Qatar Tribune

US Senate opens trial to impeach Trump

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THE US Senate on Thursday voted overwhelmi­ngly to approve a new North American trade pact, handing President Donald Trump a second backto-back trade win just as his impeachmen­t trial was beginning in Washington.

After a brief debate, lawmakers voted 89-10 in favour of a bill allowing the US-MexicoCana­da agreement to take effect, overhaulin­g trade relations among the three countries.

The USMCA bill faced some opposition -- including from Democratic leader Chuck

Schumer, who said it failed to address the threat of climate change -- and Republican Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia, who complained that it erected barriers to free trade.

Given that the USMCA was negotiated at his instigatio­n, Trump’s signature is not in doubt, however.

In split-screen drama and with the vote scarcely concluded, House lawmakers who will serve as prosecutor­s in Trump’s trial gathered in the well of the Senate bearing articles of impeachmen­t which were later read aloud to the chamber -- setting the historic proceeding­s in motion.

The second straight day of good news on the trade front offered a welcome boost for the embattled president, who faces a tough re-election fight 10 months from now.

Adoption of the continentw­ide agreement comes less than a day after Washington and Beijing reached a separate partial deal, pausing a damaging trade war between the world’s top two economies and letting farmers and businesses breathe a sigh of relief.

In an internet video, Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador hailed the USMCA’s Senate passage, calling the news “very meaningful” as it signalled “more confidence in Mexico” and would lead to growth and investment.

The USMCA is billed as an update to the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement, which Trump had long lambasted as a job killer and threatened to scrap outright.

House lawmakers voted last month to adopt the USMCA

after winning changes to the text, including stronger guarantees that Mexican labor reforms can be enforced, as well as changes governing medication­s and environmen­tal standards.

“Today, the Senate passed a USMCA that has been transforme­d by Democrats’ leadership,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said in a statement.

Mexican lawmakers adopted those changes last month while Canada has yet to vote on the text, the final step for it to enter into force.

Trump had long blamed NAFTA for the offshoring of American jobs.

Lawmakers voted 89-10 in favour of a bill allowing the US-Mexico-Canada agreement to take effect, overhaulin­g trade relations among the three countries

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