Virginia, There Should Be A Sanity Clause
It’s interesting that politicians from states that are benefitting from investment by Indian companies are at the forefront of India-bashing, especially from within the Democratic member.
The latest to join the roster is former Virginia Governor Mark Warner, who used outsourcing as a wedge issue to rouse the crowd, during his keynote speech at the Democratic National Convention:
We delivered broadband to the most remote areas of our state; because, if you can send a job to Bangalore, India, you sure as heck can send one to Danville, Virginia and Flint, Michigan and Scranton, Pennsylvania and Peoria, Illinois. In a global economy, you shouldn’t have to leave your home town to find a world-class job.
Warner isn’t alone. Ohio Governor Ted Strickland was nodding happily by Hillary Clinton’s side during the Democratic primaries while she morphed into an anti-globalisation heroine. Of course, Strickland has no problem welcoming investment by TCS into a center near Cincinnati.
The issue, of course, is that while those like Warner and Strickland favour international trade ties, they also tend to be prisoners of the unionists who don’t.
Now, the current Virginia Governor Tim Kaine, till recently in the very short list of those who could have been Obama’s VP pick, is investment-friendly, as we found out while speaking to him in denver:

