Bush, Kissinger urge Congress to pass CAFTA

Thankfully a Reuters cameraman was on hand to prove that a CAFTA picture is worth a million words:

U.S. President George W. Bush (L) greets former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger following his remarks about the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) in the Old Executive Building in Washington June 23, 2005. Supported by senior members of former administrations including Kissinger, Bush asked that congress ratify the CAFTA trade pact, which has languished in Congress since the president signed it in May 2004, to stimulate the growth of commerce between the U.S. and five nations in Central America along with the Dominican Republic. Photo by Jason Reed/Reuters

Full story in "Bush urges Congress to work together to pass CAFTA". See "What's good for CAT would be terrible for the U.S." for more, and see this site for much more.

Politics · Fri, 06/24/2005 - 08:19 · · Importance: 1

Comments

Central america uses child labor and should not be eligible to send its stolen articles here without official obstruction.

Posted by: John S Bolton at Jun 24, 2005 6:09 PM


Independent, in-depth coverage of immigration, politics, and media bias since 2002. Also: multiculturalism, Los Angeles, California, privacy, and occasionally celebrities and wacky humor...


If you can't find what you're looking for, see the About page or use the navigation features to the right.

Start here
Previous/Next

Main

Atom feed · RSS 2.0 feed · RSS 0.91 feed · WML

Subscribe with Bloglines
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Please subscribe to the feed and tell your friends about this site.

Topics

We've got almost 10,000 posts. That link divides our content into general categories so you can quickly find all our coverage on a specific topic.
Tag search
Full text search
Reliable, pre-11/19/08 only:

What's Hot

  • Can you make a phone call? Get the answers to the questions in the FAX here.
  • See the top posts in the last 45 days.
Navigation
All Tags
Note: only a fraction of the content has so far been tagged.

Archives
Latest