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HILLARY'S
INDIA CONNECTION COMES UNDER SCANNER
Washington, 9 September 2007 (IANS)
Democratic
presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton's India connection has come
under scanner again with an influential US daily suggesting that
she is seeking to strike a delicate balance on the contentious issue
of outsourcing US jobs. The former first lady is doing so as she
courts two competing constituencies: wealthy Indian immigrants who
have pledged to donate and raise as much as $5 million for her 2008
campaign and powerful American labour unions that are crucial to
any Democratic primary victory, the Washington Post said Saturday.
As
evidence the daily cites two speeches, the "dedicated free-trader"
delivered continents apart noting that when she flew to New Delhi
to meet with Indian business leaders in 2005, she offered a blunt
assessment of the loss of American jobs across the Pacific. "There
is no way to legislate against reality," she declared. "Outsourcing
will continue. . . . We are not against all outsourcing; we are
not in favour of putting up fences."
Two
years later, as a Democratic presidential hopeful, Clinton struck
a different tone when she told students in New Hampshire that she
hated "seeing US telemarketing jobs done in remote locations
far, far from our shores."
The
two speeches delivered continents apart highlight the delicate balance
the senator from New York, a dedicated free-trader, is seeking to
maintain as she courts two competing constituencies: wealthy Indian
immigrants who have pledged to donate and raise as much as $5 million
for her 2008 campaign and powerful American labour unions that are
crucial to any Democratic primary victory.
Clinton's
India connection has come under the Post scanner for the second
time this week. It alleged Monday that Indian American businessman
Sant Chatwal, "a long time friend" of former President
Bill Clinton had helped raise hundreds of thousands of dollars for
her campaigns even as he battled to escape bankruptcy and millions
of dollars in tax liens.
The
new Post story suggests that despite aggressive courtship by Democratic
candidates, major unions such as the American Federation of Labour
and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), the Teamsters
and the Service Employees International Union have withheld their
endorsements as they scrutinise the candidates' records and solicit
views on a variety of issues,
"High
on the agenda of union officials is an explanation of how each candidate
will try to stem the loss of US jobs, including large numbers in
the service and technology sectors that are being taken over by
cheap labour in India. During the vetting, some union leaders have
found Clinton's record troubling," the Post said.
"The
India issue is still something people are concerned about. Her financial
relationships, her quotes -- they have both gotten attention,"
the daily said citing Thea M. Lee, policy director for the AFL-CIO.
Facing
a cool reception, Clinton and her advisers have used closed-door
meetings with labour leaders in recent months to explain her past
ties to Indian companies, donors and policies. Aides have highlighted
her efforts to retrain displaced workers and to end offshore tax
breaks that reward companies that outsource jobs.
But
the Clinton camp has been pressed by labour leaders on her support
for expanding temporary US work visas that often go to Indians who
get jobs in the United States, and it has been queried about the
help she gave a major Indian company to gain a foothold in New York
state. That company now outsources most of its work to India, it
said without naming the firm.
"They're
obviously defensive about it," Post said citing Lee, who has
taken part in such meetings.
Clinton,
it said, declined repeated requests for an interview about her views
on outsourcing. Her campaign advisers, however, say she believes
there are no inconsistencies in the comments she has made here and
in India or in her actions as a senator.
Her
rivals for the Democratic nomination have monitored her every comment
on the issue, Post said, noting that last year she joked to a group
of Indian American donors that she could easily win a Senate seat
if she were running in the Indian state of Punjab.
An
aide to her chief foe in the Democratic contest, Barack Obama, parodied
those remarks in a document distributed to reporters; it listed
her political affiliation as "D-Punjab", it recalled.
Clinton's
positioning on outsourcing dates to the 1990s when her husband's
administration aggressively pursued free trade agreements such as
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) that union workers today
consider the start of a huge exodus of US jobs to cheaper overseas
competition, the Post said.
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