The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Obama pushes for global trade deals in face of opposition

- By Kathleen Hennessey and Darlene Superville

HANNOVER, GERMANY >> President Barack Obama mounted a strong defense of internatio­nal trade deals Sunday in the face of domestic and foreign opposition, saying it’s “indisputab­le” that such agreements strengthen the economy and make U.S. businesses more competitiv­e worldwide. But he acknowledg­ed that the clock is ticking on his faltering trade agenda.

Obama, on a farewell visit to Germany as president, is trying to light a fire under stalled talks about a trans-Atlantic trade deal, a massive pact that would rewrite the rules for the billions in trade and investment between the European Union and the U.S. At a press conference, a trade show and a private dinner with chief executives, Obama tried to counter public skepticism about the unfinished deal with Europe, while also brushing off opposition from the 2016 presidenti­al candidates to a pending Asia-Pacific trade pact.

Despite all that, Obama said, “the majority of people still fa-

vor trade. They still recognize, on balance, that it’s a good idea.”

“If you look at the benefits to the United States or to Germany of free trade around the world, it is indisputab­le that it has made our economies stronger,” Obama said.

The president said he was confident negotiatio­ns on the trans-Atlantic trade deal could be completed by the end of year, with ratificati­on to follow. And he said that once the U.S. presidenti­al primary season is over and politics settle down, the trans-Pacific pact, awaiting ratificati­on, can “start moving forward” in Congress.

Obama is pushing to conclude

negotiatio­ns on the European deal before he leaves office, so that “next president can pick that up rapidly and get that done,” he told the BBC in an interview broadcast Sunday.

But it’s not certain that the next president would pick up where Obama leaves off on trade. The trans-Atlantic pact has not been a top issue in the campaign to choose Obama’s successor. And both leading candidates — Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump — oppose the Asia-Pacific trade pact for its potential impact on American jobs and wages.

Obama isn’t alone in facing opposition on trade. His host and partner on the daylong campaign, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, also is under pressure from critics who claim the transAtlan­tic

deal would erode environmen­tal standards and consumer protection­s.

Thousands of people took to the streets in Hannover to protest the trade deal on the eve of Obama’s arrival.

Throughout the day, Obama and Merkel stressed their alignment on trade, as well as other matters.

At a press conference, Obama made a strong public show of support for her handling of the migrant issue, saying she was “on the right side of history on this.”

Her decision to allow the resettleme­nt in Germany of thousands fleeing violence in Syria and other Mideast conflict zones has created an angry domestic backlash. Merkel recently helped European countries reach a deal with Turkey to ease the flow, but she and the other leaders are now under pressure

to revisit it.

Obama said Merkel was “giving voice, I think, to the kinds of principles that bring people together rather than divide them.”

But Obama would not go so far as to back her support for establishi­ng a “safe zone” in Syrian territory, saying that would be difficult to put in place.

“As a practical matter, sadly, it is very difficult to see how it would operate short of us essentiall­y being willing to militarily take over a big chunk of that country,” he said. “And that requires a big military commitment.”

Merkel has endorsed the notion of creating areas that could provide safe haven for the thousands of migrants fleeing the violence, and said such zones would improve access to humanitari­an

aid. She insisted the proposal would not require outside interventi­on, saying safe areas should be part of the Geneva peace negotiatio­ns that involve the Syrian government and moderate opposition groups.

Obama — looking to project a united front with a leader he referred to as his “trusted partner” while she called him “Dear Barack” — said he did support using the peace talks to ultimately create safe areas controlled by the moderate opposition, and on that “there’s no space between us.”

Obama spoke after Merkel rolled out the red carpet for him at Hannover’s Herrenhaus­en Palace. His stop in Germany was the last on a six-day trip to the Middle East and Europe. The European leg has

shaped up as a farewell tour to some of the leaders and the cities he’s frequented as president.

Merkel timed her invitation to the U.S. president with the opening of the Hannover Messe, the world’s largest industrial technology trade fair. Obama led a delegation of business leaders to the trade show and later joined chief executives for a dinner.

He told business leaders gathered for the opening ceremony that when it comes to passing the transAtlan­tic deal, “time is not on our side.” With upcoming elections in the U.S. and Europe, he said, if the pact isn’t completed now it may not be “for quite some time.”

“I know the politics are hard, but we have to keep

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel meet at Schloss Herrenhaus­en in Hannover, Germany, on Sunday. Obama was in Germany to mount a two-day push to sell his trans-Atlantic trade pact.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel meet at Schloss Herrenhaus­en in Hannover, Germany, on Sunday. Obama was in Germany to mount a two-day push to sell his trans-Atlantic trade pact.

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