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Nobody believes Hillary Clinton's big trade-policy shift was real

Oct 8, 2015, 21:06 IST

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Then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Japanese Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara at the State Department in WashingtonREUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton raised eyebrows pretty much across the board on Wednesday.

In a PBS interview, the Democratic presidential front-runner announced that she opposes the landmark trade agreement known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership "as of today."

That statement not only amounted to a major break with President Barack Obama, whose administration staunchly supports the Pacific Rim trade deal.

It also constituted a major break with her own record.

As a member of the Obama administration, Clinton repeatedly boosted the deal. CNN once even tallied up 45 times Clinton pushed the Trans-Pacific Partnership, including when she called it a "gold standard in trade agreements."

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Clinton issued a lengthy statement explaining that she is "continuing to learn about the details" about the agreement. But the more she learned, the more reservations she said she had. 

"I still believe in the goal of a strong and fair trade agreement in the Pacific as part of a broader strategy both at home and abroad, just as I did when I was secretary of state," Clinton said.

"But the bar here is very high and, based on what I have seen," she added. "I don't believe this agreement has met it." 

However, critics on the left and right widely viewed Clinton's new position on the deal as a cynical political play. Many of them pointed to the fact that Clinton is currently battling against Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont), a staunch opponent of the agreement, for the Democratic nomination.

Additionally, Vice President Joe Biden may soon enter the race - and Clinton's announcement arguably positions her closer to the ideological consensus of their party.

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Business Insider rounded up some of the reactions to Clinton's policy shift below.

Political scientist Larry Sabato

Vox's Ezra Klein

Clinton keeps taking positions that are...hard to believe.

Of late, Clinton is again looking like the kind of candidate who puts polls in front of policy.

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[T]he argument here isn't that there aren't reasons to oppose the TPP, but that knowing Clinton's record, her advisors, and her past comments about the deal, it's hard to believe that Clinton really opposes the TPP deal.

 The New Yorker's Ryan Lizza

 New York's Jonathan Chait

Presidential candidate and former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley (D)

The Wall Street Journal editorial board

This is supposed to be the year when voters want authenticity in a candidate, but Hillary Clinton seems determined to test that proposition.

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Perhaps Mrs. Clinton is anticipating Joe Biden getting into the race and wants to carve out space to his populist left. But she really must think voters are dunces.

'Meet the Press' moderator Chuck Todd

The Washington Post's Chris Cillizza

It's clear that Clinton and her campaign made a simple calculation: The damage done by flip-flopping on TPP was less worrisome than the reverberations on the left -- and among unions especially -- if she supported the trade deal.

That's a concession, whether the Clinton folks admit it or not, that they are more than a little concerned about Sanders. Fact.

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Eurasia Group's Ian Bremmer

Mother Jones' Kevin Drum

The New York Times' Josh Barro

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