WEDNESDAY, OCT 7, 2015 08:17 AM PDT
We’ve sold out the environment and our jobs: The ugly truth about the “toxic” TPP
"It's a corporate dream but a nightmare for those of us on Main Street"
History was made this week: 12 nations representing 40 percent of the global economy finalized the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the largest regional trade agreement ever made. While multinational corporations and free-market aficionados are rejoicing, however, environmental and labor groups warn that this was bad history in the making.
“It’s a corporate dream but a nightmare for those of us on Main Street,” remarked Chris Shelton, president of the Communications Workers of America (CWA) union. It’s “clear that the TPP remains a bad deal for working families and communities.”
Although most of the countries — including the U.S., Japan, Mexico, Canada, Australia and more — that agreed upon the TPP are ostensibly democratic nations, it was deliberated in secret for five years, without input from citizens. To date, even though the deal has already been agreed upon, its details have still not been publicly released.
The little that is known about the TPP is only known thanks to whistle-blowing journalist organization WikiLeaks, which leaked some of the secretive agreement’s 29 chapters.
The final negotiations of the deal, which is often referred to as “NAFTA on steroids,” were made in secret in Atlanta on Monday, while activists were outside, protesting. Now the pact must get congressional approval, before it can be signed into law. The legislature already approved “fast-track” authority for the deal, so it will likely go through — but perhaps not without a fight from progressive opponents.
Environmental organizations are worried. They warn the TPP will mean “absolute disaster” for the climate.
“The TPP as a whole is a frontal assault on environmental and climate safeguards,” said Friends of the Earth president Erich Pica. Pica explained the deal will allow corporations “to sue governments for billions if climate or environmental rules interfere with corporate profits.”
Sierra Club executive director Michael Brune warned the TPP “would empower big polluters to challenge climate and environmental safeguards in private trade courts and would expand trade in dangerous fossil fuels that would increase fracking and imperil our climate.”
The “TPP makes climate change worse,” asserted 350.org executive director May Boeve. “By handing even more power to Big Oil, letting massive corporations throw tantrum lawsuits at governments who dare to scale back emissions, and spreading fracking further around the world, there’s no question that TPP is an absolute disaster for our climate.”
A variety of forces oppose the deal, including even some on the right, leading to some complex and unorthodox alliances. Progressives and dissidents within the Republican Party have found common cause against the TPP, which has been pushed through by the Obama administration, with largely bipartisan support.
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