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Reid Deals Body Blow to Obama on Trade
His Opposition to Fast-Track Authority for Trade Deals Puts Him at Odds With 
President's Economic Agenda
By WILLIAM MAULDIN and SIOBHAN HUGHES
Wall Street Journal
Updated Jan. 29, 2014 9:47 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON—Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid broke publicly with the White 
House Wednesday on trade policy, instantly imperiling two major international 
trade deals and punching a hole in one piece of the economic agenda the 
president outlined in his State of the Union address a day earlier.

Mr. Reid told reporters he opposed legislation aimed at smoothing the passage 
of free-trade agreements, a vital component to negotiating any deal, and 
pointedly said supporters should back down.

"I'm against fast track," Mr. Reid (D., Nev.) said, using the shorthand term 
for legislation that prevents overseas trade agreements from being amended 
during the congressional approval process. "I think everyone would be 
well-advised just not to push this right now."

The move spells trouble for two sets of complicated talks, one with the 
European Union and the other with countries in the Asia-Pacific region. Both 
deals likely would have required such a "fast track" approval to clear the 
Congress. The U.S.'s negotiating partners wouldn't likely commit to a final 
agreement that could be unpopular back home without assurances that it couldn't 
be modified by U.S. lawmakers.

Mr. Reid declined to say whether he would stop fast-track legislation from 
coming up for a Senate floor vote, but other senators said his opposition was 
important. "You can kiss any new trade deals goodbye," said Sen. John Cornyn 
(R., Texas.) "I think the majority leader's focus is on the November elections 
and he doesn't want to expose his vulnerable members to controversial votes." 
Added Gary Hufbauer, senior trade expert at the Peterson Institute for 
International Economics in Washington: "It's a one-two punch against trade 
policy," he said.

Mr. Reid's comments amplified a fight within the Democratic Party over trade at 
a surprising moment. Mr. Obama said in the State of the Union speech that 
fast-track authority and the trade deals would help boost hiring at small 
businesses, which he said account for 98% of U.S. exporters. Mr. Reid's 
opposition places him as the leader among Democrats who contend trade deals are 
bad for U.S. workers.

A White House official suggested the administration would continue to press for 
what is formally known as trade promotion authority, saying that Mr. Reid's 
position on this particular issue was well known. "We will not cede this 
important opportunity for American workers and businesses to our competitors," 
the official said.

How the administration will do that isn't clear. Many Democrats say free-trade 
agreements don't do enough to stem the flow of jobs overseas and don't require 
trading partners to observe strict-enough labor and environmental rules. Some 
are concerned the Asia-Pacific pact under negotiation would siphon U.S. jobs to 
low-income countries such as Vietnam. Some conservative and tea-party 
Republicans oppose giving fast-track authority to Mr. Obama, complicating the 
Republican position.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, one of the biggest supporters of the trade 
agreements under negotiation, said the Obama administration has a decision to 
make on how hard to fight against its own party. "This puts the president front 
and center in terms of how bad does he want a trade agenda," said Myron 
Brilliant, executive vice president at the Chamber. "We think he does."

The strongest business support for trade negotiations comes from companies that 
do the most business overseas, including Hollywood studios and exporters of 
heavy machinery. Others with a U.S. focus, such as textiles and auto makers, 
are worried the trade deals could expose them to what they say is unfair 
competition from abroad. Agricultural concerns would likely only support trade 
pacts that significantly open export markets, especially Japan.

U.S. officials had hoped to finish talks on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, 
which includes Japan and other Asian and Pacific nations but not China, last 
year. Sensitivities over basic tariffs and quotas, especially in agriculture, 
have held the talks back.

The latest developments come amid growing skepticism in Japan about the U.S.'s 
commitment to free trade. "It's up to the resolve of the U.S. government," 
Japan's economy minister, Akira Amari, told reporters in Tokyo Thursday 
morning. "If the president comes to the negotiating table with a strong enough 
determination to wrap it up by spring, other countries will follow suit."

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has been pressing forward with free-trade 
deals to keep pressure on domestic industries to do long-overdue reforms—even 
as it has drawn criticism from farm groups.

Mr. Reid, whose state has a heavy union presence, has long opposed trade deals. 
He also represents a caucus with several vulnerable Democrats up for election 
in November who might have been forced to choose between Mr. Obama and the 
unions that help finance campaigns.

"I think there's a lot of dubiousness in our caucus to fast track, given that 
every time we sign a free-trade agreement it seems other countries violate the 
rules and we don't," said Sen. Chuck Schumer (D., N.Y.), a member of the Senate 
Democratic leadership.

Unions opposing the trade deals cheered the move. "For those of us who want to 
have a progressive trade agenda, it means that we're encouraged," said Larry 
Cohen, head of the Communications Workers of America, one of the most vocal 
unions criticizing the current trade negotiations.

Celeste Drake, a trade-policy specialist with the AFL-CIO, a union 
confederation, said Mr. Reid's comments offered "a great opportunity to get off 
the fast track to bad trade deals and open the policy window to a better deal 
for workers."

Fast-track authority, which would require lawmakers to vote on trade deals with 
limited procedural hurdles and no opportunity to make changes, expired in 2007 
and hasn't since been renewed.

Until now, the top Senate Democrat had avoided publicly disagreeing with the 
White House on trade legislation. On Wednesday, he said he made clear the depth 
of his opposition to Senate Finance Chairman Max Baucus (D., Mont.), who 
recently unveiled the fast-track bill, and Sen. Ron Wyden (D., Ore.), who is 
presumed to become chairman of the committee if Mr. Baucus is confirmed as the 
next U.S. ambassador to China.

Mr. Wyden has also expressed concerns about the existing fast-track bill and 
thinks it needs to be rewritten, an aide said. An aide to Ways and Means 
Chairman Dave Camp said the Michigan Republican, who would be in charge of such 
a bill in the House, would like to have bipartisan support before moving 
legislation.
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