 cancel contracts with some U.S. ports and delaying negotiations on new 
 agreements “due to the uncertainty of costs associated with trading with 
 the United States,” Brett Bourgeois, executive director of the New 
 Orleans Board of Trade, said in written comments on the USTR 
 proposal.\n\nSuch upheaval in shipping schedules would have consequences 
 for large and small ports. Container ships normally operate like waterborne 
 buses, making scheduled stops at multiple ports along a coastline.\n\nBut 
 facing fees that might reach $3.5 million for each stop, they would 
 probably choose to unload all of their cargo in just one place, such as the 
 Port of Los Angeles, executives said.\n\n“You are absolutely going to 
 disrupt the U.S. economy. You’ll create covid-like congestion at places 
 like L.A., Long Beach and New York,” said Joe Kramek, president of the 
 World Shipping Council, which represents the major ocean carriers.\n\nFewer 
 vessels docking at smaller ports such as Oakland, California, would make it 
 harder and more expensive for major U.S. exporters to ship their goods to 
 foreign customers, and it would affect imports as well. Farmers who rely on 
 bulk carriers to move grain and other commodities would be hit especially 
 hard, forced to send their crops hundreds of miles overland to Southern 
 California.\n\nThe proposed fees “will have catastrophic effects on U.S. 
 exports,” Kevin LaGraize Jr., president of Southport Agencies in 
 Metairie, Louisiana, said in written comments submitted to USTR.\n\nThe 
 fees are just one element in an eight-page draft executive order, titled 
 “Make Shipbuilding Great Again” and obtained by The Washington Post, 
 that the administration is finalizing.\n\nU.S. shipyards in recent years 
 typically delivered only a handful of commercial vessels each year, while 
 China built hundreds. The draftexecutive order cites an “urgent need to 
 reinvigorate the U.S. shipbuilding and maritime industries” and proposes 
 a comprehensive menu of government aid, including the shipping fees and 
 tariffs on Chinese cargo-handling gear.\n\nAccording to a Feb. 27 draft, 
 the president would ask Congress to establish a dedicated funding source 
 for new shipbuilding ventures.\n\n“We used to make so many ships. We 
 don’t make them anymore very much, but we’re going to make them very 
 fast, very soon,” Trump said in his address on March 4 to a joint session 
 of Congress.\n\nThe White House did not respond to a request for comment 
 about the executive order.\n\nSavannah, Georgia, has had a bustling seaport 
 for years. (David Goldman/AP)\n\nThe focus on shipbuilding has bipartisan 
 support — a group of labor unions filed a petition seeking government 
 help for domestic shipmakers during the Biden administration.\n\nIn 
 January, just days before President Joe Biden left office, his 
 administration’s USTR endorsed the unions’ complaint, concluding in a 
 182-page investigative report that the Chinese government had used generous 
 state financing, forced technology transfer, intellectual property theft 
 and discrimination against foreign firms to increase its dominance of 
 global maritime markets.\n\nChina’s share of global shipbuilding orders 
 rose from less than 5 percent in 1999 to more than 50 percent by 2023, 
 depriving U.S. shipyards of business and creating dangerous 
 “vulnerabilities across the U.S. economy,” the report 
 said.\n\nChina’s shipbuilding supremacy also has military implications. 
 Even as relations with Beijing deteriorated, the U.S. Navy continued to 
 purchase tankers and dry cargo carriers from Chinese shipyards, according 
 to a 2023 Congressional Research Service report.\n\nIn a speech Tuesday, 
 Vice President JD Vance cited the nation’s shipbuilding decline as an 
 example of deindustrialization that “poses risks both to our national 
 security and our workforce.” Vance contrasted the industry’s 
 performance during World War II, when shipyards turned out “three ships 
 every two days,” with its current annual output of just five 
 ships.\n\n“Revitalizing domestic shipbuilding is not only possible but 
 also a priority,” said Michael Wessel, a Washington consultant with ties 
 to the United Steelworkers union. “The principal contributing factor to 
 reduced capacity has been China’s nonmarket pricing of ships. Order books 
 have dried up. We have existing yards that can do more today, and we have 
 facilities that can be brought online.”\n\nAn industry revival, however, 
 faces numerous hurdles. U.S. shipyards today have little presence in the 
 commercial market, concentrating instead on producing vessels for the Navy. 
 The only significant recent contract won by a U.S. shipyard came in 2022, 
 when Matson, a Hawaii-based carrier, ordered three midsize container ships 
 from the Hanwha Philly Shipyard in Philadelphia.\n\nMatson, which serves 
 domestic routes, needs the vessels to comply with the Jones Act, which 
 requires that cargo moving between two American ports is carried aboard a 
 U.S.-built ship.\n\nThe protectionist law, dating to 1920, helps explain 
 why U.S. shipyards are so uncompetitive, analysts said. Matson paid roughly 
 $330 million per ship, while Chinese shipyards offer similar vessels for 
 just $60 million, according to Lloyd’s List, a London-based industry 
 publication.\n\nTrump’s widespread imposition of import taxes, including 
 on materials used in shipbuilding such as steel, will only make the 
 domestic industry less competitive in global markets, said Rob Willmington, 
 a Lloyd’s List analyst.\n\n“China builds what the industry wants,” he 
 said. “You can go to them with your own design, and they’ll do it and 
 do it for 20 percent less than South Korea. What’s missing is the market 
 for U.S. ships.”\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/03/24/18874786.php
SUMMARY:International Panel: Trade War, Unions & The Working Class In Mexcio, Canada & The US
LOCATION:Register in advance for this 
 meeting:\nhttps://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/9jLYmhJfQ5qhRrc6ttzJJQ
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/03/24/18874786.php
DTSTART:20250329T180000Z
DTEND:20250329T200000Z
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