House Democrats’ rejection of a key trade bill Friday ensures the uncomfortable issue will remain an open question during the formal roll out of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign in coming days.
The shocking rejection of part of a trade package sought by President Obama helped clarify the battle lines in the party’s civil war over trade, and could amp up pressure on Clinton to take a clearer stand on trade during her carefully crafted kick-off tour.
While Clinton technically launched her White House bid in April, a large outdoor rally Saturday in New York City will mark the beginning of her full-fledged campaign. A swing through Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada will follow next week.
RELATED: House delivers setback to Obama trade agenda
Clinton has so far declined to take a clear position on Trade Promotion Authority, the congressional authorization that would “fast-track” future approval of free trade treaties. If Clinton were in the Senate, she would have had to cast a vote on the controversial measure last month. And if she were in the House, she would have had to vote on it Friday.
The issue has been extraordinarily contentious inside in the Democratic Party, driving a wedge between President Obama and most congressional Democrats.
In a stunning move, House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi came out against the White House just moments before Friday’s TPA vote in a speech on the House floor — after she seemed to be coming around to Obama’s side in recent days.
Pelosi was joined by 143 other House Democrats who voted against a related measure, which is needed procedurally to advance Trade Promotion Authority to President Obama’s desk. The Senate already approved the measure, but only 14 of the chambers 44 Democrats voted in favor.
Despite Friday’s vote, TPA is not dead. Premature eulogies for TPA were written when it failed on its first vote in the Senate, only to have the measure pass days later.
The White House downplayed the setback Friday. Press Secretary Josh Earnest called it “procedural snafu” in his daily briefing with reporters. The House will take up TPA again next week.
That timing could be a fly in the ointment in Clinton’s otherwise meticulously crafted campaign roll out planned for the next six days. It means that Clinton can expect to face tough questions on TPA in coming days. And it could complicate efforts to win over restive liberals with a bold progressive agenda.
And the timing raises the stakes, since it means whatever Clinton says on TPA in the next few days – if anything – could have immediate real-world consequences in Congress ahead of a critical vote. Advocates on both sides of the issue say privately that the likely Democratic nominee has the clout to swing key votes.
Lately, Clinton has been facing increasing pressure from the left to take a stance on the trade.
On Thursday, Sen. Bernie Sanders, Clinton’s challenger in the Democratic primary, said he is offended by Clinton’s silence on trade. “Secretary Clinton, if she’s against this, we need her to speak out right now,” he told reporters at a Washington breakfast organized by the Christian Science Monitor. “I don’t understand how, on an issue of such huge consequence, you don’t have an opinion.”








