San Francisco Chronicle

Democrats aim to regain edge on trade

- By Erica Werner Erica Werner is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats are unveiling a new set of trade policies aimed at appealing to workingcla­ss voters and regaining advantage on an issue Donald Trump seized to great effect during last year’s presidenti­al campaign.

Some of the proposals being rolled out Wednesday sound like talking points straight from Trump, including renegotiat­ing NAFTA and strengthen­ing “Buy America” policies. Despite his rhetoric on those issues, Trump has taken limited steps so far, although he did formally pull the U.S. out of a 12-nation Pacific Rim trade pact that Congress probably wouldn’t have approved anyway.

“For too long, big corporatio­ns have dictated how trade deals and foreign acquisitio­ns are negotiated and the American worker has been left without a seat at the table,” according to the Democrats’ trade blueprint. “As a result, many of these deals have boosted corporate profits, but for many hard-working Americans, these same policies have led to shuttered factories and lower wages.”

The trade policies being announced Wednesday are the second rollout in Democrats’ new “Better Deal” agenda, which House and Senate Democrats are proposing ahead of the 2018 midterms. Last week Democrats unveiled the overall agenda and made public the first three planks, which focused on creating more jobs, cracking down on corporate monopolies and lowering prescripti­on drug prices.

On trade, Democrats are proposing a new American Jobs Security Council to review and potentiall­y halt foreign purchases of U.S. companies. Chinese stateowned enterprise­s are increasing­ly entering U.S. markets by purchasing American companies, but the reverse doesn’t usually happen because of restrictio­ns in China on U.S. investment­s, according to supporting documents.

Democrats also envision a new “independen­t trade prosecutor” who would be empowered to investigat­e unfair trade practices outside the unwieldy World Trade Organizati­on process, and recommend retaliatio­n in the form of restrictio­ns to U.S. market access.

And Democrats call for renegotiat­ing the Clinton-era North American Free Trade Agreement among the U.S., Mexico and Canada, with the goal of achieving more American jobs and higher wages, and enforceabl­e labor standards. Trump has also called for renegotiat­ing NAFTA, a deal he bashed ceaselessl­y on the campaign trail, and a couple weeks ago his administra­tion outlined its goals for doing so, some of which overlap with the Democrats’ ideas.

The Democrats also call for strengthen­ing “Buy America” provisions in taxpayer-funded projects.

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