Newt Gingrich: This Year’s Grinch

US child labor laws are the product of hard won gains in this country’s economic development.  Current child labor laws around the world are the product of decades of hard work by venerable organizations such as UNICEF and the International Labour Organization’s IPEC program to eradicate child labor. These organizations and others have extensively documented how child laborers lose opportunities twice over:  they lose educational opportunities as children and they lose opportunities to prosper as adults.  The US Department of Labor has likewise played a critical role in supporting programs to end child labor worldwide, and has identified how often child labor goes hand in hand with forced labor.

These efforts stand in stark contrast to Mr. Gingrich’s proposed programs. How can the United States remain a beacon of hope and a champion of children around the world if the progress we have made at home is reversed? How can we continue to fight child labor in the cotton fields of Uzbekistan, or the cocoa plantations of West Africa, if we ignore our children at home?

In response to Mr. Gingrich’s comments, representatives from the fashion industry, including the American Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA), and the National Retail Federation, as well as labor and human rights advocates, have upheld their support for US child labor laws and international norms. Kevin Burke, president and CEO of the AAFA remarked, “We as an industry are sensitive to child labor and other industries are as well. We try to set an example in the U.S. for partners around the world to follow their own laws. When you have a candidate for president advocating relaxation in those laws, it calls into question the commitment.”

Ignoring any argument about the immorality of child labor, taking jobs away from adults who desperately need them and giving them to children is not a way to help boost the U.S. economy. Instead of proposing strategies to get our country’s children into the workforce, Mr. Gingrich should be offering solutions for the 13 million currently unemployed adults in the United States.

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