More Corporatism passed off as free trade.

Thanks for the article Chris, I've passed along a few of yours recently.

Scott
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Trans-Pacific Partnership: Under Cover of Darkness, a Corporate Coup Is
Underway
The highly secretive pact, dubbed "NAFTA on steroids," is so invasive it
would even limit how governments can spend tax dollars.
*June 29, 2012*  |

*Photo Credit: ShutterStock.com*





*Editor's note: On this week's AlterNet Radio Hour, Joshua Holland spoke
with Lori Wallace about the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the larger
mythology of "free trade." You can listen to their discussion below this
article.*

Have you heard about the small U.S. government agency engaged in years of
closed-door negotiations that could undermine the Obama administration’s
declared goals of creating jobs, reregulating the financial sector and
lowering healthcare costs?

With the direct participation of 600 corporations and shocking levels of
secrecy, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) is rushing to
complete theTrans-Pacific Partnership
(TPP).<http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=3129> Branded
as a trade agreement (yawn) by its corporate proponents, TPP largely has
evaded public and congressional scrutiny since negotiations were launched
in 2008 by the George W. Bush administration.

But trade is the least of it. Only two of TPP’s 26 chapters actually have
to do with trade. The rest is about new enforceable corporate rights and
privileges and constraints on government regulation. This includes new
extensions of price-raising drug patent
monopolies<http://www.citizen.org/more-about-trans-pacific-fta>,
corporate rights to attack government
drugformulary<http://www.citizen.org/documents/memo-tpp-drug-price-06-14-12.pdf>
pricing
plans, safeguards to facilitate job
offshoring<http://www.aflcio.org/Blog/Economy/Take-a-Real-Look-at-the-Trans-Pacific-Partnership-FTA>
and
new corporate controls over natural
resources<http://www.citizen.org/documents/fact-sheet-tpp-and-environment.pdf>
.

Also included are severe limits on government regulation of financial
services <http://ase.tufts.edu/gdae/Pubs/rp/TPPAEconomistsLetter.pdf>,
zoning and land use <http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=5411&frcrld=1>,
product and food safety <http://delauro.house.gov/favicon.ico>,
energy<http://www.citizen.org/documents/fact-sheet-tpp-investment-services.pdf>
and
other essential services,
tobacco<http://www.google.com/search?q=ASH+Trans-Pacific+&rls=com.microsoft:en-us&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&startIndex=&startPage=1>,
and more. The copyright chapter poses many of the
threats<http://tppinfo.org/> to
Internet freedom of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), which was stalled in
Congress under intense public pressure.

The proposed pact is so invasive of domestic policy space that it would
even limit how governments can spend tax dollars. Buy
America<http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=5414> and
other Buy Local procurement preferences used to reinvest our tax dollars in
the American economy would be banned and sweat-free, human rights or
environmental conditions on government contracts would be subject to
challenge in closed-door foreign tribunals.

Indeed, signatory countries would be obliged to conform all their domestic
laws and regulations to TPP’s rules, effecting a quiet corporate coup
d’état<http://prospect.org/article/stealth-attack-democratic-governance>.
And, regardless of election outcomes or changes in public opinion, these
extreme rules could not be altered without the consent of all signatory
countries. Failure to conform to these rules would subject countries to
indefinite trade sanctions.

A recent
leak<http://www.citizen.org/documents/release-controversial-trade-pact-text-leaked-06-13.pdf>
of
one of TPP’s most controversial chapters reveals that the pact would
elevate individual corporations and investors to equal status with
sovereign nations to privately enforce this treaty. U.S.
negotiators<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/13/obama-trade-document-leak_n_1592593.html>
are
among the greatest champions of this “investor state” enforcement
system. It would give any foreign firm incorporated in any TPP country new
rights
<http://www.citizen.org/documents/Leaked-TPP-Investment-Analysis.pdf> to
skirt U.S. courts and laws, directly sue the U.S. government before foreign
tribunals and demand compensation for financial, health, environmental,
land use and other laws they claim undermine their TPP privileges.

After Obama’s election, U.S. trade officials were instructed to withdraw
from the TPP negotiations Bush had launched – supposedly to sort out a new
approach that implemented candidate Obama’s campaign commitments to fix the
damaging old NAFTA model. But after a kabuki dance of ears-closed
check-the-box “consultations” with a minimal number of congressional
representatives and civil society groups, Obama’s trade officials picked up
where Bush left off. Actually, they doubled down -- pushing even more
extreme positions than the Bush administration on issues like Internet
freedom<http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110105/02301112524/son-acta-worse-meet-tpp-trans-pacific-partnership-agreement.shtml>
 and access to
medicines<http://democrats.energycommerce.house.gov/sites/default/files/documents/Statement_HAW_May10Agreement_05.08.12.pdf>
.

Now a thirteenth round of TPP negotiations involving the Obama
administration will occur next
week<http://www.citizenstrade.org/ctc/blog/2012/06/19/san-diego-and-the-nation-prepare-to-greet-the-tpp/>
in
San Diego. There negotiators from the Office of the U.S. Trade
Representative will meet behind closed doors with their counterparts from
eight Asian and Latin American countries. What’s on the table is a 1
percenters’ dream – a corporate power
tool<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SOokUdKYcM> of
unprecedented scope and might. Think NAFTA on steroids with the whole world.

How could something so extreme get so far? Because the entire process has
occurred under conditions of unprecedented secrecy. And, the goal is to
sign a final deal before the election.

Why the rush? It's because these sorts of corporate-power-grabs via “trade”
agreements do not fare well in the sunshine. Last month, U.S. Trade
Representative Ron Kirk
defended<http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/47405479/ns/world_news-americas/t/secrecy-needed-trade-talks-ustr-kirk/>
the
extreme secrecy of TPP negotiations by noting that when the draft of a
major regional trade pact was released previously, it became impossible to
finish the deal as then proposed.

Yes, in a moment of candor, the top U.S. trade official admitted that TPP
must be kept secret because otherwise they won’t be able to shove this deal
past the public and Congress.

We’re talking about truly *unprecedented *secrecy. Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore)
is the chair of the Senate committee with official jurisdiction over TPP
and he always supports these sorts of agreements – and yet USTR has
denied<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/07/obama-trade-deal-democrat_n_1578827.html>
 *him *access even to the U.S. proposals for the talks.

If all of this were not sufficiently dire, TPP may well be the last trade
agreement that the U.S. negotiates. Getting these rules right is essential,
because TPP, if completed, would have a new feature relative to past U.S.
trade pacts: It would remain open for any other country to join later. Last
month, USTR Kirk said that he "would love nothing
more"<http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/05/08/usa-trade-kirk-idUSL1E8G8C3M20120508>
than
to have China join TPP.

The TPP offered an opportunity to develop a new model of trade agreement
that could deliver the benefits of expanded trade without unduly
undermining signatory nations’ domestic policies or establishing special
privileges for foreign corporations. Candidate
Obama<http://www.citizenstrade.org/ctc/activist-resources/president-barack-obama-on-trade-issues>
and
countless members of Congress
campaigned<http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=502> on
replacing the damaging NAFTA trade pact model.

Instead, Obama’s USTR has doubled down. Does the president or even the
White House political shop know the real story about the politics of TPP?
(Majorities of Democrats, GOP and Independents oppose these sorts of
agreements,polling<http://www.citizen.org/documents/polling-memo-july-2011.pdf>
consistently
shows.) If they do, do they assume that we do not?

Either way, there’s only one way forward. We must force their
attention<http://www.citizen.org/Page.aspx?pid=5417&frcrld=1> to
TPP and make President Obama decide whose side he is on. Either he can let
his negotiators finish this TPP in secrecy and slam the 99 percent. Or, he
can stand with us, release the current texts and order his staff to start
over with large doses of congressional and public guidance to develop a new
deal that benefits the majority.

*Here's our interview with Lori Wallach:*


Check this out on Chirbit <http://chirb.it/PCh21b>

<http://www.alternet.org/story/156059/<http://www.alternet.org/story/156059/trans-pacific_partnership%3A_under_cover_of_darkness%2C_a_corporate_coup_is_underway_?page=entire>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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