The NAFTA Superhighway
October 31, 2006
by
Ron Paul
By now many Texans have heard about the proposed
“NAFTA Superhighway,” which is also referred to
as the trans-Texas corridor. What you may not
know is the extent to which plans for such a
superhighway are moving forward without
congressional oversight or media attention.
This superhighway would connect Mexico, the
United States, and Canada, cutting a wide swath
through the middle of Texas and up through
Kansas City. Offshoots would connect the main
artery to the west coast, Florida, and
northeast. Proponents envision a ten-lane
colossus the width of several football fields,
with freight and rail lines, fiber-optic cable
lines, and oil and natural gas pipelines running
alongside.
This will require coordinated federal and state
eminent domain actions on an unprecedented
scale, as literally millions of people and
businesses could be displaced. The loss of whole
communities is almost certain, as planners
cannot wind the highway around every quaint
town, historic building, or senior citizen
apartment for thousands of miles.
Governor Perry is a supporter of the
superhighway project, and Congress has provided
small amounts of money to study the proposal.
Since this money was just one item in an
enormous transportation appropriations bill,
however, most members of Congress were not aware
of it.
The proposed highway is part of a broader plan
advanced by a quasi-government organization
called the “Security and Prosperity Partnership
of North America,” or SPP.
The SPP was first launched in 2005 by the heads
of state of Canada, Mexico, and the United
States at a summit in Waco.
The SPP was not created by a treaty between the
nations involved, nor was Congress involved in
any way. Instead, the SPP is an unholy alliance
of foreign consortiums and officials from
several governments. One principal player is a
Spanish construction company, which plans to
build the highway and operate it as a toll road.
But don’t be fooled: the superhighway proposal
is not the result of free market demand, but
rather an extension of government-managed trade
schemes like NAFTA that benefit
politically-connected interests.
The real issue is national sovereignty. Once
again, decisions that affect millions of
Americans are not being made by those Americans
themselves, or even by their elected
representatives in Congress. Instead, a handful
of elites use their government connections to
bypass national legislatures and ignore our
Constitution – which expressly grants Congress
the sole authority to regulate international
trade.
The ultimate goal is not simply a superhighway,
but an integrated North American Union –
complete with a currency, a cross-national
bureaucracy, and virtually borderless travel
within the Union. Like the European Union, a
North American Union would represent another
step toward the abolition of national
sovereignty altogether.
A new resolution, introduced by Representative
Virgil Goode of Virginia, expresses the sense of
Congress that the United States should not
engage in the construction of a NAFTA
superhighway, or enter into any agreement that
advances the concept of a North American Union.
I wholeheartedly support this legislation, and
predict that the superhighway will become a
sleeper issue in the 2008 election.
Any movement toward a North American Union
diminishes the ability of average Americans to
influence the laws under which they must live.
The SPP agreement, including the plan for a
major transnational superhighway through Texas,
is moving forward without congressional
oversight – and that is an outrage. The
administration needs a strong message from
Congress that the American people will not
tolerate backroom deals that threaten our
sovereignty.