San Francisco Chronicle

Trump pulls his support of trade pact for 2nd time

- By Alan Rappeport

WASHINGTON — After publicly flirting last week with having the United States rejoin the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, President Trump appeared to rebuff the idea once and for all.

In a tweet Tuesday night, Trump said that although Japan and South Korea would like the United States to join the 11 other nations in the multilater­al trade agreement, he has no intention of doing so. The decision put an apparent end to a meandering trade policy in which Trump pulled out of the deal in his first week in office, before suggesting last week that he was having second thoughts.

“Too many contingenc­ies and no way to get out if it doesn’t work,” Trump wrote from his Mar-a-Lago club in Florida. “Bilateral deals are far more efficient, profitable and better for OUR workers.”

The comments confounded

some trade experts Tuesday night because South Korea is not in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p.

Trump followed up with a shot at the World Trade Organizati­on, which he said was “bad” to the United States.

The declaratio­n comes as Trump has been in discussion­s with South Korea about peace talks with North Korea and as the president hosts Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan at Mar-aLago, where they discussed trade, among other issues.

When Trump withdrew from the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p last year, he proposed a bilateral trade deal with Japan in its place. But Japan’s deputy prime minister, Taro Aso, ruled out that possibilit­y in March, saying that such a negotiatio­n would lead to unnecessar­y pain for Japan.

Instead, Japan forged ahead with a deal among the accord’s 11 remaining members, which they reached last month. Japan maintains that this agreement is still fragile and that negotiatin­g another pact with the United States could put its success at risk.

Japan has said it would be willing to enter a one-on-one deal only if it would serve as a bridge to the United States’ re-entering the TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p.

Other countries have also been cool to the idea of giving any ground to the U.S. after they spent months reworking the deal after Trump withdrew.

But the stem-winding deliberati­ons about the pact have added another dose of confusion to Trump’s trade policy as anxiety grows that the Trump administra­tion is on the verge of starting a global trade war.

In recent weeks, Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs on global imports of steel and aluminum, only to announce generous exceptions for several U.S. allies. He also announced tariffs on up to $150 billion worth of Chinese imports, before his economic advisers suggested that this might have been a negotiatin­g tactic.

After striking a bilateral trade agreement with South Korea last month, Trump suggested that he might hold out for a better deal down the road.

And Trump regularly muses about ending the North American Free Trade Agreement, even as his advisers say publicly that negotiatio­ns with Canada and Mexico are proceeding in a positive direction.

The mixed signals have put the president’s economic advisers in an awkward position and raised the hopes of many Republican­s in Congress who have been optimistic that he would seek ways to ease trade tensions. Farmers and business groups have been fearful that retaliatio­n from other countries on trade will stall the recent strength in the economy.

“This whole trade thing has exploded,” Larry Kudlow, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, said last week, explaining that he was pulling together a team to begin renegotiat­ing TPP.

While rejoining the pact would please some Republican­s, it would have been a significan­t breach of a campaign promise and an embrace of a policy that the president has described as a “rape of our country.” For that reason, many of Trump’s closest aides have been quietly playing down the prospects of re-entry.

Alan Rappeport is a New York Times writer.

 ?? Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press ?? President Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speak during a meeting at Trump’s private Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla.
Pablo Martinez Monsivais / Associated Press President Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe speak during a meeting at Trump’s private Mar-a-Lago club in Palm Beach, Fla.

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