The 12-nation
Pan-Pacific trade deal championed by President Barack Obama has
been pilloried by both major-party nominees in the U.S.
presidential race, Democrat Hilary Clinton and Republican Donald
Trump.
While Republicans have traditionally backed free trade deals,
Trump has blamed them for U.S. job losses and threatened to rip
them up or renegotiate them if he wins the Nov. 8 election.
"If we see the TPP rejected, it would be a gigantic
self-inflicted wound – a setback to our own interests in the
region," Kerry told the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, in
remarks that drew a smattering of applause and boos.
"It would amount to a conscious turning of our backs on the Asia
Pacific at the very moment that we ought to be linking arms – it
would be an act that will hurt American workers, slow our
economy, hinder our ability to advance the full range of U.S.
objectives" in the fast-growing region, he added.
Republican leaders have said there is no point in bringing the
trade deal for a vote in the "lame-duck" session of Congress
after the election.
But Kerry urged Congress to approve the deal after the election,
saying: "It's the right thing to do for America – and no matter
what the loudest voices may be shouting – it is also the popular
choice."
There are concerns in Washington that failure to pass the TPP
would prompt Southeast Asian nations to turn to China and
Russia.
Kerry said the trade deal was a "litmus" test of Washington's
capacity to lead and was necessary if the United States wanted a
steady and reliable presence in the region.
His comments came amid tensions with China over the disputed
South China Sea, increased concerns over North Korea's missile
and nuclear weapons programs, and questions over the future of
the U.S.-Philippines alliance.
(Reporting by Dave McKinney; Writing by Lesley Wroughton;
Editing by Peter Cooney)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|
|