Austin American-Statesman

Obama begins selling trade agreement to Congress, public

- By Kevin Freking

Negotiatio­ns

WASHINGTON — over the complex trade deal took more than five years. On Tuesday, President Barack Obama began what may be a similarly difficult task selling

— the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p to Congress and the American public.

Obama met with business and agricultur­al leaders at the Department of Agricultur­e. The site of the meeting reflects the urgency that farm groups have attached to the deal to remove tariffs and other trade barriers that would increase exports ranging from meat and poultry to grains and cotton.

Obama emphasized that the deal would eliminate or reduce more than 18,000 tariffs that participat­ing countries impose on U.S. exports. The reduction of those tariffs will lower the price that internatio­nal consumers pay for U.S. goods. For example, Obama said Japan currently puts a 38 percent tax on American beef and Malaysia currently puts a 30 percent tax on American auto parts.

“If the tariffs are down, if the taxes are down on goods made in America, that means U.S. companies are investing here and are able to sell over there without a disadvanta­ge. That’s what American leadership looks like in the 21st century,” Obama told reporters at the end of the closed-door meeting.

Leaders of trade groups representi­ng the film, travel and technology industries were among those who attended the meeting with Obama and Agricultur­e Secretary Tom Vilsack. One of the administra­tion’s selling points is that it will put pressure on China to match various safeguards and openness to competitio­n that’s written into the agreement.

“Under this agreement, we, rather than countries like China, are writing the rules for the global economy,” Obama said.

It will be weeks before the full scope of the agreement announced Monday is known, but several labor groups are worried that it will result in American jobs sent to countries with lower wages and less stringent labor and environmen­tal standards. A congressio­nal vote on the pact is not expected to occur until well into next year.

The president has to wait 90 days before signing the pact, and only then will Congress begin the process of voting on it. Approval of the deal would give Obama a legacy-defining victory. To achieve a victory, Obama will need help from Republican­s and will need to overcome doubts from a key Democratic constituen­cy.

In the hours after the trade deal was announced, some union leaders made clear that a candidate’s stance on the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p will determine whether he or she can expect support. While unions have lost political clout as their numbers have declined, their political action committees donated more than $60 million to campaigns during the 2012 elections. About 90 percent of that money went toward Democratic candidates, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

Chris Shelton, president of the Communicat­ions Workers of America, whose members include customer service reps and computer technician­s, said the union will “hold accountabl­e those members of Congress who support this giveaway to the 1 percent.”

Among the Democratic candidates running for president, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont moved quickly to voice his opposition.

“Wall Street and big corporatio­ns just won a big victory. Now it’s on us to stop the #TPP from becoming law,” Sanders tweeted.

Hillary Clinton has not yet taken a stance on the deal.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States