AIADA Look Back: Sanctions Averted in U.S.-Japan Auto Battle: How Dealers Made a Difference
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This article originally appeared in AIADA’s International Automobile Dealer magazine, volume 12, No. 4 July/August 1995
Thousands of dealers and their employees
breathed a sign of relief on June 28 [1995] as the
U.S. and
Caught
in the crossfire of an international trade dispute, AIADA members led
the battle against the sanctions, waging an all-out lobbying and public
relations campaign from the national level to the grassroots, reaching
Congress, the Administration, the media and the public. In the end, our
message was heard:
By mid-April, concern at AIADA headquarters was
starting to build. Months of “framework” talks between the
Early Action Key to
Strategy
AIADA began laying the groundwork to guard
against sanctions, setting the wheels in motion to focus efforts
on:
¨Urging the two countries to forge a negotiated
settlement or take their dispute to the World Trade
Organization.
AIADA
met with Commerce Department officials in charge of U.S.-Japan auto
trade talks while the government relations team also worked vigorously
to spread this message on Capitol Hill.
On
April 20 [1995], AIADA sent a letter to U.S. Trade Representative
(USTR) Mickey Kantor offering to send a delegation of AIADA leaders to
Japan to try to help reach a negotiated settlement.
On April 27 [1995], AIADA sent a faxed trade
alert to all
Talks Break Down, Sanctions
Loom
Autos Targeted for 100% Tariffs |
Acura
Legend |
The auto talks officially broke down after
Kantor and
Immediately
following Kantor’s remarks, AIADA President Walter Huizenga warned in
a
press release that sanctions on Japanese import autos would threaten
thousands of American small businesses and jobs: “Our government is
firing a bullet at Japan, but they are hitting
Americans.”
Grassroots Action
Launched
On
May 9 [1995], AIADA sent a trade sanctions bulletin to all members of
the grassroots program, alerting them to the current situation.
On
May 10 [1995], AIADA sent a letter to all Members of Congress opposing
sanctions and supporting a resolution of the dispute either through a
negotiated settlement or through the WTO. Included
in this Capitol Hill mailing was a compelling Wall Street Journal article
telling of the impact of sanctions on
Also
on May 10 [1995], AIADA sent a five-page sanctions alert to all dealers
of Japanese vehicles calling for immediate grassroots action. Dealers
were provided with AIADA’s position paper and talking points to use
with both their local press and with their Members of
Congress.
Within
days, dozens of Members of Congress had heard from dealer constituents
who warned of the severity of the sanctions the Clinton Administration
was pursuing. Dealers were making a
difference through the media at the grassroots, too. Armed with
AIADA’s
talking points, dealers across the country were featured in newspaper
reports, radio and TV interviews.
Sanctions Announced, AIADA
Reaction Swift
On
Tuesday, May 16 [1995], Kantor announced the U.S. would impose trade
sanctions against Japan targeting 13 Japanese import vehicles for 100%
tariffs valued at $5.9 billion annually.
AIADA
immediately unleashed its four-prong lobbying and public relations
campaign designed to reach the Administration, Congress, the media and
the public, hitting hard with our message that sanctions would
devastate American businesses and jobs.
Target: The
Media
AIADA’s
pre-planning enabled a hard and fast strike following the USTR’s
10:00
a.m. announcement. AIADA held a press conference at 12:00 noon jointly
with the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA), denouncing the
proposed sanctions and presenting a unified dealer front. By 11:00 a.m.
a press release was on the wire to thousands of media outlets across
the country, establishing AIADA as the voice of international auto
dealers impacted by the sanctions.
The media presence at the press conference
included all three major
Target: Congress &
Administration
AIADA Position on Auto Dispute |
* A
negotiated settlement is the best solution for both countries. |
The USTR announcement came just days before the
start of AIADA’s 18th annual American International
Automotive Congress, May 21-23 [1995]. Nearly 1,000 dealers descended on
AIADA
Chairman Kjell Bergh, and with four senior dealer members, also met
with USTR General Counsel Ira Shapiro on May 23 to discuss how the
sanctions would impact American businesses and jobs.
Target: Public
Support
AIADA launched a national advertising campaign
designed to build support for our position on
The
second ad centered on the editorial support our position had received
from newspapers across the country. A third ad was an open letter from
Begh and Huizenga on behalf of the 2,028 [1995 totals] impacted
dealerships and their 81,000 employees, urging Kantor and Hashimoto to
reach a negotiated settlement.
An
AIADA radio ad advocating our position was also broadcast on twelve
stations in the Washington metro area in the three weeks leading up to
the sanctions deadline.
Grassroots Action
Intensifies
"I
want Mickey Kantor and President Clinton to look at my 102 employees in
their eyes and tell them what they are going to do. Bill Clinton and
his company are about to put us out of business." |
AIADA’s
lobbying did not end following the Congress, it only intensified. Every
dealer member was sent a “Sanctions Survival Kit” with an
action plan
outline of what to do to help avert the sanctions:
¨ Write to the
USTR
¨ Call Congress
Now
¨ Write or FAX Congress your
USTR Letters
¨ Contact Your Local
Media
¨ Place AIADA’s Ads in
your Local Paper
¨ Serve as a Spokesperson in
your Community
¨ Keep AIADA Informed of your
Activities
Different
talking points were presented for dealers who sell the impacted cars
and those who do not. Dealers were urged to keep the pressure
on.
Hundreds
of letters poured into AIADA that had been sent to the USTR and to
Congress and from Congress to the USTR and the President. Also, dealers
continued to win the PR battle at the grassroots, earning editorial
support coast to coast by reaching out to educate the media on this
issue.
Public Hearing Put Dealers
Last
On
June 8 [1995], two days of scheduled testimony before the USTR on the
sanctions issue were packed into one, with dealers scheduled dead last.
Many dealers sat through nearly 12 hours of testimony to get their turn
to speak. “The USTR intentionally scheduled anti-sanction panelists
after 5:00 p.m. so their side of the story would not meet press
deadlines,” said Huizenga.
To ensure that their side would be heard, auto
dealers from around the nation gathered in
Dealer Delegation to
AIADA Chairman Kjell Bergh led a delegation of
AIADA dealers to
The
AIADA delegation met with U.S. Ambassador to Japan Walter Mondale, the
Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), the Ministry of
Transport, key executives and Toyota, Honda, Nissan and Mitsubishi, the
Japanese Automobile Manufacturers Association (JAMA), the Japanese
Automobile Dealers Association (JADA), and the Japanese Auto Importers
Association (JAIA).
The
meetings helped open the lines of communication between the embassy and
the manufacturers, and the groups began to outline a potential
agreement on the sticky issue of the so-called “voluntary”
parts plan.
The outline sought to ensure that manufacturers would receive credit
for the multi-billion dollar investment they had made in the
Each
manufacturer developed its own business plan outlining the investment
program and including parts purchasing plans in that
plan.
11th Hour Trade
Accord: Sanctions Averted
The plans outlined during AIADA’s trip to
While
dealers maintained pressure at home through the media and n
Administration officials, the negotiations were clearly in the hands of
Kantor and President Clinton and
Finally, at noon
The agreement, hammered out in marathon sessions
at the home of the World Trade Organization, mirrored the plan outlined in
After weeks of united effort by dealers nationwide, the negotiated settlement that had been hoped for and fought for came to light in the final hours. It will go down in history as one of the biggest battles AIADA and its members have ever fought.
AIADA Presents - Chapter 1 A Look Back
AIADA Presents - Chapter 3 How Free Trade Policy Impacted the U.S. Auto Industry"