LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Hillary Clinton said in an interview Thursday here that she would vote against a version of the fast-track trade bill currently before the Senate, but still declined to take a stand on different version of the bill more likely to emerge from Congress.
Her comments moved her somewhat to the left on trade but Clinton remains uncommitted to the fundamental question of whether President Obama should be granted fast-track authority.
In an interview following Clinton’s speech to a group of Latino government officials here, KNPB host John Ralston asked Clinton if she would vote for fast track, were she in the Senate today.
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As it happens, the fast track bill before the Senate today does not include a Democratic-backed addendum known as Trade Adjustment Assistance, which provides compensation and training to workers adversely affected by increased global trade.
Clinton said she would vote against that bill, citing the lack of the worker assistance provision. “Right now I’m focused on making sure we get trade adjustment assistance and I certainly would not vote for it unless I were absolutely confident we would get trade adjustment assistance,” Clinton told Ralston.
However, she did not say whether she would support fast track authority if it was re-coupled with the assistance bill. “It’s a process vote and I don’t want to say it’s the same as [the Trans Pacific Partnership],” she said
President Obama wants Congress to give him fast track authority in order to approve the TPP, a massive trade deal with a dozen Pacific-Rim countries. Clinton helped negotiate that treaty as secretary of state and called it the “gold standard” free trade deals, but has since distanced herself from it in the face of vehement liberal opposition.
Clinton has for months said she will wait to take a stand on TPP until the final deal is negotiated and made public, likely later this summer, and she’s declined to take a position on fast track, which dismisses as a “process issue.”








