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sad sally

(2,627 posts)
Thu Jul 26, 2012, 05:41 PM Jul 2012

Don't Expand NAFTA: A Warning Against TPP

American, Canadian, and Mexican workers cannot afford another corporate-directed trade agreement

Published on Thursday, July 26, 2012 by Foreign Policy In Focus - by Manuel Pérez Rocha and Stuart Trew

The United States recently announced that Canada and Mexico will join negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)—a secretive U.S.-led multinational trade and investment agreement currently being negotiated with eight other countries in the Pacific Rim region.

On the other side of the Pacific, Japanese legislators are defecting in droves to try to stop the country’s entry into the negotiations. But the situation is much different in Canada and Mexico, which were admitted to the table with much fanfare during the G20 summit in June. The Japanese response is justifiable, and a recent statement of solidarity against the TPP by North American unions offers a good building block for resisting an agreement that for Mexicans and Canadians amounts to a neoliberal expansion of NAFTA on U.S. President Barack Obama’s terms.

Mexico and Canada had been trying to secure a spot at the TPP table for months prior to the G20, and it became a leading story in both countries. Their anxiety played nicely into Obama’s hands, allowing the U.S. trade representative to put humiliating entry conditions on both countries — essentially giving these NAFTA neighbors a second-rate status, or what in Spanish is called convidados de palo (to be invited but without a say). Neither Canada nor Mexico will be able to see any TPP text until they finally join the negotiations in December, following the required 90-day U.S. congressional approval process. Once at the table, they will not be able to make any changes to the finished text or propose any new text in the finished chapters. There is a very real possibility that the existing TPP countries, the United States in particular, will use the following months to fashion a trap for the TPP latecomers.

snip

The intense secrecy of the TPP negotiations is not helping the Obama administration make its case. In their statement, North American unions “call on our governments to work with us to include in the TPP provisions to ensure strong worker protections, a healthy environment, safe food and products, and the ability to regulate financial and other markets to avoid future global economic crises.” But the truth is that only big business is partaking in consultations, with 600 lobbyists having exclusive passwords to online versions of the negotiating text.

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/07/26-8

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Don't Expand NAFTA: A Warning Against TPP (Original Post) sad sally Jul 2012 OP
The TPP will put the nail in the coffin for democracy. fasttense Jul 2012 #1
The fact that it's secret, spells trouble for those who will finance it via lost wages, lost midnight Jul 2012 #2
 

fasttense

(17,301 posts)
1. The TPP will put the nail in the coffin for democracy.
Fri Jul 27, 2012, 07:50 AM
Jul 2012

If Obama allows this fascistic corporate rule to pass, he will always be remembered for it. He will be remembered as the President who destroyed democracy. Just like Clinton is known as the NAFTA President and is remembered for the destruction of Glass-Steagal that led to the Great Recession.

Obama is a wolf in sheep's clothing.

midnight

(26,624 posts)
2. The fact that it's secret, spells trouble for those who will finance it via lost wages, lost
Fri Jul 27, 2012, 09:28 AM
Jul 2012

working conditions, and benefits....

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