basquebromance
Diamond Member
- Nov 26, 2015
- 109,396
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- #1
from the article:
"Toward the end of his vice presidency, Joe Biden was a prime player in the administrationās bid to win support for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the failed trade deal that was supposed to be the crowning achievement of Barack Obamaās presidency-long āpivot to Asia.ā Biden liked to hold up two maps of the Pacific regionāone shaded in blue to show Americaās influence in the region if the deal passed, and one shaded in red to show Chinaās growing influence if it didnāt.
āI think itās very, very important to understand that the 20th-century rules of the road no longer exist, and new ones have to be written, and we should write them,ā I heard him say in April 2015, to a gathering of the insistently moderate New Democrat Coalition at a hotel on the Chesapeake Bay. To other crowds, Biden and others in the administration would try to sell TPP as Obamaās trade deal, arguing that people should support it because they liked and trusted the president.
On the eve of the first presidential-primary debates, however, Bidenās 2020 campaign wouldnāt say whether he still supported the deal. Heās far from aloneāDemocratic candidates are quick to say theyād immediately rejoin the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate agreement, both of which Obama helped put in place, but his TPP remains toxic. Even as Biden is running explicitly as a restoration of the Obama presidency, his campaign press secretary declined to comment on what his position is, other than to point to recent remarks the former vice president has made: that he opposes President Donald Trumpās trade war, and that heād like higher labor standards in the revamped NAFTA agreement that the current administration is hoping to get approved by Congress. The campaign says more details on what heād do on trade will be coming soon.
That seems to reflect the Democratic Partyās current crisis on trade, with even most of the people running for the presidential nomination unable to articulate a clear vision of what Americaās approach should be. The Atlantic asked 23 Democratic presidential candidates whether they support TPP and would want to restart negotiations if elected, and received only some definitive responses. Of the people who were firm in their answers, former Representative John Delaney of Maryland is the only one who said yes.
Several candidatesā campaigns didnāt provide answers on their current position on TPP despite repeated requests: South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg; Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota; and Representative Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii.
"
Joe Biden Wonāt Say If He Backs the Trade Deal He Helped Sell
"Toward the end of his vice presidency, Joe Biden was a prime player in the administrationās bid to win support for the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the failed trade deal that was supposed to be the crowning achievement of Barack Obamaās presidency-long āpivot to Asia.ā Biden liked to hold up two maps of the Pacific regionāone shaded in blue to show Americaās influence in the region if the deal passed, and one shaded in red to show Chinaās growing influence if it didnāt.
āI think itās very, very important to understand that the 20th-century rules of the road no longer exist, and new ones have to be written, and we should write them,ā I heard him say in April 2015, to a gathering of the insistently moderate New Democrat Coalition at a hotel on the Chesapeake Bay. To other crowds, Biden and others in the administration would try to sell TPP as Obamaās trade deal, arguing that people should support it because they liked and trusted the president.
On the eve of the first presidential-primary debates, however, Bidenās 2020 campaign wouldnāt say whether he still supported the deal. Heās far from aloneāDemocratic candidates are quick to say theyād immediately rejoin the Iran nuclear deal and the Paris climate agreement, both of which Obama helped put in place, but his TPP remains toxic. Even as Biden is running explicitly as a restoration of the Obama presidency, his campaign press secretary declined to comment on what his position is, other than to point to recent remarks the former vice president has made: that he opposes President Donald Trumpās trade war, and that heād like higher labor standards in the revamped NAFTA agreement that the current administration is hoping to get approved by Congress. The campaign says more details on what heād do on trade will be coming soon.
That seems to reflect the Democratic Partyās current crisis on trade, with even most of the people running for the presidential nomination unable to articulate a clear vision of what Americaās approach should be. The Atlantic asked 23 Democratic presidential candidates whether they support TPP and would want to restart negotiations if elected, and received only some definitive responses. Of the people who were firm in their answers, former Representative John Delaney of Maryland is the only one who said yes.
Several candidatesā campaigns didnāt provide answers on their current position on TPP despite repeated requests: South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg; Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota; and Representative Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii.
"
Joe Biden Wonāt Say If He Backs the Trade Deal He Helped Sell