House
panel passes fast track trade bill
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[April 24, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Legislation
to speed trade deals through the U.S. Congress cleared through a key
committee on Thursday, but low Democratic support signaled a looming
battle over a Pacific trade pact central to President Barack Obama's
strategic shift toward Asia.
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Democrats and Republicans clashed over proposals to punish
countries that manipulate their currencies to gain an export edge
and ways to give lawmakers more leverage over trade deals like the
12-nation Trans-Pacific Partnership.
Despite the partisan wrangling, the vote in the House of
Representatives' Ways and Means Committee marked an important step
forward for the legislation, which would prohibit Congress from
amending trade deals and allow for just yes-or-no votes.
Obama and major U.S. trade partners, including Japan, have said the
measure is vital to seal the TPP deal.
A companion "fast-track" bill cleared a Senate panel on Wednesday,
and both are now ready for action in their respective chambers.
Still, the way forward is likely to be treacherous with many of
Obama's fellow Democrats in opposition over worries that trade deals
could harm jobs and the environment, leaving the White House to rely
heavily on Republican support.
The House committee's 25 to 13 vote in favor of the bill provided an
exhibit of this unusual alliance, with only two of the panel's 15
Democrats voting for the legislation - much less support than it
received in the Senate panel.
Committee chairman Paul Ryan joked it was a "strange world" when he
had to defend Obama against amendments moved by his own party.
The panel's top Democrat, Sander Levin of Michigan, is one of the
fiercest opponents. He put forward an alternative backed by unions
and the House Democratic leadership, but Ryan did not allow a vote.
In both the House and Senate committees, lawmakers pressed to insert
provisions allowing the United States to punish trade partners who
deliberately weaken their currencies to make their goods more
competitive in global markets.
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Both panels largely fended off those efforts, with the House
committee rejecting a tough currency rule 24 votes to 14. The Obama
administration had warned the provision would sink the TPP, as
trading partners worried that central bank efforts to boost growth
could come under U.S. attack if their currencies weakened.
The House panel did not take up a Senate tweak excluding countries
deemed soft on human trafficking from fast-tracked trade deals -
potentially hitting TPP partner Malaysia. Ryan said the change would
make it very difficult for the administration in negotiating the TPP
accord.
Obama sees the TPP as an important counterweight to China's growing
clout in the region. An agreement would stretch from Japan to Chile
and cover a third of world trade.
But U.S. trading partners have expressed hesitance to finalize a
deal that could be reopened by the U.S. Congress.
To make the fast-track bill more palatable for critics, its sponsors
inserted a provision that would turn off the streamlined procedures
if a trade deal did not fulfill objectives set by Congress.
But some House Democrats said that did not go far enough. "I don't
want at the end of the deal to be told that you did the best you
could," said New York's Charles Rangel.
(Reporting by Krista Hughes; Editing by Alan Crosby)
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