These are not trade deals. This is corporate America giving itself dictatorial power over the rest of the world
Obama signs bill giving himself fast-track powers for trade deals
RT,
29
June, 2015
President
Barack Obama signed a bill giving him "fast-track" powers
to conduct and conclude trade legislation. The bill was approved by
Congress last week after months of contentious debate and several
difficult votes.
In
addition to the Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), as the fast-track
bill is officially called, the president signed the Trade Adjustment
Assistance (TAA) act, extending aid to US workers who might lose
their jobs as a consequence of free-trade deals.
The
two bills were originally bundled together in both the Senate and the
House of Representatives as a way of securing bipartisan support.
However, Obama faced an uphill battle within his own party, with the
House Democrats rejecting TAA in order to hold TPA hostage.
After
weeks of talks with party leadership and several close roll calls in
both the House and the Senate, the bills were voted on separately and
approved last week. Most Republican lawmakers backed the president,
whose insistence on the trade deals strained relations with the
Democrats’ traditional power base of labor unions and environmental
groups.
TPA
clears the way for Obama to finalize the negotiations with 11 other
Pacific Rim governments that are aiming to establish a free-trade
area to compete with China, known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership,
or the TPP. Another trade deal in the works is the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) with Europe. That law gives
Congress the right to accept or reject the final agreements, but not
to make any changes to them.
.@POTUS at trade bill signing: 'I thought I’d start off the week with something we should do more often, a truly bipartisan bill signing'
— darlene superville (@dsupervilleap) June 29, 2015
Democrats’
opposition to the TAA was finally withdrawn after the TPA was adopted
separately, and the workers’ assistance program was included in a
trade bill extending preferences to nations in sub-Saharan Africa.
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