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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDown to the Countdown with Senate Trade Deal Vote--Ted Cruz has dropped previous support
WASHINGTON (AP) Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz of Texas has dropped his previous support for President Barack Obama's trade agenda only hours before a crucial Senate vote Tuesday, complicating GOP leaders' hopes of enacting the legislation.
Cruz, who is angling for hard-right voters in next year's GOP primaries, said Americans cannot trust Obama or Republican leaders to keep promises on key issues. He's demanding an end to the Export-Import Bank, a celebrated cause among many conservatives.
Some Senate Democrats, meanwhile, are demanding that the Ex-Im bank be reauthorized before its scheduled expiration at this month's end.
Cruz defied Republican leaders' call for senators to stand by their previous votes when they revisit the issue in Tuesday's showdown.
Opponents meanwhile are mounting an equally emotional push to keep Obama from obtaining "fast track" authority to negotiate trade agreements with Pacific Rim countries and others.
At least 60 of the Senate's 100 members must back the measure for it to clear a procedural hurdle Tuesday and complete a near-miraculous resurrection of the White House priority. In a May 21 vote, 62 senators, including Cruz, backed fast track. But they didn't expect it to return to their chamber.
The House revived the fast track legislation last week after Democrats initially derailed it in a complicated legislative package. Republican leaders who support Obama on trade while most of his fellow Democrats oppose him restructured the package and then passed the key elements, with only 28 House Democrats.
Hours before the vote, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said the goal was to get the bills to Obama by week's end before Congress breaks for the July 4th recess "and deliver this win for the American people."
Obama's allies now are counting on the 14 Senate Democrats and 48 Republicans who supported fast track in May to do so again. Lawmakers generally dislike voting both yes and no on a contentious issue, figuring it's better to draw the enmity of only one side.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., urged senators to stick with their May positions.
"We shouldn't let this opportunity for a significant bipartisan achievement slip past us," McConnell said Monday. "If we simply vote the same way we just did a couple weeks ago, we won't."
Anti-free-trade groups are employing ads, phone banks and other tools to defeat Obama's trade agenda. An AFL-CIO ad warns that the legislation includes "no training for displaced workers" who lose their jobs to international trade.
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/mcconnell-asks-senators-cast-pro-trade-vote-once-070938264--finance.html
Thinkingabout
(30,058 posts)ChairmanAgnostic
(28,017 posts)I read a fairly good analysis of his form of personality, and it really hit on all fours. I wish I would have saved it. Clearly he has some personality issues going on.