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		 U.S. 
		lawmaker sees fast-track trade power soon in step towards trade pact 
		
		 
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		[February 19, 2015] 
		TOKYO (Reuters) - The chairman of a 
		U.S. congressional committee responsible for trade said on Thursday he 
		expects passage of legislation to fast-track trade deals soon, a vital 
		step towards a Pacific trade pact covering a large chunk of the global 
		economy. 
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			 Negotiators from 12 Pacific nations hope to conclude talks on a 
			Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) within months, and House Ways and 
			Means Committee Chairman Paul Ryan said legislation known as trade 
			promotion authority (TPA) should pass soon, easing a major hurdle. 
			 
			"We're very close, we're in the 11th hour of negotiating the final 
			pieces of TPA," Ryan, in Tokyo with a Congressional delegation for 
			negotiations, told a news conference ahead of a meeting with 
			Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. 
			 
			"Once those negotiations are wrapped up we anticipate moving ... 
			fairly quickly, and that's really this spring," he said. 
			  Ryan said he hoped the TPP could then be concluded soon after the 
			TPA was passed. Dave Reichert, a lawmaker who is also a member of 
			Ryan's committee, said they hoped to clinch a deal by the end of the 
			year. 
			 
			The TPP pact would link 12 countries from the United States to 
			Japan, Australia and New Zealand, and cover nearly 40 percent of the 
			world economy. Disagreement on farm exports between the United 
			States and Japan, the pact's two biggest economies, has hindered 
			progress. 
			 
			Japanese Economy Minister Akira Amari said on Wednesday concluding 
			an agreement by Japan's initial target of as early as March was 
			becoming difficult. 
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			Japan is keen on protecting sectors such as beef, sugar and dairy, 
			although Japanese media has reported the government is considering 
			concessions. 
			 
			Under U.S. trade promotion authority, the executive branch under 
			President Barack Obama negotiates trade agreements with input from 
			Congress. But once an agreement has been concluded, TPA means it 
			cannot be changed by Congress and is subject to simple votes in the 
			House and Senate. 
			 
			(Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Robert Birsel) 
			
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