In a move that was a decided blow to President Barack Obama’s trade agenda, Democratic lawmakers in the House helped undermine legislation aimed at shoring up the administration’s ability to negotiate a sweeping multinational trade pact.
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The series of surprising votes came mere hours after Obama headed to Capitol Hill Friday morning in a last-minute effort to try to sway Democratic House members to support his trade agenda — a move that rankled some Democrats.
“Basically the president tried to both guilt people and impugn their integrity, and I don’t think it was a very effective tactic,” said Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Oregon. “There were a number of us who were insulted by the approach.”
The overall deal at the core of the debate, the Trans Pacific Partnership, would expand U.S. trade relationships with more than a dozen Pacific nations. Obama has argued that the agreement would inject a new global vitality into American markets and boost job creation.
To get to a deal, the administration pushed for Trade Promotion Authority — commonly known as “fast-track” authority which would give the president the ability to negotiate a trade deal with other countries without Congress amending it.
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The vote on that measure was 219-211.
However, well into the debate, in a dramatic turn of events, Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi announced on the House floor that she would be voting against a measure intended to shield workers who might be adversely affected by the trade deal and the measure giving the president “fast track” authority. Her comments came shortly after Obama appeared at the House Democratic Caucus meeting to try and urge his fellow party members to back the trade measures.
Her rationale: voting against the worker protections measure would stymie “fast track.”
This “is the only way that we will be able to slow down the fast track,” Pelosi said.
Shortly after, the House voted 302 to 126 against the financial assistance for displaced workers measure.
Both measures needed to pass in order to move the trade package forward.
While some Republicans, especially those from Rust Belt states, were in favor of the legislation, Democrats were going to have to unite to get the worker protections measure over the finish line. The most vehement opponents of the trade agreement, including the AFL-CIO, urged members to vote against it, saying that defeating the Trade Adjustment Assistance measure would be the fastest way to scuttle the whole deal.
The White House portrayed support for “fast track” authority as a good sign and the relationship with Pelosi as remaining “long, warm (and) productive.”
For the White House, the stinging rebuke from the House is déjà vu for the administration which initially faced a similar defeat in the Senate on similar trade legislation.








