Trump vows to kill Asia trade deal being pursued by Biden if elected
Donald Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination, said on Saturday that he would kill off a Pacific trade pact being advanced by US President Joe Biden if he were to win the 2024 election and return to the White House.
Speaking to supporters in Iowa, Trump said he was against the regional trade deal being negotiated by the Biden administration with 13 other countries, arguing that it would hollow out US manufacturing and trigger job losses.
Talks on the trade sections of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework, which is aimed at offering the region an alternative to China's growing trade clout, stumbled in recent days after some countries, including Vietnam and Indonesia, declined to commit to strong labor and environmental standards.
Trump, who withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal that had been forged with many of the same countries after taking office in January 2017, said he would "knock out" what he referred to as "TPP Two" immediately upon taking office.
"Under the next administration... the Biden plan for 'TPP Two' will be dead on day one," Trump said at a campaign event in Fort Dodge, about 94 miles (150 km) north of Des Moines.
"It's worse than the first one, threatening to pulverize farmers and manufacturers with another massive globalist monstrosity designed to turbocharge outsourcing to Asia."
The Biden administration had hoped to finish key chapters of its IPEF trade initiative in time for this week's Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation meeting. It has vowed to continue negotiating the ambitious deal, but election-year pressures and resistance to tough commitments from some countries make a deal unlikely, trade experts and business groups say. (Reuters-Yonhap)
相关文章:
- Violinist Yoo Da
- Will Suneung without ‘killer questions’ reduce reliance on private education?
- Rising obesity in S. Korea comes amid doubts over BMI's reliability
- Baekyangsa's Buddhist cuisine templestay teaches what it means to eat beyond taste
- LG Electronics CEO to present AI vision at CES
- S. Korea issues navigation warning amid planned N.K. rocket launch
- Seoul to push through bill to ban dog meat consumption
- Fifty Fifty's Keena marks group's 1st anniversary with apology
- S. Korea's Busan making last
- [Herald Interview] Latvia hopes to boost economic, cultural ties with Korea
相关推荐:
- Spike in camping enthusiasts in Korea, yet camping etiquette lags behind
- Enigmatic artist David Rappeneau's first Asia show taking place at Gladstone Gallery
- Will Suneung without ‘killer questions’ reduce reliance on private education?
- 이낙연 "전우 시체 위에서 응원가 못 부른다"…총선 유세 거절?
- Seoul shares start lower ahead of key rate decision
- Gov't administrative network down for 2nd day; recovery efforts under way
- Rising obesity in S. Korea comes amid doubts over BMI's reliability
- 60조 역대급 세수 펑크에도…여야, 국회 운영비 364억 증액 합의
- Transgender blind spot in hospitalization: NHRCK
- [Herald Review] NCT 127 takes inspiration from ‘Matrix’ for 3rd tour
- Spike in camping enthusiasts in Korea, yet camping etiquette lags behind
- Hanwha Ocean developing submarine stealth technology
- South Korea warns tit
- S. Korea's English proficiency slips 13 notches to 49th
- [Herald Interview] 'Korea strives to set global standards for data protection in generative AI era'
- BOK likely to keep policy rate unchanged on slowdown, hope for Fed's rate freeze, easing inflation
- Yoon orders increased defense of public digital infrastructure
- South Korea warns tit
- Daily Sports Hankook hopes to help stengthen Korea
- Samsung Biologics sees highest
- EU preparing UN draft resolution on NK human rights
- S. Korea's rising problem: unemployed youth giving up on job searching
- Unification minister meets US civic group head to discuss NK human rights
- Korean delicacy of live octopus leads to choking death of 82
- Seoul shares down for 3rd day amid geopolitical tension, high US bond yields
- [Korea Beyond Korea] Berlin, Europe's Korean Studies hub, nurtures next
- Mirae Asset seeks generational change in leadership reshuffle
- Drug crimes in Seoul most common in Itaewon, Gangnam, Hongdae: study
- [New on scene] Lee Jun
- Samsung Biologics to offer solutions for Kurma Partners' portfolio firms