Jeb
Bush knocks Hillary Clinton over Asia trade talks stance
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[April 23, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
Jeb Bush on Wednesday bashed Democratic 2016 presidential contender
Hillary Clinton for voicing reservations about overseas trade talks, a
rare issue on which the White House enjoys support from Republicans,
with many Democrats opposed.
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Bush, the former Florida Governor who is also expected to jump
into the presidential race, said Clinton backed foreign trade
agreements as secretary of state but has grown reticent now that she
is seeking the Democratic nomination.
The U.S. Congress is debating whether to give President Barack Obama
"fast-track" authority to negotiate deals such as the 12-nation
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). The White House says the pact would
open up new markets to U.S. exports and help businesses compete
abroad.
But many Democrats and their supporters, including labor unions, say
free-trade deals help big corporations at the expense of American
jobs.
On Tuesday, Clinton said any trade deal "has to produce jobs and
raise wages and increase prosperity and protect our security." Bush
called those tests "poison pills" that amount to a change of
position.
"I haven't changed in my view even though Hillary Clinton has," Bush
wrote in a post on the blog publishing site Medium. "It is time to
move forward as even recent Democratic presidents have recognized -
and Sec. Clinton shouldn't stand in the way for political gain."
A Clinton spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for
comment on Bush's post.
The TPP would set trade rules and common standards and cut tariffs
between the United States and 11 Pacific Rim countries. Lawmakers
last week introduced legislation to give Obama "fast-track"
authority. This would require Congress to vote for or against a
trade deal, without the opportunity to amend it.
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Republicans have found themselves in the unusual position of
defending the White House.
Senator Ted Cruz, who is seeking the 2016 Republican presidential
nomination, and influential Representative Paul Ryan wrote an
opinion piece dated Tuesday in the Wall Street Journal asking
colleagues to approve fast-track authority.
But many of Obama's fellow Democrats say trade deals make it easier
for American companies to move jobs to countries with lower labor
costs.
Former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley, a Democrat who is
considering challenging Clinton for the nomination, said in an email
to supporters that opposing the Asia deal was "common sense."
Obama said last week that any trade deal he reached would benefit
U.S. workers.
(Reporting by Emily Stephenson; Editing by David Gregorio)
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