President
Bush urges trade expansion to combat recession
By
Scott Lindlaw
Associated Press
EAST
MOLINE, Ill. President Bush renewed his push Monday for expanded
trade as a cure for recession, undeterred by a fainting incident
that left him with a scraped cheek and bruised lip. He vowed anew
to oppose, repeal or delay the tax cuts enacted last year.
Bush
opened the two-day, three-state push with a series of jokes about
the fainting spell he suffered Sunday after a pretzel went down
the wrong way while he was watching television in the White House.
He told 1,500 workers and supporters at a John Deere plant that
he expected to receive a pretzel from union workers those
kind that are easy to chew.
The
president, who seeks broader powers to negotiate trade pacts, said,
Im confident we need to open up markets, not close them
down.
What
this nation needs is to level the playing field and have trade thatll
create jobs all across America, he said.
In
Springfield, Mo., Bush told a crowd in an airplane hangar that expanded
trade is essential.
Let
us compete and when we can compete in a fair way, we whip anybody
when it comes to selling food.
Bush
renewed his call for lower taxes to create jobs.
Its
economics 101, except sometimes people in Washington havent
taken the course, Bush
said.
Congress
last year passed Bushs long-term tax cut but some Democrats
now say that in the face of budget deficits, some of those cuts
should be deferred.
Monday,
Bush pledged to fight any such effort.
If
you have more money in your pocket, you buy more things, which encourages
more production, he said. Ive made up my mind
the tax relief plan we passed, which youre now beginning
to feel the effects of, is going to be permanent.
Bush
left the White House with a bruised lip and a half-dollar-sized
abrasion on his cheek after his fainting spell.
During
the flight from Washington, Bush made light of his fainting spell
by sending a large bag of pretzels to the press cabin with a scribbled
warning to chew slowly. Later, touring a John Deere
plant here, Bush said of a welders mask, I need this
all the time around the press corps.
I
feel great, Bush told reporters as he left the White House.
Spokesman Ari Fleischer said the president, fighting a head cold,
reported having a runny nose but was otherwise fine.
During
the flight, Bush called Crown Prince Abdullah of Saudi Arabia and
President Bashar Assad of Syria to talk about peace efforts in the
Middle East and the anti-terrorism campaign.
The
presidents itinerary had him tracing the flow of farm goods
south through the Midwest en route to overseas markets. On Tuesday,
he will visit the port of New Orleans, the last stop for many agricultural
goods destined for export markets.
The
president badly wants authority to negotiate fast-track
trade agreements, which Congress could reject but not change.
The
Republican-controlled House passed such trade promotion authority
by a deeply partisan 215-214 vote last month after the White House
and Republican leaders persuaded GOP holdouts to change sides. The
Democratic-controlled Senate is due to vote early this year.
On
agricultural business, the Senate was unable to agree on a Democratic
plan to reauthorize farm programs through 2006. Most of the money
in that bill would continue to go to grain, cotton and soybean farms
but also offer new subsidies for a variety of additional commodities,
including milk, honey and lentils. It also would double spending
on conservation.
The
administration criticized both that bill and one passed by the House
in October and urged Congress to delay finishing work on them until
this year. It said both measures risk exceeding levels set in an
international trade agreement and provide too much money to big
farms that least need the assistance.
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