Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on Tuesday tied together the policies of President Bill Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, the presumptive Democratic nominee, in an attack on trade policies.

In a speech near Pittsburgh, Trump said the loss of manufacturing jobs has come due to the passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement and China’s entry into the World Trade Organization.

“It was Bill Clinton who signed NAFTA in 1993, and Hillary Clinton who supported it,” according to a text of Trump’s prepared remarks. “It was also Bill Clinton who lobbied for China’s disastrous entry into the World Trade Organization, and Hillary Clinton who backed that terrible agreement.”

Trump also criticized Hillary Clinton as standing by as China “cheated” on its currency and stole intellectual property. She also signed a “job-killing” free-trade deal with South Korea, Trump said.

He further said Clinton would make a “small token change” to the Trans Pacific Partnership and then ram it through approval. Clinton has said she doesn’t support the TPP — which as President Obama’s secretary of state, she helped to negotiate — in its current form.

The Senate has yet to ratify the TPP, though both the House and the Senate passed the fast-track legislation that traditionally presages passage.

Trump says, if elected, he would withdraw the U.S. from the TPP, as well as renegotiate NAFTA. And if he is not able to renegotiate NAFTA, Trump says he’d withdraw from it.

Trump’s speech drew immediate criticism from groups traditionally aligned with Republicans, like the National Association of Manufacturers and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Trump’s remarks were among his most detailed so far on the campaign trail for a candidate that has eschewed formalized policy speeches and resisted the use of teleprompters. In it, he name-dropped specific passages of trade agreements and laws, like Article 2205 of NAFTA, and Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962.

The RealClearPolitics average of polls has Clinton with a 6.8-percentage-point lead nationally, though in swing states, her lead is narrower. In Pennsylvania, where Trump delivered the speech, Clinton has just a 2.5-point lead.