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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
10. That would be the Democratic thing to do.
Sun Mar 2, 2014, 10:49 AM
Mar 2014
Civil Society Groups Urge Trade Transparency

Sunlight Foundation, NOV. 21, 2013, 10:13 A.M.

Today, the Sunlight Foundation joined with more than 30 Civil Society organizations from around the world and urged leaders to conduct the Trans-Pacific Partnership and any future trade negotiations in "a manner consistent with the democratic principles and openness and accountability."

The Trans-Pacific Partnership, along with other recent trade deals, has been negotiated under a cloud of secrecy, with only cursory public input. This secrecy represents a failed strategy that is in direct conflict with the ideals of openness embraced by many of the participating nations, who are also proud members of the Open Government Partnership. It is time for negotiating countries to heed the growing desire for transparency in these talks.

The letter, which calls "for governments around the world live up to their own rhetoric and extend their commitments to openness and public participation to the Trans-Pacific Partnership and any future negotiations," can be viewed in full below.



Tony Abbott, Prime Minister of Australia
Hassanal Bolkiah, Sultan of Brunei
Stephen Harper, Prime Minister of Canada
Sebastian Pinera, President of Chile
Shinzo Abe, Prime Minister of Japan
Najib Razak, Prime Minister of Malaysia
Enrique Pena Nieto, President of Mexico
John Key, Prime Minister of New Zealand
Ollanta Humala, President of Peru
Tony Tan, President of Singapore
Ma Ying-jeou, President of Taiwan
Barack Obama, President of the United States of America
Truong Tan Sang, President of Vietnam

We, the undersigned civil society groups, urge you to conduct any further trade negotiations in a manner consistent with the democratic principles of openness and accountability.

Countries participating in the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations must reconcile the radically secretive process against the transparency values they purport to hold, to strengthen the legitimacy of any international agreements, and to seek appropriate balance between corporate and public interests.

The Trans-Pacific Partnership is a binding international agreement that could have far-reaching implications for commerce and trade around the globe, while modifying or undermining policies affecting consumer safety, access to medicine, intellectual property rights, and internet freedom. Twelve Pacific Rim countries participated in the most recent round of negotiations, which took place this August in Brunei, and several others have expressed interest in joining.

This agreement has the power to override national and local legislation on any number of issues because signatories to the Trans-Pacific Partnership will be required to bring existing and future national policies into compliance with the international norms established in the agreement. Despite the substantive importance of this agreement and growing international support for “open government” principles, it has been negotiated in secret, with only cursory input from the public; only government officials and a small group of industry representatives have been given access to the drafts of this agreement.

Many of the very same countries that have participated in the secret Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations, including Chile, New Zealand, the United States, Australia, Peru, Mexico, and Canada, attended this month’s Open Government Partnership meeting to tout their commitments to transparency. But, the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiating process has embodied the opposite values -- secrecy and elite access that undermines the democratic principles that these countries purport to represent.

The secrecy surrounding the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations has led to a widespread and decisively negative public reaction, including growing opposition in the U.S. Congress and among Members of Parliament in New Zealand, frustration in Japan and Australia, and skepticism all around the world. As shown by reaction to recent disclosures by Wikileaks which, for the first time, allowed advocates and experts to see and analyze a portion of the agreement, there is a clear need, and desire, for the public to have access to the negotiation process. Allowing industry representatives, in particular, to have access to the drafts and negotiation process all but guarantees that corporate interests will be represented at the expense of the public interest in areas as diverse as freedom of expression, access to medicine, consumer product safety, and many more.

In order to ensure that democratic principles are preserved, policy makers, civil society, and members of the public must be given the opportunity to have a level of participation and engagement in this process that is at least equal to that of industry representatives. Attempting to conduct international negotiations in secret has proven untenable in the past, with public opposition swelling when details of the plans are apparently leaked by those in positions of power who share these concerns. We believe that it is time for governments around the world live up to their own rhetoric and extend their commitments to openness and public participation to the Trans-Pacific Partnership and any future negotiations.

Signed,

Africa Freedom of Information Centre
ARTICLE 19, Global Campaign for Free Expression
Center for Effective Government
Center for Independent Journalism, Romania
Centre for Law and Democracy
Christopher Allan Webber
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington -- CREW
Coalition for Democracy and Civil Society
Common Cause Zambia
Concerned Citizen
CPI Foundation, Sarajevo
David Eaves
Diritto Di Sapere
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Fundación Ciudadano Inteligente
Global Financial Integrity
Government Accountability Project
Knowledge Economy International
IndyMedia
International NGO Forum on Indonesian Development -- INFID
Iraqi Journalists Rights Defense Association
Melbourne Social Forum
New Rules for Global Finance
OpenTheGovernment.org
Oxfam America
Pro Media
Project on Government Oversight -- POGO
Public Knowledge
Sean Flynn, American University Washington College of Law
Sunlight Foundation
The Open Knowledge Foundation
Windmill



SOURCE: http://sunlightfoundation.com/blog/2013/11/21/civil-society-groups-urge-trade-transparency/

But, noooooo.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

K&R woo me with science Mar 2014 #1
Top 10 TPP myths used by U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman Octafish Mar 2014 #4
+1 jsr Mar 2014 #12
Froman's exit payment from Citi was *conditional* on accepting a high level government post. pa28 Mar 2014 #2
For some reason, Corporate McPravda is not telling this part of the TPP story. Octafish Mar 2014 #6
Good Grief... KoKo Mar 2014 #3
Obama TPP Trade Officials Received Hefty Bonuses from Big Banks Octafish Mar 2014 #7
oh c'mon. we don't even know what's in it! why should we be again' it? KG Mar 2014 #5
Yeah, see. It's all legal-like, see. Octafish Mar 2014 #9
If it were good for most people.. sendero Mar 2014 #8
That would be the Democratic thing to do. Octafish Mar 2014 #10
If the TPP is so good for us, why not more transparency? octoberlib Mar 2014 #11
Because we peasants don't know how to read jsr Mar 2014 #13
That's due to teachers' unions. Octafish Mar 2014 #15
Democracy and the Republic require transparency. Octafish Mar 2014 #16
TPP Will Have Strong Environmental Protections; Then Immediately Denies Saying That Ichingcarpenter Mar 2014 #14
''...he's doing what he's always done best: talking out of both sides of his mouth...'' Octafish Mar 2014 #17
Its all the little pieces we add up Ichingcarpenter Mar 2014 #18
It's no pony and it smells like sulfur... Octafish Mar 2014 #19
If the big boys are for it then you know we're going to get screwed. hobbit709 Mar 2014 #20
Guy who hired Tim Geithner to bail out the banksters got set for LIFE. Octafish Mar 2014 #21
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