With the fight over Fast Track authority in full swing and the battle lines drawn between progressive voices opposing the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and corporate-backed forces rallying in its favor, a growing chorus of voices want Hillary Clinton—who recently made her presidential bid for 2016 official—to take a definitive stance on the controversial trade pact that so clearly represents the power struggle between the interests of big business on one hand, and transparency, democracy, and an economic system that protects workers, the planet, and the public good on the other.

On Tuesday, Clinton made what were widely regarding as milquetoast statements on the pending agreement, saying: “Any trade deal has to produce jobs and raise wages and increase prosperity and protect our security.”

But as Politico reports Thursday:

And according to the Wall Street Journal:

With more progressive members of Congress—including large numbers of House Democrats and a group of senators led by Sens. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), and Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio)—scrambling to resist the tide of support the agreement has received from corporate interests, critics say that while Clinton’s decision to stand on the sidelines might be smart campaigning in the age of $5 billion election cycles, it shouldn’t go unnoticed.

As journalist and political commentator John Nichols wrote last week, Clinton “has a chance to get trade policy right when it matters” and that means “now”—when the fire is hot and the stakes are real. Citing the title of her recent memoir, Hard Choices, Nichols argued that is because of the intense political climate surrounding TPP and the Fast Track authority that would see it rammed through Congress on a simple up-or-down vote that Clinton should weigh in. “Politics requires hard choices,” he said. “Clinton should make one.”

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