By Derrick Max

One issue that is not getting enough attention in this election, especially for its impact on Virginia, is the growing โanti-tradeโ mentality of both major parties.โฏIn Tuesdayโs debate, former President Donald Trump stated,โฏโother countries are going to finally, after 75 years, pay us back for all that weโve done for the world, and the tariff will be substantialโฆโโฏVice President Kamala Harris accurately responded that increased tariffs aren’t paid by foreign countries, but are really a sales tax on US consumers.โฏโฏ
It is important to note, however, that Harris and the Biden administration have kept all of the increased tariffs from the first Trump administration in place.โฏIn May, they even raised tariffs on $18 billions of Chinese goods, including semiconductors and electric vehicles.โฏThe left remains committed to tariffs (sadly, often as a tool to force their green agenda) and the right is drifting against trade out of a misplaced โAmerica Firstโ mentality.โฏโฏ
Even the Heritage Foundation, once a champion of free trade, in its much-mischaracterizedโฏProject 2025โฏmanifesto is waffling on free trade.โฏIn fact, Project 2025 contains two contradictory chapters — one by Peter Navarro entitled, โThe Case for Fair Tradeโ and one by Kent Lassman entitled, โthe Case for Free Trade.โโฏIt is clear that Heritageโs new trade philosophy increasingly emphasizes the need for โreciprocity and fairnessโ in trade agreements over open markets and increased trade.โฏโฏโฏ
This shift is not just bad for America generally but is particularly bad for Virginia.โฏInternational trade continues to play a vital role in Virginiaโs economy, driving growth, supporting jobs, and enhancing competitiveness.โฏAccording to theโฏU.S. Global Leadership Coalition, in 2023, Virginia exported $22.4 billion worth of goods, with key markets including Canada, China, and India. The agricultural sector alone contributed $1.5 billion in exports, underscoring its importance to the state. Additionally, over 7,000 Virginia-based companies are engaged in exporting, 85% of which are small- and medium-sized enterprises.
(more…)









