COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - Democratic presidential candidate
John Edwards said Tuesday he wants tax breaks and incentives for companies
that locate in communities reeling from job losses, especially those
dependent on a struggling textile industry.
Speaking to an overflow crowd in a classroom at the University of South
Carolina Law School, the North Carolina senator said he sent a letter to
President Bush urging immediate safeguards to prevent increasing imports
from China that cause "an unfair trade advantage."
"Last year, our nation ran a $100 billion trade deficit with China,"
Edwards wrote in a letter to Bush. "We bought five times more from China
than we sold there. More textile and apparel products are imported from
China than any other country. With such a deficit, it is no coincidence we
have lost 2.4 million manufacturing jobs since the beginning of 2001."
Edwards, one of nine Democratic White House hopefuls, also visited
Charleston and Greenville during his two-day campaign stop in South
Carolina, which holds its first-in-the-South Democratic primary Feb. 3.
Edwards criticized Bush for his free-trade policies, attempting to
connect with Southern voters who blame cheaper overseas labor for
manufacturing job losses.
But Edwards has received his share of criticism for not doing more to
help North Carolina-based Pillowtex, which is closing 16 plants, laying
off about 6,450 employees and filing for bankruptcy.
Since Bush took office in January 2001, it has been estimated North
Carolina and South Carolina have lost more than 180,000 manufacturing
jobs.
"And we see here in South Carolina, also in my state of North Carolina,
how devastating the impact is," Edwards said Tuesday. "Well, this
president is never going to do anything about it. He misses a fundamental
thing that most of us understand, which is a job is about more than a
paycheck. It's about self-respect and dignity and self-worth."
Edwards called for tax breaks and other incentives for existing
American companies to keep jobs from going overseas.
"It's not enough to protect the jobs that we have," Edwards said. "We
don't want folks who have been working in their community all their life
to have to move 50, 75, 100 miles ... because they don't have a job."
Edwards blamed part of the trade imbalance on China's handling of its
currency, which makes it harder for American manufacturers to compete.
Next week, U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow visits China and Edwards said
the success of his trip should be "judged on whether or not he makes real,
concrete progress on currency manipulation."
His message didn't carry with at least one law student. "It was OK. I
thought he was overly critical of our president," said second-year law
student Darrell Carter, 27, who said he is a Republican from North
Carolina.
But other students were impressed. Tommy Hite III, 22, said before the
speech he wasn't sure if he would vote for Edwards, but afterward said he
wanted to volunteer for the campaign.
"I thought he did an excellent job," said Hite, of Abbeville. "I'm
really looking forward to working for his campaign."