The Columbus Dispatch

Senate confirms Katherine Tai as Biden’s top trade envoy

Ex-negotiator has vowed tough stance on China

- Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON – The Senate confirmed Katherine Tai as the top U.S. trade envoy in an overwhelmi­ng bipartisan vote on Wednesday. She will be the first Asian American and first woman of color to hold the position.

Tai is considered a problem-solving pragmatist, and her nomination by President Joe Biden to be U.S. trade representa­tive drew support from Democrats and Republican­s alike. She was confirmed on a 98-0 vote and is the 19th member of Biden’s Cabinet to clear the Senate.

A former trade negotiator and congressio­nal staffer, Tai has vowed to work for a U.S. trade policy that benefits ordinary workers, not just big corporatio­ns, and to work more closely with America’s allies to confront an increasing­ly

assertive China.

In her confirmation hearing, she ducked questions about how she’d handle several politicall­y sensitive questions such as whether the Biden administra­tion would drop former President Donald Trump’s tariffs on imported steel and aluminum and whether it would revive an Asia-pacific trade agreement that was negotiated by President Barack Obama but jettisoned by Trump.

Fluent in Mandarin, Tai served several years as head of China enforcemen­t at the trade representa­tive’s office. “I know firsthand how critically important it is that we have a strategic and coherent plan for holding China accountabl­e to its promises and effectively competing with its model of state-directed economics,” Tai told senators last month.

In the biggest trade war since the 1930s, Trump slapped taxes on $360 billion in Chinese imports in a fight over China’s aggressive push to promote its own technology companies and challenge U.S. technologi­cal dominance.

Biden and his team appear to be in no hurry to reverse Trump’s China tariffs. U.S. legislator­s and policymake­rs across the political spectrum have taken an increasing­ly confrontat­ional line on China, frustrated by its trade practices, crackdown on Hong Kong and aggressive pursuit of territoria­l claims in the South China Sea.

Tai promised to work with U.S. allies to present a united front to Beijing. Trump sparred with U.S. allies, putting tariffs on imported steel and aluminum.

At her confirmation hearing, Tai wouldn’t commit to dropping the tax on foreign metals, calling tariffs “a legitimate tool in the trade toolbox.”

Tai also dodged a question about whether the Biden administra­tion would revive the Trans-pacific Partnershi­p, a pact with 11 Pacific Rim countries. It excluded and was meant to isolate China and cement U.S. ties with other Asian countries. Trump called the TPP a job killer and withdrew from it in his first week in office. The pact also faced opposition in Biden’s Democratic Party.

Tai last served as the top trade staffer at the House Ways and Means Committee. She handled negotiatio­ns with the Trump administra­tion over a revamped North American trade deal. Under pressure from congressio­nal Democrats, Trump’s trade team agreed to strengthen the pact to make it easier for Mexican workers to form independen­t unions – decreasing the incentives for U.S. firms to move south of the border to take advantage of cheap labor.

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