SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Brumar89 who wrote (1065100)4/13/2018 1:19:51 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) of 1578435
 
Bumbler in Chief puts America back in TPP after taking America out of it. Perhaps someone got it through his thick head that pulling out of TPP and starting a trade war with China was going to hurt American farmers in the red states that put him in office. When he made those bumbling moves he didn't care, but now he's threatened with impeachment. So he needs to mollify his base.

President Trump Directs Administration To Rejoin Trans-Pacific Partnership

Posted at 2:30 pm on April 12, 2018 by streiff



One of President Trump’s first acts in office was withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership which was one of the signature accomplishments of the Obama administration, the others being giving Iran over a billion dollars in cash and a roadmap to a nuke and setting off a regional war in Syria and Iraq.

With the stroke of a pen on his first full weekday in office, Mr. Trump signaled that he plans to follow through on promises to take a more aggressive stance against foreign competitors as part of his “America First” approach. In doing so, he demonstrated that he would not follow old rules, effectively discarding longstanding Republican orthodoxy that expanding global trade was good for the world and America — and that the United States should help write the rules of international commerce.

Although the Trans-Pacific Partnership had not been approved by Congress, Mr. Trump’s decision to withdraw not only doomed former President Barack Obama’s signature trade achievement, but also carried broad geopolitical implications in a fast-growing region. The deal, which was to link a dozen nations from Canada and Chile to Australia and Japan in a complex web of trade rules, was sold as a way to permanently tie the United States to East Asia and create an economic bulwark against a rising China.

Instead, Mr. Trump said American workers would be protected against competition from low-wage countries like Vietnam and Malaysia, also parties to the deal.

But some in both parties worry that China will move to fill the economic vacuum as America looks inward, and will expand its sway over Asia and beyond.

On March 8, eleven nations signed the trade deal:

A group of 11 nations — including major United States allies like Japan, Canada and Australia — signed a broad trade deal on Thursday in Chile’s capital, Santiago, that challenges Mr. Trump’s view of trade as a zero-sum game filled with winners and losers.

Now, signatories are opening the door for China to join. Heraldo Muñoz, Chile’s foreign minister, told reporters on Thursday afternoon that Chinese officials had been weighing the possibility of signing on.

“This will be open to anyone who accepts its components,” Mr. Muñoz said. “It’s not an agreement against anyone. It’s in favor of open trade.”

The new agreement — known as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership — drops tariffs drastically and establishes sweeping new trade rules in markets that represent about a seventh of the world’s economy. It opens more markets to free trade in agricultural products and digital services around the region. While American beef faces 38.5 percent tariffs in Japan, for example, beef from Australia, New Zealand and Canada will not.

That was then, this is now.


Gabby Morrongiello
?@gabriellahope_


NEW: Senate Ag Committee Chair @SenPatRoberts says Trump told Rs at the WH today that he has asked Lighthizer & Kudlow to take a look at rejoining TPP

11:18 AM - Apr 12, 2018




Charlie Spiering
?@charliespiering


JUST IN: @BenSasse tells reporters that during their meeting with Trump, he ordered Robert Lighthizer and Larry Kudlow to look at rejoining TPP - to open up more markets for farmers

11:26 AM - Apr 12, 2018


View image on Twitter




Senator Ben Sasse
?@SenSasse

It is good news that today the President directed Larry Kudlow and Ambassador Lighthizer to negotiate U.S. entry into TPP: t.co

11:47 AM - Apr 12, 2018

According to the Washington Post, the decision was reached by some conservative senators using mental kung fu on Trump:

Sen. John Thune (R-S.D.) said that he and others at the table raised the point that “if you really want to get China’s attention, one way to do it is start doing business with all the people they’re doing business with in the region: their competitors.”

Trump then told Lighthizer and Kudlow to “take a look at getting us back into that agreement, on our terms of course,” Thune said. “He was very I would say bullish about that.”

Sen. Ben Sasse (R-Neb.) also confirmed Trump’s surprise move.

“We should be leading TPP,” Sasse said. “China is a bunch of cheaters and the best way to push back on their cheating would be to be leading all these other rule of law nations in the Pacific that would rather be aligned with the U.S. than with China.”

Engaging in talks to reenter the TPP would be part of a broader White House strategy to respond to an escalating trade flap between Trump and Beijing. Trump is looking for ways to crack down on what he believes are unfair trade practices in China, but he is having a hard time rallying other countries to backstop his push to impose new tariffs or raise the costs of exports and imports for China.

I expect there are two forces at work here. Or maybe three. First, this opens markets to US exports, particularly agricultural exports, that are vulnerable in the trade spats Trump is picking. Second, the possibility of China being asked to join makes the US joining mandatory. And last, but not least, Trump’s people will be negotiating it, not Obama’s, so by definition, it won’t be a terrible deal.


John Podhoretz
?@jpodhoretz


after we join TPP, Trump will join Black Lives Matter

11:41 AM - Apr 12, 2018

redstate.com
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext