Portman Urges Democrats to Not Play Politics with U.S. Competitiveness, Support American Workers with Comprehensive Trade Reform

Source: United States Senator for Ohio Rob Portman

September 28, 2021 | Press Releases

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, U.S. Senator Rob Portman (R-OH) sent a letter to Senators Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Mike Crapo (R-ID), Chairman and Ranking Member of the Senate Finance Committee, asking them to support workers by combining the reauthorization of Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) with other proposals to strengthen U.S. trade remedy law and expand opportunities for Made in America exports. Democrats have proposed to ram through TAA reauthorization on a partisan basis without comprehensive reforms to support U.S. jobs, especially from unfair competition with China.

“…Congress should pass trade policies to expand the number of good paying jobs in the United States, and reduce the threats to those jobs from unfair competition abroad,” said Portman. “The best chance for that is to reauthorize TAA as part of a bipartisan trade reform package. I stand ready to work with Democrats and Republicans to make such a package a reality because I believe it is something we owe the American worker. I thank you for your consideration of this request and look forward to working with you to build upon the Trade Act of 2021 by adding new provisions to strengthen our trade remedy laws, open overseas markets by providing trade negotiating authority, and to reauthorize Trade Adjustment Assistance this year.”

Text of the letter can be found below and here.

Dear Chairman Wyden and Ranking Member Crapo,

I write in favor of reauthorizing Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA), which expired June 30, 2021, by regular order. Failure to reauthorize TAA has jeopardized the future of countless workers who have lost their jobs to foreign competition, most of it unfair. It would also be a rejection of the opportunity for comprehensive trade reform.

While the Senate unanimously passed a short-term extension of TAA this summer, the House of Representatives failed to take up the Senate extension and let the program expire, putting American workers in jeopardy. Apparently this was a calculated decision since House Democrats have included a seven year TAA reauthorization in their partisan reconciliation bill.

Despite TAA’s necessity, deindustrialization is not the inevitable conclusion of some unalterable arc of economic progress. As policymakers, I believe we can take steps to support American manufacturing and avoid the root causes for TAA. I also believe that the best TAA is one that does not need to be used because workers remain employed at well-paying jobs.

In order to accomplish that aim, and support American workers and the domestic manufacturing industry, I believe that this TAA reauthorization should be considered alongside other trade reforms to foster American economic competitiveness and challenge anti-free market practices by foreign countries. I was glad to see some of these, such as reauthorization of the Miscellaneous Tariff Bill and the Generalized System of Preferences, included in your Trade Act of 2021 and was pleased to support including that legislation in the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act (USICA).

However, there are trade priorities beyond those included in the Trade Act of 2021, which the committee should continue to consider. One of these is legislation to strengthen our trade remedy capabilities, such as our anti-dumping and countervailing duty (ADCVD) laws. Given the widespread fears in Congress about China’s anti-free market economic practices and the exportation of this model abroad through policies like the Belt and Road Initiative, I believe it to be absolutely critical to the national security and economic competitiveness of the United States to consider legislation which pushes back against China in this regard.

How can we fight for American jobs if we are only willing (and on a partisan basis no less) to reauthorize a program to assist those who are hurt by trade. To me it suggests an admission that the “losers” from trade, will always be just that. Such an admission is as unacceptable as it is false—good paying jobs do not appear and disappear at random; they do so as the result of intentional choices by policymakers.

This is why Congress should pass trade policies to expand the number of good paying jobs in the United States, and reduce the threats to those jobs from unfair competition abroad.

The best chance for that is to reauthorize TAA as part of a bipartisan trade reform package. I stand ready to work with Democrats and Republicans to make such a package a reality because I believe it is something we owe the American worker. I thank you for your consideration of this request and look forward to working with you to build upon the Trade Act of 2021 to successfully reauthorize Trade Adjustment Assistance this year.

Sincerely,

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