Trump Administration now supports more Free Trade Agreements

Well that didn't take very long.
The headline is about Trump's brinkmanship with NAFTA negotiations.

President Trump told the leaders of Mexico and Canada on Wednesday that he would not immediately move to terminate the North American Free Trade Agreement, only hours after an administration official said he was likely to sign an order that would begin the process of pulling the United States out of the deal.
In what the White House described as “pleasant and productive” evening phone calls with President Enrique Peña Nieto of Mexico and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada, Mr. Trump said he would quickly start the process of renegotiating Nafta — not abandon it, as he said he would do during the 2016 presidential campaign if he could not rework the deal to his satisfaction.

I can't say that I am surprised. I'm willing to predict that the renegotiated NAFTA will suck too.
How can I be so confident? Because of two other recent developments in the Trump Administration.
Here's one:

After a series of angry tweets from President Donald Trump directed toward Germany over trade, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told CNBC on Tuesday he is open to continuing talks on a proposed trade pact with the European Union.
"It's no mistake that, while we withdrew from TPP" — the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade pact with Pacific Rim nations — "we did not withdraw from TTIP," Ross said.
...

The reason TTIP stalled was mostly because of Europe, not Trump.
But the biggest reason I can be so confident was something that I couldn't even find in the American press.

The US has started trade talks with multiple countries in Asia to find an alternative to the failed Trans-Pacific Partnership, US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said.

This is a great, big FU to Trump voters, who are overwhelmingly against FTAs.
It's only a matter of time before working class Trump voters realize that he's betrayed them yet again.

It was Obama's arrogant and tone-deaf push for TPP in late 2016 that cost the Dems the rust belt.
Trump's betrayal will put the Rust Belt back into play, but only if the Dems embrace a more economically populist message, something the Dem establishment has so far refused to do.

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Trump is being Obama-esque.
I this good news for Clinton?

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

Another issue for the dems, but since they are out for the money, don't expect them to scare off the oligarchs and corporations.

They will spend lots of money on consultants to figure out how to spin it.

There are so many "radical" issues that the democratic party could endorse

What about - no more subsidies for energy extraction companies .. a level playing field in which renewals are holding their own or better

Remember back in 2000 when Al Gore proposed a massive effort in renewable energy? He probably started 20 years ago on that issue. If the US had done that and not spent the empire on wars, things would be better now.

But, "they were mean to Hillary" "Trump is a scumbag" "Russia, Russia, Russia..."

Are the consultants to the establishment any better than the generals?

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@DonMidwest
is that they will learn how to talk the populist message but continue walking their corporate minion mince.

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More off shoring of jobs, more concentration of wealth, a giant stride towards third world status.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

@on the cusp

The corporate coups labelled as 'trade deals' which off-shore law might be the reason why there's been so much talk about 'needing Constitutional rewrites' because no public servants in any democracy has any right to dispose of everyone else's rights and to hand control of domestic law over to hostile outside agencies intent on harming/killing the public and country in order to maximize their profits.

Poisoning is just as much murder when forced on entire populations as on individuals, and there is no 'right to randomly mass-murder for profit' accepted by democratic law or by the sane.

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Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.

A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.

Raggedy Ann's picture

they are waiting for Herr Drumpf to fail, to be impeached, to become ill, something, anything, just please no, no economically populist messages, which would mean that that infernal Sanders was right, still IS right. No way, no how!
Diablo

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"The “jumpers” reminded us that one day we will all face only one choice and that is how we will die, not how we will live." Chris Hedges on 9/11

orlbucfan's picture

look like a democratic socialist's dream. No surprise, unfortunately. Sad Rec'd!!

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Inner and Outer Space: the Final Frontiers.

Lily O Lady's picture

@orlbucfan

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"The object of persecution is persecution. The object of torture is torture. The object of power is power. Now do you begin to understand me?" ~Orwell, "1984"

TRUCKED UP The worst jobs in America are getting worse thanks to a loophole in US laws

Sounds like a loophole in regulations, like flammable material in cladding in UK

Who needs stinking regulations!

At ports in Los Angeles, short-haul truckers have jobs that look more like indentured servitude than employment.

In an in-depth investigation by USA Today, which relied on accounts from more than 300 drivers, reporter Brett Murphy described a horrific arrangement in which workers, even after putting in grueling hours, sometimes owe their employers money at the end of their pay periods.
That’s because employers force the truckers—who move more than half of the United States’ container imports out of LA ports—to finance their own trucks, buy their own gas, or even pay to use the company parking lot, and deduct those fees each week from drivers’ paychecks. Companies force drivers to work up to 20 hours a day by threatening to take away the trucks—and the money drivers have paid toward them.

This setup demonstrates the worst that can happen when companies falsely designate their workers as “independent contractors” in order to avoid labor protections. Because these workers are technically “mini businesses,” employers can require workers to pay for their own equipment, and they aren’t responsible for following worker protection laws that apply only to employees, such as minimum wage laws, overtime pay laws, and requirements to contribute to benefit programs.

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@DonMidwest And all of us driving on the highways alongside an exhausted, sleepy trucker carrying flammable liquid feel great about people being able to work for themselves, of course.
I occasionally work for truckers who get a traffic ticket. Some of them have told me their company was supposed to pay their ticket, only to discover the company didn't, and the drivers wind up with a failure to appear, a high fine, surcharges, an arrest warrant, etc...as well as losing their commercial driving licenses.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

@DonMidwest
But I've been told online that we don't need unions anymore.

Minneapolis, 1934
Minneapolis.jpg

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thanatokephaloides's picture

@DonMidwest

Companies force drivers to work up to 20 hours a day by threatening to take away the trucks—and the money drivers have paid toward them.

One small point: usually, once a truck is paid off, it's also worn out -- which means that this is a never-ending vicious cycle.

We need over-the-road trucking (and most other transport for hire) to be re-regulated, the way they were before 1980. The small price increases at the consumer level would be far offset by safer highways and railways, and better and more secure union jobs for truck drivers and rail workers.

In fact, the "independent contractor" tax and responsibility dodge needs to go away entirely.

Diablo

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

link

In a highly unusual intervention, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson plans to remove Iraq and Myanmar from a U.S. list of the world's worst offenders in the use of child soldiers, disregarding the recommendations of State Department experts and senior U.S. diplomats, U.S. officials said.

The decision, confirmed by three U.S. officials, would break with longstanding protocol at the State Department over how to identify offending countries and could prompt accusations the Trump administration is prioritizing security and diplomatic interests ahead of human rights.

Tillerson overruled his own staff’s assessments on the use of child soldiers in both countries and rejected the recommendation of senior diplomats in Asia and the Middle East who wanted to keep Iraq and Myanmar on the list, said the officials, who have knowledge of the internal deliberations.

Tillerson also rejected an internal State Department proposal to add Afghanistan to the list, the three U.S. officials said.

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snoopydawg's picture

@gjohnsit
Wasn't Myanmar the country that Obama included in the TPP after he said it was okay for them to deal in human trafficking and slavery?
Imagine that. The first Black American president was okay with slavery. I don't remember seeing a diary on this on ToP, which used to be the first website to cover issues like this before the president was from their own party.
How the mighty have fallen.

Thanks again, gjohnsit for your essays here.

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Was Humpty Dumpty pushed?

I haven't seen the Putin/Stone interviews but apparently Putin noted American foreign policy has not changed since he has been in power for 17 years. I think it is safe to say that neither has domestic economic policy. There are some contrary blimps now and then, but pretty much the same since Clinton.

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Ken in MN's picture

This is a great, big FU to Trump voters, who are overwhelmingly against FTAs.
It's only a matter of time before working class Trump voters realize that he's betrayed them yet again.

Is that they'll figure it out sometime in late 2032...

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I want my two dollars!