Here's how 55 current lawmakers voted on NAFTA in 1993

For some members of Congress, 2019 may feel a lot like 1993.

The North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, is once again in the spotlight -- though this time, the revised trade deal is known as the U.S. Mexico Canada Agreement, or USMCA.

Fifty-five lawmakers who voted on the original trade agreement in 1993 are still in office today.

At the time, several lawmakers — including Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) and Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) — were serving in the U.S. House and have since moved to the Senate.

These are the current members of Congress who were in office during the 1993 NAFTA vote. (David Foster for Yahoo Finance)
These are the current members of Congress who were in office during the 1993 NAFTA vote. (David Foster for Yahoo Finance)

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) told Yahoo Finance she campaigned in opposition to NAFTA when she was first elected in 1990. When she arrived on Capitol Hill, she waged a war against the trade agreement that she argued would cost American jobs.

“I put my heart and soul into defeating this,” said DeLauro. “It was wild. It was very, very wild. It was really quite a time.”

DeLauro describes the period as an emotional one, especially for a new member of Congress.

“We were on the floor every morning, every night...I partnered with Sherrod [Brown], we whipped, it was a full-scale operation,” said DeLauro in an interview with Yahoo Finance.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro speaks on the House floor against NAFTA in 1993.
Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-CT) speaks on the House floor against NAFTA in 1993. (CSPAN)

Brown remembers NAFTA was one of his first major votes in Congress.

“We knew that trade agreement would cost American jobs,” Brown told Yahoo Finance.

“That's what's happened with NAFTA over and over. Companies moved to Mexico, sold back into the United States — made more money, as wages have been stagnant and corporate profits are up. Executives are making more money and American workers are hurt,” he said.

Portman was a freshman member of Congress in 1993. He saw the trade agreement with Canada and Mexico differently.

“The notion was that we should be able to knock down barriers on both sides to be able to create more jobs in America,” Portman told Yahoo Finance. “The reality was, that we had relatively low tariffs and these other countries, particularly Mexico, had relatively high tariffs.”

DeLauro and Brown still agree on the issue. DeLauro argues the biggest problem with the trade deal in 1993 was that it was designed for corporations – not workers.

Rep. Sherrod Brown (D-OH), now a US Senator, appears on CSPAN in 1993 to voice his opposition to NAFTA.
Rep. Sherrod Brown (D-OH), now a US Senator, appears on CSPAN in 1993 to voice his opposition to NAFTA.

“The point was that companies, corporations are going to outsource their jobs. That is still the problem today,” said DeLauro.

Measuring NAFTA’s impact is not so simple

The reality of NAFTA’s impact on American jobs is tricky.

The goal of NAFTA was to eliminate barriers and increase trade and investment between the three countries.

“The economies really have grown together — all three of them — which was the point. There are a lot of supply chains now that are tightly bound to all three countries,” said Bill Reinsch, a trade expert with the Center for Strategic and International Studies and a former Commerce Department official.