DAVENPORT, Iowa — After months of waiting to take a position on a controversial Obama administration trade deal, Hillary Clinton said Tuesday she will soon have an opinion on the newly finalized Trans Pacific Partnership.
“I’m going to be diving into that tonight. I’m going to be talking to people about it. They’re giving me all the information they can gather so that I can make a timely decision,” she told NBC News of the TPP while campaigning here.
“I will definitely have a position,” Clinton continued. “I certainly think that people have good opinions and I’m looking at all of them.”
The massive trade treaty with a dozen Pacific Rim Countries has become enemy No. 1 for labor unions, even as the Obama White House pushes it as a defining legacy item.
Clinton, Obama’s former secretary of state, has for months been torn between loyalty to her former boss and to organized labor, whose support she is aggressively courting as she seeks the Democratic nomination in 2016.
RELATED: Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiators reach landmark trade deal
She was involved in negotiating the deal, but has said she would hold off on taking a position on the TPP until the treaty was finalized, since it was negotiated in secret.
On Monday, negotiators announced they had finally reached a deal. Clinton did not specify a timetable for her decision, and the full text is not yet available.









