PDA

View Full Version : WikiLeaks Leaks the TPP's "Investment Chapter"




charrob
03-26-2015, 07:22 PM
WikiLeaks Reveals TPP Proposal Allowing Corporations to Sue Nations (http://www.democracynow.org/2015/3/26/headlines/wikileaks_reveals_tpp_proposal_allowing_corporatio ns_to_sue_nations)

WikiLeaks has published a leaked chapter of the secret Trans-Pacific Partnership — a global trade deal currently being negotiated between the United States and 11 Latin American and Asian countries. The TPP would cover 40 percent of the global economy, but details have been concealed from the public. Now, WikiLeaks has released the "Investment Chapter," which highlights the intent of U.S.-led negotiators to create a tribunal where corporations can sue governments if their laws interfere with a company’s claimed future profits. WikiLeaks warns the plan could "chill the adoption of sane" health and environmental policies.



WikiLeaks reveals negotiators planning to expand secret corporate tribunals (http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/03/26/tpp-vs-democracy-leaked-draft-secretive-trade-deal-spells-out-plan-corporate-power)

"With the veil of secrecy ripped back, finally everyone can see for themselves that the TPP would give multinational corporations extraordinary new powers that undermine our sovereignty," said Lori Wallach of Public Citizen.

Newly leaked classified documents show that the secretive Trans-Pacific Partnership deal, if it goes through as written, will dramatically expand the power of corporations to use closed-door tribunals to challenge—and supersede—domestic laws, including environmental, labor, and public health, and other protections.

The tribunals, made infamous under NAFTA, were exposed in the "Investment Chapter" from the TPP negotiations, which was released to the public by WikiLeaks on Wednesday.

"The TPP has developed in secret an unaccountable supranational court for multinationals to sue states," said Julian Assange, WikiLeaks editor. "This system is a challenge to parliamentary and judicial sovereignty. Similar tribunals have already been shown to chill the adoption of sane environmental protection, public health and public transport policies."

Responding to the leak, Lori Wallach, director of Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch, declared: "With the veil of secrecy ripped back, finally everyone can see for themselves that the TPP would give multinational corporations extraordinary new powers that undermine our sovereignty, expose U.S. taxpayers to billions in new liability, and privilege foreign firms operating here with special rights not available to U.S. firms under U.S. law."

The document reveals that negotiators plan to recycle language from past trade agreements to create the controversial "investor-state dispute settlement" system (ISDS). Under this framework, multinationals would be granted a parallel legal system in which they can sue governments, and therefore taxpayers, for loss of "expected future profit," with the power to overrule national laws and judicial systems.

The language included in this draft is even worse than previously thought, because it excludes a minor safeguard included in a version leaked in 2012.

Public Citizen noted in a press statement that the latest draft "abandons a safeguard proposed in the 2012 leaked TPP investment text, which excluded public interest regulations from indirect expropriation claims, stating, 'non-discriminatory regulatory actions... that are designed and applied to achieve legitimate public welfare objectives, such as the protection of public health, safety and the environment do not constitute indirect expropriation.'"

Such ISDS tribunals have become a cornerstone of so-called "free trade" deals and are included in 3,000 accords world-wide, according to The New York Times. They have been used to attack toxic bans, environmental regulations, access to medicines, and safety laws.

However, their inclusion in the TPP is expected to have an even greater impact, given the number of countries involved in the pact and the size of their economies.

Under negotiation since at least 2008, the deal includes the U.S. and 11 Pacific Rim countries: Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and Vietnam. These nations together represent 40 percent of the world's GDP, making this the largest trade deal yet.

Analysts say the new revelations have broad implications.

"The TPP would empower companies from New Zealand, Australia and Japan with new rights to attack our federal and local laws," said Patrick Woodall, Research director and senior policy advocate for Food & Water Watch, in a statement released Thursday. "For example, one natural gas company has already challenged a fracking moratorium in the Canadian province of Quebec under NAFTA’s investment provisions."

Woodall added, "These corporate lawsuits have a chilling effect on communities that want to protect their citizenry but lack the resources to defend against a colossal corporate lawsuit, including the more than 250 localities (including New York state) that have banned or imposed moratoriums on fracking."

Furthermore, Sean Flynn, associate director of the Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property at American University, warned that the TPP "would give new rights to private companies to challenge limitations and exceptions to copyrights, patents, and other intellectual property rights."

"The text contains the same provisions that are being used by Eli Lilly to challenge Canada’s invalidation of patent extensions for new uses of two medicines originally developed in the 1970s," wrote Flynn. "The same language is also being used by Philip Morris to challenge Uruguay’s regulation of advertising on cigarette packages as an 'expropriation” of their trademarks.'"

"But the TPP language goes farther," Flynn added. "It includes a new footnote, not previously released as part of any other investment chapter and not included in the U.S. model investment text—clarifying that private expropriation actions can be brought to challenge 'the cancellation or nullification of such [intellectual property] rights,' as well as 'exceptions to such rights.'"

The leaked chapter is dated January 20, 2015, meaning the text was drafted before the last two negotiation sessions in February and March. Nonetheless, experts say this and other leaks provide the best—and only—public information about what the deal holds in store, given the intense secrecy of the talks.

The cover of the chapter stipulates it must remain classified "four years from entry into force of the TPP agreement or, if no agreement enters into force, four years from the close of the negotiations"—in what the Times says is likely an acknowledgement of the "sensitivity" of the secret tribunals.

Global civil societies had already mounted vigorous opposition to the deal for years, with unions, environmental groups, anti-militarist movements, and feminist organizations from New Zealand to the Japan voicing concern that the agreement will harm ordinary people. Groups across the U.S. have staged mounting protests against an ongoing attempt by the administration of President Barack Obama to fast track the accord to completion.

Wednesday's revelations are likely to add to controversy over the deal.

Meanwhile, the Obama administration is negotiating two other secret trade deals: the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and the Trade in Services Agreement.

Natural Citizen
03-26-2015, 07:33 PM
Previously...

Discussion (2013)... WikiLeaks releases draft of highly-secretive multi-national trade deal (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?433167-WikiLeaks-releases-draft-of-highly-secretive-multi-national-trade-deal&p=5307335&viewfull=1#post5307335)

Report (2013) - TPP Uncovered: WikiLeaks releases draft of highly-secretive multi-national trade deal (http://rt.com/usa/wikileaks-tpp-ip-dotcom-670/)


Dang, charrob. Yer on a roll. Heh.

Good follow-up. It didn't just magically go away, huh? :)

Tinnuhana
03-27-2015, 06:10 PM
Why does Hawai'i come to mind when I read this? Sanford Dole had his way.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LS8kJ2LIXQ

DamianTV
03-27-2015, 06:45 PM
Big Pharma: Lets sell a drug we know is dangerous!
Govt: You can't do that, it hurts people!
Big Pharma: Well we are gonna sue you cuz your Laws messed with our Profits!
Govt: You're right, profits are more important than people, and we must obey our Corporate Masters! We's a sorry, Mass'a!

Kotin
03-27-2015, 06:57 PM
well no wonder its secret.. sounds right up the ally of this government though..

Natural Citizen
03-27-2015, 07:13 PM
well no wonder its secret.. sounds right up the ally of this government though..

Well. We're already seeing what charrob shares here with regard to these corporations suing nations happening right here in the U.S. Well...specific cases at the moment are where companies are suing local governments if the company's posituion is that their laws would do any kind of harm to the company's future profits. And they'll get away with it because they use freedom against us. They have the gift of constitution. Of course, libertarians and people of similar political persuasion actually help them along. And so we do it to ourselves. Which is another phenomenon in and of itself. When we try to bring up these critical ongoings we get called a commie or a liberal and whatnot. Is what it is.

But yes. What charrob shares here is actually already happening here in the states. Is a shame. We have a scwewy phenomenon evolving whereas we'll cry for liberty in one breath but in the same breath actively participate in the demise of it's natural benchmark. Weve lost our identity as natural citizens essentially.

This is actually one such area where I've moved away from the political libertarian vision.

Here is just one example off the top of my head. Of course, there are many...

TPP in America: Judge blocks County from implementing law that would harm corporate profit (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?463308-TPP-in-America-Judge-blocks-County-from-implementing-law-that-would-harm-corporate-profit&p=5705198&viewfull=1#post5705198)

Natural Citizen
03-27-2015, 07:25 PM
Now, If I'd have added a poll to that thread there I shared with kotin, likely 8 out of 10 libertarians would be okay with what is actually happening there. And so, is why I say that we do it to ourselves. We do.

idiom
03-27-2015, 09:36 PM
The TPP would empower companies from New Zealand, Australia and Japan with new rights to attack our federal and local laws

I love this. Here comes big bad New Zealand going to screw over America with a Treaty.

If anything this turns 30+ countries into Vassal states of the USA.

idiom
03-27-2015, 09:38 PM
Well. We're already seeing what charrob shares here with regard to these corporations suing nations happening right here in the U.S. Well...specific cases at the moment are where companies are suing local governments if the company's posituion is that their laws would do any kind of harm to the company's future profits. And they'll get away with it because they use freedom against us. They have the gift of constitution. Of course, libertarians and people of similar political persuasion actually help them along. And so we do it to ourselves. Which is another phenomenon in and of itself. When we try to bring up these critical ongoings we get called a commie or a liberal and whatnot. Is what it is.

But yes. What charrob shares here is actually already happening here in the states. Is a shame. We have a scwewy phenomenon evolving whereas we'll cry for liberty in one breath but in the same breath actively participate in the demise of it's natural benchmark. Weve lost our identity as natural citizens essentially.

This is actually one such area where I've moved away from the political libertarian vision.

Here is just one example off the top of my head. Of course, there are many...

TPP in America: Judge blocks County from implementing law that would harm corporate profit (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?463308-TPP-in-America-Judge-blocks-County-from-implementing-law-that-would-harm-corporate-profit&p=5705198&viewfull=1#post5705198)

The An-Cap vision is actually one of freedom of states to not be limited by borders at all. Its a great concept really!

Natural Citizen
05-01-2015, 03:46 PM
A group of radical performance activists who hail from New York staged an “exorcism” of corporate power outside an international law firm in London to raise awareness about the dangers of an EU-US trade deal being brokered behind closed doors.

In a symbolic act of political protest on Thursday, the performance artists targeted the London office of global law firm King & Spalding over its role in Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) litigation.

The firm has represented a slew of corporations in lawsuits against governments through a controversial investor protection mechanism – a version of which may form part of TTIP.

The Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) mechanism in question has been the focus of criticism in Europe and America, with anti-TTIP academics, trade unionists and politicians warning it will pave the way for corporations to sue governments attempting to legislate in the interests of ordinary citizens.

Using this mechanism, King & Spalding has aided multiple corporate clients who are engaged in a series of bilateral trade pacts.

Among these were Enron and Mobil’s legal actions against the Argentinian government, and Chevron and Texaco’s legal actions against the Ecuadorian government.

The creative spectacle was co-organized by UK think tank Global Justice Now.

“King & Spalding have represented countless corporate clients in suing governments for making decisions that have benefited workers' rights, public services, or protected the environment,” Guy Taylor, a leading trade campaigner from Global Justice Now, told the Solicitors Journal.

“The controversial EU-USA trade deal TTIP would massively ramp up the ability of corporations to carry out court cases like this,” he said.

“Governments would start implementing legislation on the basis of whether they were safe from litigious corporations rather than whether it was beneficial to ordinary people. And law firms like King & Spalding would make a fortune through representing even more corporate clients in all the additional court cases.”

Billed as a Festival of Democracy, the affair will feature a diverse series of workshops, artistic performances, creative direct actions and discussions throughout the election period.

It will begin on Friday evening and finish on May 10.




Continued - Corporate power ‘exorcism’ held outside London law firm billed for TTIP lawsuits (http://rt.com/uk/254953-activists-exorcise-corporate-power/)


King & Spalding - http://www.kslaw.com/library/newsletters/WashingtonInsight/2014/Jan21/

mad cow
05-01-2015, 04:12 PM
A group of radical performance activists who hail from New York staged an “exorcism” of corporate power outside an international law firm in London to raise awareness about the dangers of an EU-US trade deal being brokered behind closed doors.


Apparently the Trans Atlantic Trade in exorcist performing radical activists is going great guns.

Natural Citizen
05-11-2015, 11:44 AM
I don't generally care for Trump but he is exactly spot on with regard to currency manipulation and American jobs. Much has been shared with regard to that in the BRICS summit thread with regard to currency clearing models as they develop but, of course, there are several other developing outliers at the ge-political level that indicate the elevated danger of this so called "trade" deal.

Anyhoo...


TPP trade deal ‘a disaster,’ other countries will ‘dupe’ US – Donald Trump...

Source note..

Information presented on this website is considered public information (unless otherwise noted in material) and may be distributed or copied for non-commercial (personal, educational, research etc.) purposes.




http://cdn.rt.com/files/news/3e/d6/10/00/10.si.jpg
Real estate developer Donald Trump.(Reuters / Chris Keane)

US real estate mogul and billionaire Donald Trump slammed the Obama administration over its Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal, labeling it as disastrous and warning that it will encourage US companies to slash domestic jobs.
“The new trade deal is a disaster,” The Hill quoted Trump as saying at the South Carolina Freedom Summit in Greenville, South Carolina.

“They don’t talk about currency manipulation,” he said. “That’s the tool all these countries are using to beat us.”

Trump stressed that the deal would encourage US companies to move their production abroad, weakening US domestic job market.

“Our leaders are incompetent. They’re babies,” he added. “Most nations don’t respect us.”

The proposed TPP free trade agreement includes 12 countries, with the US at the helm. The other countries are Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Singapore, Vietnam, and Peru. If approved, the deal will encompass nations representing more than 40 percent of the world’s gross domestic product.
However, the agreement has been heavily criticized, including for the lack of transparency during negotiations.

Most of the known draft documents have been revealed by the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, which is trying to disclose as much of the agreement as possible before it is adopted.

One of the recently leaked chapters from the TPP reveals that firms would allegedly be allowed to sue the countries they are operating in via private courts, steering clear of national jurisdictions.

Supporters of the TPP argue that the deal will open up new markets for American products, but critics have raised issues, including currency manipulation, environmental protections and internet privacy. A common argument against the treaty is that American people will not be the beneficiaries of this agreement since domestic jobs are likely to be cut.




Continued - TPP trade deal ‘a disaster,’ other countries will ‘dupe’ US – Donald Trump (http://rt.com/usa/257377-tpp-deal-trump-criticism/)

Natural Citizen
06-09-2015, 04:30 PM
Major TTIP vote at European Parliament postponed due to 'political divisions'...





http://cdn.rt.com/files/news/40/f7/b0/00/4.si.jpg
Reuters / Wolfgang Rattay

A key vote on the controversial TTIP resolution was postponed by European Parliament last minute on Tuesday. While a large number of amendments have been cited as the reason for the delay, some believe the "mounting public pressure" is "bearing fruit."

The plenary Wednesday vote on Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) resolution was postponed by the European Parliament's president on Tuesday evening. The vote on the controversial report following the ongoing EU-US TTIP trade and investment negotiations will not take place "in view of the fact that more than 200 amendments and requests for split or separate votes have been tabled," President of the European Parliament Martin Schulz announced.

A Wednesday vote was expected greenlight the EU's negotiating position on a free trade deal with the United States, Politico reported. Although Parliament’s resolution backing the European Commission in the talks is not essential at this stage, it's considered important for the project's success. Parliamentary leaders are still said to be holding the TTIP debate on Wednesday, but a new date for the vote has not been set.

READ MORE: EU drops controls on dangerous chemicals after TTIP pressure from US – report (http://rt.com/news/261213-dangerous-chemicals-ttip-talks)

Reacting to the decision, some believe the "European Parliament's establishment is in panic" over TTIP resolution. The vote "will reveal the clear divisions within the larger political groups on the controversial EU-US negotiations," Greens/EFA trade spokesperson Yannick Jadot said in a statement, adding that an administrative procedure was used to "prevent these divisions from being put on the record."

Calling this alleged division a "major turnaround" from a previous vote on the issue two years ago, Jadot said the delay "shows that the significant and mounting public pressure is bearing fruit." He added that his party will continue to raise concerns over TTIP.

On Monday, a European Citizens' Initiative "Stop TTIP" reached a new record number of signatures, with two million people having signed the document, UK think tank Global Justice Now said, adding that the initiative is "the largest" since the introduction of the instrument in 2012.

The large number of amendments "reflects just how controversial and contested this toxic trade deal has become," director of Global Justice Now Nick Dearden said on Tuesday. "MEPs know that the people of Europe do not want the introduction of secret corporate courts," he said.

In May, senior UN official and human rights campaigner Alfred de Zayas called for the TTIP talks between Europe and the US to be halted, as there have been fears that the system of courts used by corporations in the negotiations would bypass human rights. UK's general trade union GMB has also warned against the deal, saying that Britain could be flooded with harmful currently banned chemicals if the TTIP resolution at the parliament is signed.

READ MORE: ‘Post-democracy’: TTIP talks could undermine human rights - UN official (http://rt.com/uk/255773-un-ttip-human-rights)

TTIP is part of the so-called "T-treaty trinity," which also includes the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Trade in Services Agreement (TiSA). Last week, WikiLeaks published (http://rt.com/news/264745-wikileaks-secret-tisa-documents) a number of secret documents related to the latter agreement, which has been also negotiated behind closed doors between the US, EU and over 20 WTO members.




Continued - Major TTIP vote at European Parliament postponed due to 'political divisions' (http://rt.com/news/266107-ttip-vote-parliament-postponed/)

Source Note:

Information presented on this website is considered public information (unless otherwise noted in material) and may be distributed or copied for non-commercial (personal, educational, research etc.) purposes.