Donald Trump's historic victory on Tuesday has killed any chance of Congress voting on President Barack Obama's signature Asia-Pacific agreement. | Getty Analysts: No hope for TPP after Trump win

Say a final goodbye to the Trans-Pacific Partnership.

Donald Trump's historic victory on Tuesday has killed any chance of Congress voting on President Barack Obama's signature Asia-Pacific agreement in the lame-duck session that begins next week, say analysts,


"TPP is now in the history dustbin for sure," Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told POLITICO Pro.

Two other trade initiatives still under negotiation -- the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and the Trade in Services Agreement -- may also end up on the globalization trash pile, Hufbauer added.

The odds of TPP passage were long even before the election. Still, the Obama administration had hoped to pave the way for a vote in the lame duck session by resolving a number of Republican concerns about the agreement. However, the election of Trump, who strongly opposes the agreement, has dashed those hopes, the analysts said.

"Just like [Obama's Supreme Court nominee] Merrick Garland is never going to get a confirmation hearing, TPP is never going to get an implementing bill," said Scott Miller, a trade policy specialist at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Alan Wolf, senior counsel at Dentons and chairman of the National Foreign Trade Council, shared that assessment. "Nothing that has the label TPP — or in the near term, the content of TPP — will be put into place by the U.S.," Wolf said.

"The coffin is nearly closed on TPP," Nate Olson, director of the Trade21 project at the Stimson Center, agreed. "There's no viable action in the lame duck" given the results of Tuesday's election.

