Los Angeles Times

Senate conf irms Commerce pick

Trump’s choice for Commerce secretary will be a key player in NAFTA negotiatio­ns.

- By Don Lee

Billionair­e investor Wilbur Ross will be a key player in President Trump’s revamping of NAFTA.

WASHINGTON — Wilbur Ross, the billionair­e investor who will play a leading role in President Trump’s revamping of the North American Free Trade Agreement, easily won Senate confirmati­on Monday night to be the administra­tion’s Commerce secretary.

Unlike some other Trump nominees who faced intense opposition from Senate Democrats, Ross had a relatively smooth confirmati­on hearing and cleared the full Senate 72 to 27.

Just before the vote, Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Fla.), the ranking minority member of the Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee, urged fellow lawmakers to vote for Ross, despite what he said was the Trump administra­tion’s refusal to release written answers to questions from Senate Democrats about Ross’s investment­s in a Cyprus bank with reported financial ties to wealthy Russians.

Nelson said he had talked with Ross twice about the matter and was satisfied with the nominee’s assurances that he had no knowledge of any interactio­n between the bank and people associated with the Trump administra­tion.

Earlier in the confirmati­on process, there were questions about Ross’s vast financial holdings and past involvemen­t turning around distressed companies in textile and auto industries, in part by investing in low-cost manufactur­ing overseas and in Mexico. Trump has blasted such practices for killing American jobs but is now enlisting Ross to help reverse offshoring activities by overhaulin­g trade and other economic policies.

Ross, 79, dealt with concerns about his massive fortune — and the potential conflicts of interest that might raise — by promising to divest most of his assets and step down from positions on multiple companies and foundation­s.

In an agreement with the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, Ross said he would retain interests in a dozen entities engaged in real estate and shipping businesses, although most would not undertake new investment­s after his confirmati­on.

Now that Ross is on board, Trump is expected in short order to give the required 90-day notice to Congress for the administra­tion to start renegotiat­ing NAFTA. Ross has said that overhaulin­g the 23-year-old pact with Canada and Mexico would be a top priority.

During his confirmati­on hearing in January, Ross signaled that his agency also would look at imposing duties on Chinese steel and possibly other goods that have been dumped at unfairly low prices or subsidized by the state.

Ross told lawmakers that he opposed the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, the massive 12-nation free-trade deal completed by the Obama administra­tion but never ratified. Trump formally withdrew from the agreement after taking office and has threatened to pull out of NAFTA if the U.S. doesn’t get concession­s, particular­ly from Mexico.

Trump’s often-strident talk on trade has put Republican leaders between a rock and a hard place. The GOP has long been the party of free trade. Ross has taken a more measured tone than Trump, saying that he is pro-trade.

Traditiona­lly the head of the Commerce Department has wielded little power in the White House, but the president has indicated that Ross would be the principal Cabinet official in reshaping NAFTA and other trade deals to protect American industries and jobs.

With Ross’s confirmati­on, two of three key figures on Trump’s trade team are in place. In December, Trump tapped Peter Navarro, a UC Irvine business professor known for his harsh criticism of China’s trade practices, to head a new White House-based trade council.

The president in early January nominated Robert Lighthizer, a veteran trade lawyer and negotiator who worked in the Reagan administra­tion, to serve as the U.S. trade representa­tive.

Navarro’s appointmen­t did not require Senate confirmati­on. Lighthizer’s does, but a hearing on his nomination has not yet been scheduled, in part because of delays related to Lighthizer’s past work on behalf of foreign government clients.

don.lee@latimes.com Twitter: @dleelatime­s

 ?? Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press ?? WILBUR ROSS, President Trump’s nominee for Commerce secretary, testifies at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Commerce Committee in January.
Manuel Balce Ceneta Associated Press WILBUR ROSS, President Trump’s nominee for Commerce secretary, testifies at his confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Commerce Committee in January.

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