US House blocks Obama trade agenda, for now

Published June 13, 2015
US President Barack Obama, with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi at his side, walks from a meeting room after making a last-ditch appeal to House Democrats to support the trans-Pacific trade accord.—Reuters
US President Barack Obama, with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi at his side, walks from a meeting room after making a last-ditch appeal to House Democrats to support the trans-Pacific trade accord.—Reuters

WASHINGTON: The US House of Representatives dealt a setback to President Barack Obama’s ambitious trade agenda Friday, voting to block a measure giving him fast-track authority to conclude a trans-Pacific trade accord.

The vote, in which some two thirds of the House opposed the so-called Trade Adjustment Assi­sta­nce, was a stinging defeat for Oba­ma, who personally came to Capitol Hill in an effort to get fellow Dem­ocrats on board with his trade plan.

Immediately afterward, the House narrowly passed the bill that would give Obama Trade Promotion Authority to rapidly conclude the Pacific trade deal and send it to Congress for an up-or-down vote, but without lawmakers’ ability to make changes.

But it was merely a show vote, because the rejection of the measure that helps US workers displaced by globalization automatically put the brakes on TPA.

Both measures have already passed the Senate, but TPA is now stuck in limbo in Congress because the pair are part of the Senate package. TPA would allow Obama to finalize negotiations with 11 other Pacific Rim countries on what would be the largest trade agreement ever, a massive pact with Japan, Australia, Canada, Chile, Vietnam and others encompassing some 40 per cent of global commerce.

“We need to slow this fast track down,” top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi, a longtime Obama ally, told members immediately before the vote, revealing her position on trade that she had kept private for weeks.

“Whatever the deal is with other countries, we want a better deal for America’s workers,” she said. House Speaker John Boehner has left open the possibility of concluding the trade package at a later date.

Published in Dawn, June 13th, 2015

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