San Francisco Chronicle

President’s trade agenda clears hurdle

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WASHINGTON — Congressio­nal backers of President Obama’s trade agenda battled opponents on the left and right Wednesday, hoping to advance legislatio­n that could lead to trade agreements with numerous countries.

They won an early round when the Senate Finance Committee narrowly defeated a “currency manipulati­on” measure, which the administra­tion said would unravel a long- negotiated trade proposal with 11 Pacific Rim nations. Votes for and against the provision were about evenly divided between Republican­s and Democrats, highlighti­ng the unusual — and possibly tenuous — political alignments on trade.

The committee’s chairman, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R- Utah, predicted an eventual “strong bipartisan vote” for “fast track” legislatio­n. The measure would renew presidenti­al authority to present trade deals that Congress can endorse or reject but not amend.

If Obama wins fast track, he’s expected to ask Congress to approve the 12- nation Trans- Pacific Partnershi­p. It involves Japan, Canada and Mexico, but not China.

Liberal groups and labor unions vow to fight him, saying trade deals hurt U. S. jobs. The Finance Committee’s actions Wednesday were delayed for hours because liberal Sen. Bernie Sanders, I- Vt., invoked an often- ignored Senate scheduling rule in protest. “This job- killing trade deal has been negotiated in secret,” said Sanders, who made a lengthy Senate speech denouncing the legislatio­n.

Hatch rejected the claims, saying fast track and other trade proposals have been carefully negotiated and will undergo long public scrutiny.

Obama says his Democratic opponents have their facts wrong. “I would not be doing this trade deal if I did not think it was good for the middle class,” Obama said in an interview this week with MSNBC. “When you hear folks make a lot of suggestion­s about how bad this trade deal is, when you dig into the facts, they are wrong.”

Few issues divide Democrats more than trade. Obama, like former President Bill Clinton, supports free trade, but many Democratic lawmakers do not.

Republican Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio urged the Finance Committee to direct U. S. trade officials to take tougher stands against nations that allegedly keep their currency artificial­ly low. The practice can boost exports by making local products more affordable to foreigners. Economists disagree on whether China and other nations engage in the practice.

The Obama administra­tion said Portman’s proposal “could derail” the Pacific Rim negotiatio­ns. The Finance Committee rejected the amendment, 15 to 11.

 ?? Mark Wilson / Getty Images ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders waits for the Senate subway to the Capitol. Sanders gave an impassione­d speech denouncing the “fast track” trade legislatio­n.
Mark Wilson / Getty Images Sen. Bernie Sanders waits for the Senate subway to the Capitol. Sanders gave an impassione­d speech denouncing the “fast track” trade legislatio­n.

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