Moment of crisis, unrest no time for U.S. to desert global partners: congressman
WASHINGTON — The public health crisis gripping the world and civil unrest roiling cities across the United States are precisely why President Donald Trump should be embracing America’s global friends and allies, not tearing down the rules-based international order, says a key member of the congressional committee that oversees global trade.
Rep. Ron Kind, a Democrat from Wisconsin on the House Ways and Means Committee and an advocate for the new U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, says now is precisely not the time for the U.S. and the Trump administration to be isolating the United States, erecting protectionist barriers and abandoning international partners.
“I think psychologically, at a time of national crisis and great anxiety, it’s awfully easy politically to demonize outsiders — multilateral institutions, other countries — it’s just the typical political fallback position,” Kind told a panel of trade experts hosted by the Washington International Trade Association.
“I believe it creates a more dangerous world, and complicates the complex and difficult issues that we have to work on.”