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In reply to the discussion: The Latest on Free Trade and the TPP [View all]KoKo
(84,711 posts)In Letters to Obama, 151 House Democrats, Bloc of GOP Announce Opposition to Fast Track Trade Auth [View all]
Last edited Wed Nov 13, 2013, 05:25 PM - Edit history (1)
WASHINGTON, D.C. A letter sent today to President Barack Obama opposing Fast Track authority, signed by 151 House Democrats, signals the end of a controversial Nixon-era procedure used to railroad contentious trade pacts through Congress. Obama has asked Congress to delegate to him its constitutional trade authority via Fast Track for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and other pacts.
The signers of the letter show the breadth and depth of Democratic House opposition to Fast Track. Signers include:
18 of 21 full committee ranking members and 72 subcommittee ranking members;
Leadership members including Assistant Democratic Leader Jim Clyburn; Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chair Steve Israel; Steering and Policy Committee Co-Chairs Rosa DeLauro and Rob Andrews; and 35 of 48 Democratic Steering and Policy Committee members;
19 of the short list of Democrats who voted for the 2011 U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement;
26 of the 51 members of the New Democrat Coalition, and 8 of the 14 members of the Blue Dog Coalition; and
36 of 42 House members of the Congressional Black Caucus, and 13 of 19 House members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus
On Tuesday, 25 House Republicans members announced their opposition to Fast Track, and most Democratic Ways and Means Committee members joined a letter noting that the old Fast Track process enjoys little support. Even prominent supporters of past trade agreements who did not sign these letters recently have voiced their opposition to Fast Track.
These letters make clear that Fast Track is history, said Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizens Global Trade Watch. When Nixon cooked up this scheme 40 years ago, trade pacts covered only tariffs. Now, deals like the TPP could rewrite wide swaths of U.S. policy, currently under the control of Congress, from food safety and financial regulation to Buy American procurement to energy policy.
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