Chicago Sun-Times

Trump gets pair of charges, big trade-deal victory on same day

- LYNN SWEET D.C. DECODER lsweet@suntimes.com | @lynnsweet

WASHINGTON — House Democrats unveiled two articles of impeachmen­t against President Donald Trump on Tuesday and then handed him a major legislativ­e win — a pending deal on a new U.S.-Canada-Mexico trade pact.

The coincident­al byproduct of locking in the deal now is that endangered House Democrats can go home for the holidays and have bipartisan landmark legislatio­n to talk about — as well as impeachmen­t.

That the two matters converged Tuesday was not part of a grand timing plan Democrats used to distract from impeachmen­t. That spin from Trump and other Republican­s is not true.

Sources told me the deal fell into place only after intense final negotiatio­ns over the weekend. The agreement had to be announced Tuesday morning in the U.S. because there was a signing ceremony in Mexico City on Tuesday afternoon with officials from the

U.S., Canada and Mexico.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is showing the nation Democrats can get things done while pursuing Trump’s impeachmen­t.

This pending trade pact was accomplish­ed because labor — it’s endorsed by AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka — and the White House and House Democrats worked together.

Revamping the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement, nicknamed NAFTA, has been a Trump priority. Some Democrats have also been wanting to improve the deal.

Moving ahead with the United StatesMexi­co-Canada Agreement — known as the USMCA — while pursuing impeachmen­t is another example of Pelosi playing the long game.

Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., was one of eight members Pelosi tapped to be USMCA negotiator­s. At a news conference Tuesday, Schakowsky said Democrats got rid of some onerous provisions the White House wanted. Vice President Mike Pence said Democrats “acquiesced”; that’s not right.

“The Trump administra­tion sent us a deeply flawed trade deal,” Schakowsky said, “that among other things would have raised the price of pharmaceut­icals across North America by locking in high drug prices and expanding big pharma’s — pharma’s monopoly.”

The deal, she said, “prevents big pharma from raising the price of prescripti­on drugs across the United States, Mexico and Canada.”

Illinois impact

Underwood: The most endangered Illinois House incumbent is Democratic freshman Rep. Lauren Underwood. In 2018, she flipped a suburban Chicago district voting for Trump in 2016.

Underwood, a panelist at Politico’s “Women Rule Summit” on Tuesday, was asked about the impact of impeachmen­t.

“We, of course, are in a unique position in that folks in Illinois are very familiar with political corruption. It’s not a foreign concept,” she said. When Pelosi announced the impeachmen­t inquiry, folks in her district — who watch Chicago TV — saw it “at the same time the FBI were raiding the local aldermen offices. And so when you are watching the news you see Speaker Pelosi, Donald Trump, the FBI bringing out boxes, right, from City Hall in Chicago. And for my neighbors, it all kind of looks the same.”

“. . . Now whether or not folks think that’s impeachabl­e, that’s different,” said Underwood.

Casten: Another freshman, Democrat Sean Casten, beat a Republican in 2018 and is a major GOP 2020 target. The two narrow articles on abuse of power and obstructio­n of Congress zero in on “where there’s unambiguou­s, unambiguou­sly clear evidence.” The articles are “the closest to no brainers that I could think of,” Casten told me. He is making no other pronouncem­ents until he’s finished reading the entire record.

Lipinski: Rep. Dan Lipinski’s district is heavily Democratic; his two major Democratic March rivals are progressiv­es. Lipinski is looking for Republican crossover support in the Democratic primary. Lipinski said in a statement he will “carefully consider” the impeachmen­t articles “in light of the evidence that has been brought forward in the inquiry.”

Foster: Rep. Bill Foster is facing a Democratic primary challenge from the left. He said flat out in a statement, “I support the Articles of Impeachmen­t against President Trump that have been introduced by the Judiciary Committee, and I intend to vote for them on the Floor of the House of Representa­tives next week.”

Kinzinger: Rep. Adam Kinzinger, the only Chicago-area Republican, said impeachmen­t is “leaving us even more divided than before. There will be another presidenti­al election in 11 months and the voters will have the final say.”

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Rep. Lauren Underwood
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