CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2014, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“OPENNESS A MUST FOR NEW PACIFIC TRADE
PACT”
Here’s a bit of unsolicited advice to
Congress and the President about the newest free trade agreement in the works
for America, the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which because of its location would
affect California more than any other part of this country:
Go
slow, and open up the negotiations to press and public.
Whenever
this country negotiates a new free trade deal with other countries, government
officials try desperately to keep their horsetrading as secret as possible and
it always leads to trouble.
The latest dickering over the
Trans-Pacific agreement follows the same pattern, with Ron Kirk, the U.S.
trade respresentative insisting he must have “some measure of discretion and
confidentiality” so he can “preserve negotiating strength and encourage our
partners to be willing to put issues on the table they may not otherwise.”
The Trans-Pacific Partnership, which
many call “the newest NAFTA,” would see this country enter a free-trade area
already begun by Brunei, Chile, Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and Singapore.
Others that would be involved now include Canada, Japan, Mexico, Peru and
Vietnam.
This agreement, like the North
American Free Trade Agreement, would have more effects in California than
other states because most American trade with the those nations flows
through California. Since Barack Obama became President, his administration has
held 19 negotiating sessions on this pact, reaching tentative agreements on
copyright infringement and the environment, on human rights and on an
independent judicial tribunal, among others.
Yes, a tribunal. These have been dicey
from the time NAFTA's took effect more than 10 years ago; they tend to
interfere with American sovereignty, sometimes allowing international judicial
panels to overrule U.S. law.
The most famous of these cases came while
California in the late 1990s sought to rid gasoline sold here of the additive
MTBE and its noxious odors and taste, along with the alleged cancer risks, it
gave some drinking water as it leached from rusty storage tanks and the engines
of small boats into aquifers and reservoirs.
The MTBE ban threatened profits of the
Canadian Methanex Corp., which filed a $970 million claim for lost sales in a
NAFTA tribunal, circumventing the American court system. Methanex eventually
lost, but the point was made – in some cases, the U.S. Supreme Court may no
longer be supreme, especially when corporations want to bypass the court
systems of countries where they do business, including ours.
That’s a loss of sovereignty, one
that would be widened under suspected provisions of the Trans-Pacific
Partnership. The text of the agreement has not yet been released, but consumer
advocate Ralph Nader’s Public Citizen group claims it would off offshore
“millions of jobs,” roll back banking reforms, expose Americans to unsafe food
and other products, further threats to Internet freedom and attack
environmental safeguards.
Even members of Congress have not yet
seen the full text of the pact as it now stands, one reason Democrats there
rejected the Obama Administration’s early January effort to get authority for
fast-track negotiations. Fast-tracking would forbid any amendments to
the treaty when it comes before Congress and prevent full-scale
hearings on it.
Meanwhile, Wikileaks, which delights
in publicizing secret documents, has published a draft of the pact’s proposed
environment chapter, written in Salt Lake City last November and making many
promises about trade of wood products, wildlife protection, climate change and
preventing overfishing. But Wilileaks griped in its release that the chapter is
“noteworthy for its absence of...meaningful enforcement measures.”
Kirk responded that “The U.S.….will
insist on a robust, fully enforceable environment chapter…”
One good thing about the refusal to
fast track this slippery concoction is that it could eventually lead to wide
publication of the full planned treaty. At the very least, every member of
Congress should read the entire thing before approving it.
For going fast could lead not just to
reduced American authority over our own affairs but to corporate lobbyists
sneaking in self-serving elements. That’s why complete openness should feature
any consideration of this agreement before it’s adopted. That way, anyone who
cares will know just what America gets if the treaty takes effect, and just
what it loses.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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