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    Obama signs 3 trade deals, biggest since NAFTA

    WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama signed off Friday on the first three, and possibly the last, — free trade agreements of his administration, deals with South Korea, Colombia, and Panama that could be worth billions to American exporters and create tens of thousands of jobs.

    The three deals were years in the making, and the difficulty of bringing them to fruition make it unlikely there will be another bilateral trade agreement during Obama's current term.

    Obama signed them with none of the ceremonial fanfare that normally accompanies such triumphs. Republicans, while supportive of the deals, continue to find fault with Obama's trade policies. And nearly three-fourths of House Democrats voted against the trade measures.

    The agreements will bring to 20 those countries that have free trade relations with the United States.

    Trade will not go away as an issue, as the administration pushes ahead with a major Pacific rim trade pact, Congress and the White House scuffle over China, and Republicans take aim at Obama's policies during the presidential campaign.

    But, "I don't see this administration coming up with new free trade agreements," said National Foreign Trade Council president Bill Reinsch. "For the next six months we ought to go after trade liberalization in manageable pieces."

    Republicans accuse the administration of moving too slowly to find new free trade partners, resulting in U.S. exporters losing out to foreign rivals. The administration says it is promoting free trade but wants to assure that the other side is playing by the rules, that basic worker and environmental rights are observed and that deals promote U.S. job growth.

    "From day one," U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk told The Associated Press, the guiding principle has been not just to complete the three trade agreements but "to develop a new paradigm for trade, and rebuild and restore America's confidence in our trading policy."

    He added that the administration was on track to reach Obama's goal, set early last year, of doubling U.S. exports over a five-year period.

    Trade officials, in justifying their approach, point to the 83 Senate votes for the South Korean deal, which was renegotiated by Obama to expand access for U.S. vehicles in Korea. That was the highest total ever for a free trade vote.

    The accord with South Korea, America's seventh-largest trading partner, is estimated to support 70,000 jobs, and the signing capped a singular moment of triumph for a president who during the past year has seen his jobs agenda blocked on every front by unified Republican opposition. This time Republicans were his eager partners, urging him to move even faster to complete the long-delayed trade deals and move on to new ones.

    Obama also signed legislation extending a program, a Democratic favorite, to help workers hurt by foreign trade. Yet the quiet signing ceremony and a low-key reception in the Rose Garden for those who might benefit from the agreements reflected the unpopularity of free trade pacts among Obama's core labor supporters, and the uncertainty of his future trade policy.

    Supporters say the three deals are a winning proposition for American businessmen and farmers who now face high tariffs in those three countries, while those countries can ship goods to the United States with few or no duties. The deal with Korea could boost exports by $10 billion, erasing the current trade gap. Exports could go up another $1 billion a year to Colombia, one of the strongest U.S. allies in Latin America.

    The three deals were initially signed in the George W. Bush administration but were slowed down as the Obama White House renegotiated changes and haggled with Republicans over the worker aid program. Democratic opposition was strongest against the Colombia deal because of that country's record of violence against labor leaders.

    After the signing, Obama called President Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia and President Ricardo Martinelli of Panama to congratulate each of them. The White House in a statement said the president stressed the importance of meeting obligations of the agreements and of Colombia advancing labor rights.

    The U.S. Trade Representative Office is now shifting its attention to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an economic alliance that would link the United States with Brunei, Malaysia, New Zealand, Vietnam and four countries that are already free trade partners — Australia, Chile, Peru and Singapore. Going beyond cutting tariffs, the alliance would tackle such areas as financial services, intellectual property rights, government procurement, investment and conservation.

    Kirk said negotiators had been "making really good progress," and they hoped to have the broad outline of an agreement when leaders meet in Honolulu next month for the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum.

    "TPP is the one game in town and there is going to be a lot of focus on that," said John Murphy, vice president for international affairs at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

    But in a world filled with acronyms, TPP would have a tough time getting congressional approval without TPA. Trade promotion authority, also known as fast track, gives the president the authority to negotiate trade deals that Congress can either accept or reject, but cannot amend. That authority expired in 2007 and Obama, tied to Democrats and labor groups who oppose further free trade agreements, has not pushed for its restoration.

    Last month Senate Republicans tried to revive TPA, but the measure was defeated on a largely party-line vote. Democrats argued that the TPA law has to first be rewritten to reflect changes in such areas as digital services and the environment.

    Kirk also emphasized the importance of getting other countries to abide by existing trade rules. "Enforcement has been paramount to the work we have done on market access," he said, adding that "if we could get China to a better place where they were really opening up their markets," it would be a major windfall to U.S. exporters.

    Mitt Romney, currently viewed as the strongest contender for the Republican presidential nomination, said in a trade policy speech this month that he would work to re-establish TPA and promote more free trade agreements. He also singled out China, saying that as president he would take punitive actions if China should continue to unfairly subsidize its domestic products and manipulate its currency.

    The Obama administration was cool to legislation passed by the Senate last month that would make it easier to impose higher tariffs on China if it continues to keep its currency undervalued as a way to make its exports cheaper.

    Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, a group that has strongly opposed past trade agreements, said Obama may have to get tougher on China if he is to defend Ohio and other states where workers hit by foreign trade do not agree with his promotion of free trade.

    She said Obama already has lost ground among Democrats, noting that a greater percentage of House Democrats, 71.4 percent, voted against Obama on the trade deals than on any other legislation since he took office.

    Among other prickly subjects in the coming year, Russia is close to being accepted into the World Trade Organization, but U.S. businesses would not benefit from lower Russian tariffs unless Congress would repeal the Cold War Jackson-Vanik law that barred normal trade relations with the Soviet Union because of its policies on Jewish emigration. And the U.S. still has to make sure that South Korea, Colombia and Panama are ready to carry out their trade agreement commitments, a process that could take months.

    But the Chamber's Murphy said they are for now putting aside their frustrations over trade. "This isn't the moment for that. This is a week for sunny optimism."

     
    • Marlin2000  •  New Castle, United States  •  7 mths ago
      So now everyone except Americans are doing well. Either jobs are being shipped to their country, or foreigners are coming here to suck off the government teet.
      • denis 7 mths ago
        Vote RonPaul 2012
      • The DUDE. 7 mths ago
        Yep. Vote Ron Paul so he can completely deregulate and deliver the killing blow...
      • MeMe 7 mths ago
        Exactly, Rorshack. American jobs will have absolutely no protection under Ron Paul, who is a clueless utopian whose brain seems to be stuck in a prior pre-globalized century.
    • aeneuman  •  7 mths ago
      attention organized labor, if you liked nafta YOU ARE GOING TO LOVE THESE DEALS !
      • MeMe 7 mths ago
        I hope that was sarcasm. Organized labor opposed NAFTA. There seems to be a lot of confusion, denial, and people who have just crawled out from under rocks on yahoo.
      • Chet 7 mths ago
        LOL. . .Who are you kidding MeMe. . .You organization supports the progressive liberals that have done this. Guilt by association. You'd better be reigning in your union leaders.
    • Time Bender  •  7 mths ago
      Why are the free trade agreements always with poorer countries?
      • CharlesK 7 mths ago
        So American businesses can get a higher profit.
      • Steve 7 mths ago
        They contribute to his reelection campaign, that's why.
      • Rowell 7 mths ago
        Everyone else is poorer when you're the richest coutnry in the world.
    • John  •  Hope, United States  •  7 mths ago
      That sucking sound you hear is American jobs going offshore
      • NY123 7 mths ago
        Good old Ross- if only the stupid Americans were listening.
      • FritzVonErich 7 mths ago
        That is the problem. People being so easily manipulated by the the big money political show. In effect the people in America by and large are super stupid no doubt.
      • MeMe 7 mths ago
        And you can thank G.W. Bush for originating this bill, but you probably weren't paying attention to that part.
    • William Hill  •  Branson, United States  •  7 mths ago
      free trade is why we have high unemployment now. ross peroet said it right that great sucking sound of jobs leaving this country with gat and nafta. we need fair trade with duties to even the field fos americans.
      • ad v 7 mths ago
        GATT
      • jeremyk 7 mths ago
        The malinvestment created by the bursting of the housing bubble is why we have high unemployment. Free trade is not a bad thing if you want cheap commercial goods and Americans buy more than any culture in history.
      • KJ 7 mths ago
        Great point William, I remember when he said that and everyone chuckled at him and called him crazy....
    • Heinz  •  7 mths ago
      That's what they said about nafta and we have seen what a disaster that was.
    • more skcus oohay  •  7 mths ago
      Well....we have all seen the fruits of NAFTA. You can now go to Mexico and work at your old job for only $2.00 and hour with no vacation or incentive to work at all and really crappy conditions. Pretty soon , with all of these great trade deals, we will be the ones sneaking over the border to find work!!!!

      Great job!!! You guys in DC are always thinking about the working man aren't you?
    • bobs  •  7 mths ago
      When people call these treaties FREE trade agreements they have to realize it means we wont tax their items coming here, they still charge taxes on our exports. So another bad deal for the citizens of the USA.
    • NY123  •  Rochester, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Another 3 nails in the coffin of the American working stiff. Owner's rejoice you have won again. NO trade agreement has EVER helped the working man--NONE.
      When NAFTA went through my company within a month was shuttering finishing lines and laying off thousands, China was the end of us. Nothing left, gutted by American greed.
    • Rick  •  7 mths ago
      When has a trade agreement ever been a plus for our workers here in the USA?
    • wallyac  •  7 mths ago
      If it works like NAFTA, god help us.
    • Stan  •  7 mths ago
      When Clinton signed NAFTA I watched the locomotive and railcar work at the Pine Bluff Southern Pacific facility dwindle. Now it is just a parking lot. The work went to Mexico and Canada.
    • ed  •  7 mths ago
      During the Ohio primary, he continually reiterated that one of his first acts as president would be to completely overhaul the failed “free trade’ agreement. How did that work out?
    • screwybruce  •  7 mths ago
      free trade, means other countries get away scott free of sending poisoned/defective products undercutting US firms prices so US firms go out of business. Then once the imported goods are found to be defective nothing is done to punish the country that sent it over. Look at China, killing our pets, then our children with lead, yet thier status remains "most favored nation status" even after all this. Clinton distroyed this Country with NAFTA and then by promoting China to buy all the US bonds. Now we are letting Obama do the same? Picket DC you idiot OWS, not the firms. Stop the politicians like Obama who BUY elections then allow the companies to not pay taxes (GE) or get huge loans just before they declare bancruptcy (Solyndra) which Obama pushed through. Go picket the 'savior' you elected that has not done anything to help you or the US.
    • Bud  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  7 mths ago
      Billions of dollars for the USA? Not likely, folks! What this will do is allow some of the last of the USA manufacturers to relocate to these 3rd world countries and operate for pennies on the day.
    • Jack M  •  7 mths ago
      You hear that? The sound of millions of American Jobs going away.
    • RayS the VietNam Vet  •  Sassamansville, United States  •  7 mths ago
      WANT YOUR JOBS BACK ??
      1. REPEAL NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement) – Signed into Law by Slick Willie and his Democratic Congress.
      2. REPEAL CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreement) – Signed into Law by G. W. Bush and the Liberal Democratic Congress.
      3. DUMP ALL DEMOCRATS AND LIBERAL RINOS (Republican In Name Only)
      4. DUMP ALL POLITICANS WHO SUPPORTED AND VOTED FOR OBAMMACARE, THE BAILOUTS, AN INCREASE IN TAXES AND AMNESTY FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS.
      5. Deport ALL 20+ Million ILLEGALS = 20 Million Jobs that Americans Don’t Want…….LoL
    • Imgamekc  •  San Jose, United States  •  7 mths ago
      More unenforcable trade agreements that result in losing more jobs - great - thanks again Obama.
    • 2 Party System is BROKEN  •  7 mths ago
      Every time I hear about a new trade agreement we lose more American jobs...
    • Scott  •  7 mths ago
      You can kiss more jobs goodbye. And gee...look at this, a bipartisan measure no less! Seems to me that both parties really don't have any interest at all in serving the constituents that vote for them.
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