US Chamber Of Commerce Kicks Off Campaign Touting Free Enterprise
14 Octobre 2009 - 7:27PM
Dow Jones News
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce kicked off a multi-year campaign
Wednesday to convince Washington and the rest of the nation that
the free enterprise system is the best way to create jobs and raise
living standards.
"We'll spend what we have to," in hopes of getting that message
across, U.S. Chamber President and Chief Executive Officer Thomas
Donohue told reporters at a press conference.
The campaign will feature national ads running on television,
radio, in print and online, along with an educational push
targeting younger Americans, many of whom "believe socialism is
better" than free enterprise, Donohue said.
While Donohue conceded that the financial market meltdown and
ensuing recession "frightened a lot of people," he said the
chamber's campaign will portray the free enterprise system as the
solution, not the problem.
"Every system has its warts, we just think the warts on this
system are a hell of a lot better than any others," he said.
Chamber officials are calling for the creation of 20 million new
jobs over the next decade, a goal they say can only be met by the
private sector. The business group said that would erase the seven
million jobs lost in the recession and create 13 million jobs that
will be needed due to population growth.
Donohue praised the $787 billion economic stimulus package
signed into law by President Barack Obama early this year as a
helpful measure that probably has prevented U.S. unemployment, now
approaching 10%, from rising even higher. He dodged the question of
whether a second stimulus package may be needed, saying he hopes
the economy rebounds to the extent that another fiscal stimulus
package isn't an issue.
Although the free-enterprise campaign isn't focused on specific
policy changes, chamber officials suggested that free trade, export
promotion, sensible taxes and regulation would all help encourage
business and job creation.
Donohue said the Chamber isn't focusing its message on a
particular political party, but wants to spur "a new political
dynamic" in which policy makers consider every decision or vote in
light of a single question: will this help or hurt the
free-enterprise system?
The chamber's CEO stressed that the campaign was approved in
June, months before some members quit the group to signal
disapproval of its approach to legislation targeting climate
change. Donohue blamed the departures on "encouragement or
pressure" from environmental groups that want "to get the Chamber
to back off" from criticism of climate change legislation being
considered by Congress. He added that he takes the attacks as "a
compliment."
Apple Computer (AAPL), Exelon Corp. (EXC), PG&E Corp. (PCG)
and PNM Resources Inc. (PNM) left the chamber altogether and Nike
Inc. (NKE) resigned from the chamber's board of directors over the
climate change dispute. Donohue reiterated that the business group
is willing to support climate change legislation, but isn't happy
with the bills now on the table.
-By Judith Burns, Dow Jones Newswires, 202-862-6692; Judith.Burns@dowjones.com