Big boost for 'globalists'
The departure on Friday of Steve Bannon, the White House's top economic nationalist, will likely tip the trade policy scales in favor of the Trump administration's "globalist" faction, which could soften the stance toward two of Trump's favorite targets: China and the North American Free Trade Agreement.
But after news that Trump had fired Bannon from his post as chief strategist, trade experts said it may take some time for National Economic Council Chairman Gary Cohn, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to start winning more debates on trade policy.
Bannon and White House Trade and Manufacturing Office director Peter Navarro were often allied in taking hardline anti-China stances over currency manipulation, steel tariffs and other trade issues, often opposed to Cohn, Mnuchin and Perdue, according to lobbyists who been involved in the debates.
The Cohn-led group proved more influential in the administration's decisions in April not to label China a currency manipulator and to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement instead of terminating it.
More recently, they have pushed for a delay in a decision on the imposition of broad steel tariffs.
With Bannon gone, "there's not a replacement for that voice in internal debates," said a senior administration official who was not authorized to speak publicly on the issue.
"Without Steve constantly pushing back on every policy idea coming from the so called "globalists," it's easy to see how they could have a chance to start winning more policy battles," the official said.
In the short term, the trade policy trajectory won't change much, said Derek Scissors, a China trade expert at the American Enterprise Institute, a pro-business conservative think tank in Washington. Many of Trump's views on trade pre-dated Bannon's arrival on his campaign in any case.
But industry lobbyists, who have been whipsawed by economic policy twists over trade and an ill-fated border tax proposal, were skeptical that much would change.
Bonnie Glaser, senior adviser for Asia at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said the administration's efforts to develop an effective strategy to retaliate against China's unfair trade practices will survive, largely because there is a widely held view in the administration and the corporate sector that China's trade practices are a problem.
"I doubt this effort will evaporate, though it may evolve," she said.
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