Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

Bush loses power to 'fast-track' trade deals: Difference between revisions

From Wikinews, the free news source you can write!
[unchecked revision][unchecked revision]
Content deleted Content added
That photo of GWB is WAY too old. Here's a newer one. Can we import one from Wiki Commons?
new pic
Line 1: Line 1:
{{date|July 1, 2007}}
{{date|July 1, 2007}}
[[Image:Bush.nola.martial_law.jpg|thumb|200 px|Photo of [[United States|U.S.]] President [[George W. Bush]].]]
[[Image:LeeHsienLoong_%26_GWBush_2007May04.jpg|thumb|200 px|[[George W. Bush]] with Prime Minister [[Lee Hsien Loong]] of Singapore]].]]
[[United States|U.S.]] President [[George W. Bush|George Bush]] today lost the power to unilaterally approve or 'fast-track' trade deals, bypassing congressional approval. Fast-track authority originated in 1975 during the Ford Administration. President Bush is the only president other than Bill Clinton to lose this authority.
[[United States|U.S.]] President [[George W. Bush|George Bush]] today lost the power to unilaterally approve or 'fast-track' trade deals, bypassing congressional approval. Fast-track authority originated in 1975 during the Ford Administration. President Bush is the only president other than Bill Clinton to lose this authority.



Revision as of 08:30, 1 July 2007

Sunday, July 1, 2007

George W. Bush with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore

.]]

U.S. President George Bush today lost the power to unilaterally approve or 'fast-track' trade deals, bypassing congressional approval. Fast-track authority originated in 1975 during the Ford Administration. President Bush is the only president other than Bill Clinton to lose this authority.

On Friday, Democratic members of the Ways and Means committee stated that their priorities "do not include the renewal of fast track authority" and complained that Bush had "pushed too many trade deals through at the expense of worker rights and environmental protections" and costing American jobs.

Administration official Susan Schwab urged renewal of this presidential authority warning that the U.S. could lose the race to exploit new markets without it. The Bush Administration has approved trade deals, without congressional oversight, with Singapore, Chile, Australia, Morocco, Bahrain, Oman, the Dominican Republic, and the Central America Union, since winning approval in 2002.

Democrats have complained that these deals have resulted in the export of American jobs and in American companies moving off-shore to capitalize on tax and trade breaks, along with weaker labor and environmental laws. Republicans stress the market-opening benefits of such trade deals.

Sources