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		Trump's opposition to trade deals fuels 
		internal party opposition 
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		 [July 01, 2016] 
		By Ginger Gibson 
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Presidential 
		candidate Donald Trump on Wednesday lashed out at the U.S. Chamber of 
		Commerce's scathing criticism of his stance on trade, highlighting 
		divisions within the Republican Party that threaten unity ahead of the 
		Nov. 8 election.
 At a campaign rally in Maine on Wednesday, Trump called the 
			nation's largest business association "controlled totally by various 
			groups of people who don’t care about you whatsoever."
 He said new trade deals should be negotiated because foreign 
			countries are taking advantage of America.
 
 "Every country that we do business with us look at us as the stupid 
			people with the penny bank," Trump said Wednesday at the rally in 
			Bangor, Maine.
 
 The Washington-based lobbying group, which represents the United 
			States' largest companies and business interests, is typically a 
			reliable backer of Republican policies.
 
 But on Tuesday it took issue with Trump's vocal opposition to trade 
			deals, calling his proposals "dangerous" ideas that would push the 
			United States into another recession.
 
		
		 Trump said the Chamber's argument that his policies would cause a 
			trade war were incorrect because the United States was already at a 
			deficit.
 "We’re already losing the trade war, we lost the trade war," Trump 
			said. "Nothing can happen worse than is happening now."
 
 In speeches on Tuesday, Trump called for renegotiating or scrapping 
			the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) with Canada and 
			Mexico, calling it a job killer, and reiterated opposition to the 
			pending Trans-Pacific Partnership among the United States and 11 
			other Pacific Rim countries. He also lambasted China's trade and 
			currency policies.
 
 The Chamber has consistently backed trade deals.
 
 The public squabbling between the presumptive Republican nominee and 
			the business group was unusual, one of a series of reminders that 
			Trump still struggles to unite his party behind his campaign. The 
			Republicans and many business leaders tend to share policy goals and 
			work in lockstep, and many business leaders have traditionally been 
			big donors to Republican candidates.
 
 So far, the Chamber's political action committee has donated 
			$134,000 to federal candidates or their committees, with $127,500 of 
			that total going to Republicans, according to U.S. government 
			campaign finance records.
 
 Billionaire Republican donor Paul Singer, who bankrolled an effort 
			to try to defeat Trump during the campaign's nominating phase, said 
			on Wednesday that a Trump presidency and his trade positions would 
			almost certainly lead to a global depression.
 
 "The most impactful of the economic policies that I recall him 
			coming out for are these anti-trade policies," Singer said during a 
			panel discussion at the Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado, according 
			to CNBC.
 
 But opposing trade deals has proven a winning strategy for Trump 
			among voters concerned about the loss of manufacturing jobs.
 
 
		 
		
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			Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump takes the stage at a 
			campaign rally in Bangor, Maine, June 29, 2016. REUTERS/Brian Snyder 
            
             
			Art Laffer, an economic adviser to President Ronald Reagan who 
			supports Trump, said he did not like the tone of Trump’s speech on 
			Tuesday but thought it was an improvement over his past comments on 
			trade. 
			"It’s not terribly alarming to me,” Laffer said. “I didn’t see any 
			45 percent tariffs across the board. ...
 "I saw negotiating better trade deals rather than throwing away all 
			the trade deals we have now. He points out the flaws in these 
			trades, and that’s all true," Laffer said. "I don’t like the tone of 
			it, but I dislike the tone less today than I did three weeks ago.”
 
 Peter Navarro, a Trump trade policy adviser, defended the 
			candidate's position.
 
 “Here’s the central point to understand: The White House has been 
			utterly and completely soft on China’s illegal trade practices,” 
			said Navarro, a professor at the University of California, Irvine. 
			"The status quo is the worst of all possible worlds for the United 
			States."
 
 Trump also took fire from for his positions on trade from Democrats.
 
 In a call organized by rival Hillary Clinton's presidential 
			campaign, U.S. Senator Mark Warner of Virginia, a former businessman 
			and tech entrepreneur, said that while the country needed to do a 
			better job protecting workers, more resources should be put into 
			training them for a new economy.
 
 He also noted that it was unusual to see a Republican 
			standard-bearer and the Chamber divide.
 
			 
			“You’ve really got a special circumstance when the U.S. Chamber of 
			Commerce” responded to Trump’s economic plan with a “full-fledged 
			onslaught,” Warner said. “No one could have predicted this kind of 
			election season.”
 Clinton held no public campaign events on Wednesday but did announce 
			she would appear next week with President Barack Obama, the first 
			time this year that he and his former Secretary of State have 
			campaigned together.
 
 (Reporting by Ginger Gibson, Grant Smith, Amanda Becker, Alana Wise 
			and Emily Stephenson; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
 
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