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NOV. 20, 2009:NWLP 11/17/09 9:47 AM Page 8 ...WTO — 10 years later (From Page 6) As night fell, the police cracked down. Some in the crowd responded by setting fire to Dumpsters. Seattle Mayor Paul Schell declared a curfew and the formation of a “no-protest” zone. Police pur- sued protesters out of downtown and into the nearby Capitol Hill neighborhood. Most of the day’s protesters — union members off work for the day, students who’d skipped classes — re- turned home. By morning, two dozen blocks in the core of downtown Seattle had become a militarized zone where anyone who protested would be arrested on sight. Police — who’d stood by the day before while anarchists and delinquents broke windows and spray-painted corporate storefronts — now rushed in aggressively at any sign of protest. Police arrested 630 people in all, bused them to a special FEMA detention center at the moth- balled Sand Point Naval Base, and held them there and at King County Jail for up to five days. Shop- pers, bystanders, reporters and local politicians were swept up in the arrests. Anyone going into the street could find themselves choking on tear gas, as did Oregon Congressman Peter DeFazio. Over the next few days, police repression of basic rights came to overshadow other issues. On Day Four of the summit, the WTO talks PAGE 8 collapsed when delegates from less-developed countries walked out. For protesters, it was a vic- tory beyond what they could have imagined. For advocates of WTO-style free trade agreements, it was a debacle. The uprising punctured the per- ception of inevitability or omnipotence that free- traders had enjoyed. “It was a radicalizing experience,” said Stan Sorscher, a trade activist and union rep for the So- ciety of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace Local 2001 at Boeing. “People who participated in it talk about it in semi-religious terms.” “This was taking on world powers,” recalls Jeff Johnson, legislative director for the Washington State Labor Council, AFL-CIO. “It was unprece- dented. Here you have all these world leaders and you’ve exposed what they’re doing: meeting be- hind closed doors. They’re not interested in having honest discussion about the repercussions of trade on people.” Ripples from the event continued for months and years. In Seattle, Police Chief Norm Stamper re- signed. Mayor Schell lost re-election. A federal jury agreed the City of Seattle had violated pro- testers’ free speech rights, and the City paid $1 million to settle the suit, filed on behalf of pro- testers arrested for violating the “no-protest zone.” Attempting to recreate Seattle, protesters came together by the tens of thousands at the 2000 Re- publican and Democratic conventions, and at in- ternational summits in Washington, D.C.; Miami; Genoa, Italy, and Cancun, Mexico. But none had the impact of the Seattle protests. Local police and national governments resolved never to allow a repeat of Seattle, and police surveilled and dis- rupted, created barriers, and used preemptive mass arrests and physical intimidation. A year after the Seattle WTO protests, George W. Bush was declared president by the U.S. Supreme Court. Labor’s energies were absorbed in defense against a hostile White House; a mini-re- cession; and the economic and political fallout of the 9/11 attacks. Campus activism shifted to other causes, including opposition to the war in Iraq. But free-traders never fully recovered from the protests, and have been on the defensive ever since. Attempting to rally, the WTO held its next meeting in 2001 in Doha, Qatar, a state ruled by a monarch, who forbade all forms of protest. At Doha, the WTO achieved what had eluded it in Seattle — a declaration of commitment to a new round of negotiations. But the negotiations never led to an agreement. A 2003 WTO summit in Cancun collapsed in similar fashion to the Seattle summit. After Seattle, free-traders adopted the rhetoric of protesters, saying it was important that labor and environmental concerns be considered. But labor and green groups were not fooled and con- tinued to oppose new international trade agree- ments. In 2005, a Republican majority in Congress succeeded in passing CAFTA (a NAFTA-style agreement with Central America), but by then a shift had occurred among Democrats. Whereas 102 House Democrats voted for NAFTA in 1993, NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS just 15 voted for CAFTA. When Democrats re- gained the majority in 2007, they stripped the White House of the “fast track” authority needed to negotiate future trade agreements. And they signed up in droves to support a bill in Congress that calls for the renegotiation of NAFTA, the WTO, and other agreements, and sets labor and other standards for new trade agreements; the TRADE Act of 2009 has 127 co-sponsors in the House. The next WTO summit kicks off in Geneva, Switzerland Nov. 30, exactly 10 years after pro- testers shut it down in Seattle. In Geneva, there will be protests; in Seattle and Portland, remem- brances. Portland, Seattle To Hold Events In Seattle: A “week of action” will start with a weekend conference Nov. 28-29. David Korten will keynote Saturday, Nov. 28 at Seattle Univer- sity, where AFL-CIO trade expert Thea Lee will present a workshop on trade policy. That will be followed by an evening event at New Hope Bap- tist Church. Sunday evening at Town Hall, Lee will be joined by British Columbia Labour Feder- ation President Jim Sinclair and a video appear- ance by United Steelworkers President Leo Ger- ard. See seattleplus10.org for details. In Portland: A march, rally and concert will take place Saturday, Dec. 5 in downtown Portland. The rally begins at noon at Tom McCall Water- front Park under the Hawthorne Bridge; at 1 p.m. participants will march to the World Trade Center, Federal Building and Wells Fargo Building, end- ing up at Portland State University at 2 p.m. for an indoor rally and concert. See www.december5 .org for details. NOVEMBER 20, 2009