[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 34 (Friday, February 27, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S1193]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRADE PROMOTION AUTHORITY
Mr. ISAKSON. Madam President, I rise for a minute to talk about trade
between the United States and our trading partners around the world.
To make the point of my remarks, I ask rhetorically for everybody in
the auditorium and the Senate Chamber to answer these questions:
Are you willing to cut American sales of goods and services by over
$2 trillion?
I think the answer would be a resounding no.
Secondly, are you ready to diminish or lose 39.8 million jobs?
Nobody in here wants to give up $2.3 trillion in American business,
and everybody wants more jobs in the middle class, and nobody wants to
cost America 39 million jobs. But that is exactly what is going to
happen if we don't pass TPA, if we don't enter into trade agreements
and aggressively work to make the three pending trade agreements the
United States has workable for our country.
Yesterday I listened as Members of this body came to the floor to
talk against trade and talk against the trade promotion authority. For
the benefit of our new Members, trade promotion authority is our
authorization to give the President the parameters, the limitations,
and the prerogative to negotiate trade agreements, which come back to
us for a final ratification up or down. That is a good way to do
business. The world recognizes that if our President has trade
promotion authority, he can sit down across the table from them and he
can make a deal, and it is only subject to one vote of the U.S. Senate.
If we leave it as it is now, where there is no trade promotion
authority, then we can vote on every amendment, every prerogative,
every limitation, every opportunity, and make negotiations for the
administration and our country impossible.
We have three pending agreements before the United States of America:
first, the trade promotion authority for the President; second, the
African Growth and Opportunity Act, which expires in September of this
year; next is the trade and investment partnership with Europe; and
lastly is the transpacific trade agreement with the Pacific Rim. All
three of those agreements are important for us to negotiate and close
the deal on. Yet, without passing TPA, we can do none.
Ambassador Froman and the administration are doing an outstanding job
of representing the United States. I have traveled with him to the
African Union in Africa to work on the goal. I was with him yesterday
afternoon. I talked with him about some of the obstacles we have in
terms of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and I have talked to him about
the transatlantic trade and promotion act--all of which we need to pass
and all of which he needs to be able to negotiate. But without TPA, the
United States of America is sitting at the table but they can't make a
deal, and the President doesn't have the authority that he needs and
that he says he wants.
Most of the opposition I have heard on the floor of the Senate comes
from the people in the President's own party. In the last two State of
the Union Addresses, the President of the United States has underlined
the importance of TPA. He said it again this year. But yesterday seven
Members of his party came to the floor to talk against trade promotion
authority.
It is time for us to sit around the table and talk about $2.3
trillion in business for our country and 39.8 million jobs in our
country. Let's talk about how we can increase those jobs. In my State
of Georgia, 1.2 million jobs are directly export-related. The Congress
of the United States appropriated $706 million over the next 6 years
for the deepening and expansion of the Savannah Harbor in Savannah, GA.
The Panama Canal is being widened and next year will open to the ships
of the 21st century. Are they going to go somewhere else if we don't do
trade promotion authority? Probably so. We all saw what happened last
week when the west coast shut down because of the longshoremen's strike
and what an impact it had on our economy. That is the kind of impact we
are going to have if we don't do trade promotion authority for the
President.
It is ironic that almost unanimously the Republican Members of the
Senate are for trade promotion authority, and it appears, after
yesterday's speeches, that a significant majority of the Democratic
Party is against it. Yet their President is for it.
All of us are for jobs. All of us are for business. All of us are for
economic activity. It is time we put our differences aside and
delineate for the President of the United States the negotiating
parameters, the negotiating authority, and the ability we grant to him
to make deals in the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the Transatlantic
Trade and Investment Partnership and the African Growth and Opportunity
Act. All three will mean jobs not just for my State of Georgia but for
our country. All three will be good for our national defense and our
security. People don't tend to fight with or bomb people with whom they
do business. The more trade agreements we have, the more business we
share, the more exchanges of our currency and economic prosperity, the
better off our country is, the better off our security is, and the
better off are jobs for those in the middle class.
I thank the Presiding Officer for the opportunity to speak from the
floor, and I encourage all my Members in the Senate, Republican and
Democrat alike, to dedicate themselves when we come back to
expeditiously bringing up trade promotion authority, delineating our
differences, negotiating those differences, and giving our President
the opportunity to create more jobs for America, more jobs for Georgia,
more jobs for West Virginia, and more jobs for our country.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Indiana.
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