‘ SADDLE UP:’ U. S. PRO-NAFTA CAMPAIGN RAMPS UP.
WASHINGTON• The proNAFTA forces in Washington are promising to try saving the agreement with a fight that could culminate in using legislative action to protect it from President Donald Trump.
T he U. S. Chamber of Commerce will hold weekly events to rally support for the deal, representatives said Tuesday during a gathering at its headquarters across the street from the White House.
Two of the speakers were prominent Republican senators who urged everyone who supports the agreement to raise their voices in defending the deal, thereby helping to tilt the scales amid an internal debate within the White House about whether to cancel the deal as a hardball negotiating ploy.
One senator from Kansas dismissed that as a “Humpty Dumpty” strategy that would break NAFTA first, and attempt to fix it later. Pat Roberts called it a risky approach and said he has personally confronted the president three times over the issue.
The latest came at a caucus meeting last week where Trump told Republican lawmakers not to get excited over his negotiating ploy, and Roberts replied to the president: “I am excited.”
Speaking after his colleague Sen. Ted Cruz, Roberts said it’s imperative that people who believe in trade speak out now to counter the anti- trade impulses in Trump’s Washington.
“Saddle up. Everybody saddle up. We have to ride. Ride with me,” Roberts said in a speech.
“We are fighting a pervasive view that our economy has not benefited from NAFTA. That is simply not right. We are coming to a crossroads … These issues affect real jobs, real lives and real people.”
Both senators described how their states have benefited from NAFTA; Kansas, for instance, is a significant exporter of agricultural products like wheat. A number of farming groups have warned that the mere threat to cancel NAFTA could send foreign customers sc rambling to find new non- U.S. suppliers.
Roberts briefly addressed the emerging debate over whether his fellow lawmakers might step into take legislative measures to counter a presidential pullout. The U.S. Constitution gives Congress power over international trade, and some analysts like former U.S. tradeczarRo bert Zoellick have urged it to flex those muscles by taking legislative steps to wrest some control away from the White House.
Asked whether his colleagues are discussing such steps, Roberts said: “That might be an option. Right now I think it would be a little early to be doing that … I think we can make our case before the administration.”
Cruz said his GOP colleagues are almost universally pro-trade.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has sounded the alarm over what it sees as potentially fatal moves to undermine the agreement by the Trump administration amid negotiations to upgrade the deal.
Those moves include demands by t he Trump administration for a fiveyear termination clause allowing easy cancellation of the agreement; tougher Buy American rules; auto- parts requirements the industry calls impossible to meet; and a gutting of the dispute mechanisms that enforce NAFTA.