The Phnom Penh Post

Vietnam to delay TPP ratificati­on: lawmaker

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VIETNAM will delay ratifying the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p ( TPP) until after the US elections, a lawmaker said yesterday, in the latest blow to the massive trade pact.

Prospects that the 12-country deal could be ratified in Washington this year have dimmed, with US lawmakers casting doubt on whether President Barack Obama’s signature Pacific trade deal will receive substantia­l backing or even come to a vote.

Both US presidenti­al hopefuls Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have said they oppose the TPP, raising questions about the future of the pact come the November ballot.

Vietnam, which sta nds to ga i n enor mously f rom t he trade deal that spans 40 percent of the world’s economy, had set a July target to approve it, according to t he government’s website.

But a member of the National Assembly, or parliament, told AFP yesterday the deal would not be discussed in the next parliament­ary session that opens on October 20 and runs until mid-November.

“The important issue here is to find a proper time to discuss and ratify the trade deal. Everybody knows that the US is the most important member in this deal and the country is in the middle of an election,” Dung Trung Quoc told AFP.

“Therefore, Vietnam pushing back the discussion of TPP is only normal,” he said, adding that the pact still had full support from parliament.

Comments on the National Assembly website confirmed that TPP ratificati­on would be delayed.

The trade deal has been a major policy of Obama’s administra­tion, and a key component of his “pivot to Asia”.

The TPP, which excludes economic powerhouse China, must be ratified by all participat­ing countries: Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States and Vietnam.

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