http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/14/opinion/dont-keep-trade-talks-secret.html

 *Don’t Keep the Trans-Pacific Partnership Talks Secret*



The New York Times

By MARGOT E. KAMINSKI

April 14, 2015



COLUMBUS, Ohio — WHEN WikiLeaks recently released
<https://wikileaks.org/tpp-investment/WikiLeaks-TPP-Investment-Chapter/page-1.html>
a
chapter of the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, critics and proponents
of the deal resumed wrestling over its complicated contents. But a cover
page of the leaked document points to a different problem: It announces
that the draft text is classified by the United States government. Even if
current negotiations over the trade agreement end with no deal, the draft
chapter will still remain classified for four years as national security
information. The initial version of an agreement projected by the
government to affect millions
<https://ustr.gov/tpp/Summary-of-US-objectives> of Americans will remain a
secret until long after meaningful public debate is possible.

National security secrecy may be appropriate to protect us from our
enemies; it should not be used to protect our politicians from us. For an
administration that paints itself
<https://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/TransparencyandOpenGovernment/> as
dedicated to transparency and public input, the insistence on extensive
secrecy in trade is disappointing and disingenuous. And the secrecy of
trade negotiations does not just hide information from the public. It
creates a funnel where powerful interests congregate, absent the checks,
balances and necessary hurdles of the democratic process.

Free-trade agreements are not just about imports, tariffs or overseas jobs.
Agreements bring complex national regulatory systems together, such as
intellectual property law, with implications for free speech, privacy and
public health.

The level of secrecy employed by the Office of the United States Trade
Representative is not typical of how most international agreements are
negotiated <http://infojustice.org/archives/30027>. It’s not even how
our negotiating
partners
<http://www.euractiv.com/sections/justice-home-affairs/commission-launches-transparency-initiative-ttip-and-lobbying-310183>
say they want to operate. Yet it is the way that the Obama administration
handles trade deals, from a failed anti-counterfeiting agreement
<http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-18704192> more than two years ago to
the TPP today. The trade representative’s office keeps trade documents
secret as national security information, claiming that negotiating
documents — including work produced by United States officials — are
“foreign government information.”

The justification for secrecy in trade is that negotiations are like a
poker game: Negotiators don’t want to reveal their hand too soon, or get
pressured by concerned domestic constituencies. But the trade
representative’s office takes this logic too far. After being forced to
turn over documents in a 2002 lawsuit, it began regularly classifying trade
documents. Now the office uses classification to invoke the national
security exemption to open government law. Yale Law School’s Media Freedom
and Information Access Clinic is challenging this behavior in a lawsuit
<http://www.law.yale.edu/academics/17818.htm>. (I submitted testimony in
the case.)

The peculiarity of this secretive approach is becoming more apparent as our
foreign negotiating partners push toward transparency in trade. The
European Union now voluntarily releases
<http://trade.ec.europa.eu/doclib/press/index.cfm?id=1230> its side of
trade negotiations in an effort to be as transparent as possible; New
Zealand officials pressed for greater transparency
<http://www.networkworld.com/article/2205111/infrastructure-management/nz--pressing-for-greater-transparency--in-acta-negotiations.html>
in previous trade negotiations with the United States.

Secrecy has real costs. Because the negotiating process combines a general
shield from the public with privileged access for industry advisers, the
substance of American free trade agreements does not represent truly
national interests. It represents the interests
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/trade-deals-a-closely-held-secret-shared-by-more-than-500-advisers/2014/02/28/7daa65ec-9d99-11e3-a050-dc3322a94fa7_story.html>
of those members of industry who sit on the office’s Industry Trade
Advisory Committees
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/business/trade-advisory-committees/>,
which have regular access to negotiating information.

One justification for keeping trade negotiations in the executive branch is
that it can keep lobbyists at bay. But the current system brings those
entities inside, using classification to keep out citizens and competitors.
Perhaps in response to these sorts of criticisms in 2014, the Obama
administration announced
<http://www.regulations.gov/#%21documentDetail;D=USTR-2014-0005-0001> the
creation of a new public interest advisory committee. But that committee
would be given less direct access than industry groups, and couldn’t
discuss some issues with the public.

Secrecy also delegitimizes trade agreements: The process has been
internationally criticized as undemocratic. The European Parliament, for
example, rejected
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/9375822/European-Parliament-rejects-ACTA-piracy-treaty.html>
the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement in large part over legitimacy
concerns. In some of our trading partner countries, citizens have objected
to trade agreements by calling them undemocratic. And they rightly fear
that the American commitment to these agreements is weak because the United
States public might rebel once the texts are released.

Congress is soon likely to consider
<http://www.politico.com/story/2015/04/trade-fight-looms-as-congress-returns-116896.html>
whether to authorize an up-or-down vote on a trade deal, with what’s known
as “fast track” legislation. Free trade now involves dozens of areas with
complex subject matter, and the agency responsible for negotiating it often
fails to tap key expertise. The discussion over the trade negotiating
authority is not a question of which is better: the executive branch or the
legislative branch. It’s a question of whose input we’re getting on
decisions that reach far beyond trade — into questions on the price of
generic drugs or whether websites will have to monitor users online.

As it considers fast track here, Congress must address the secrecy, and the
views of the privileged advisers, that shaped the agreement. Otherwise,
“fast” will be little more than a euphemism for “avoid the public, and
benefit the fortunate few.”

*Margot E. Kaminski
<http://moritzlaw.osu.edu/faculty/professor/margot-kaminski/> is an
assistant professor of law at Ohio State University and a fellow of the
Information Society Project at Yale Law School.*
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