US Congress Democrat and Republican oppose TPP Deal
Media Release November 14, 2013
US Congress Democrat and Republican oppose Trans-Pacific Trade Deal as leaked text shows deep divisions over US proposals for higher medicine prices
Cross-party Congressional opposition to legislation which would speed up approval of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) shows the deal could unravel in the House of Representatives of the US Congress,” Dr. Patricia Ranald, Convener of the Australian Fair Trade and Investment Network, said today.
At the same time the text
of the intellectual property chapter was posted on
Wikileaks Twenty-seven US House of
Representative Republicans and 151 Democrats have today
released letters proclaiming their opposition to giving
President Obama “trade promotion authority” for the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). A backgrounder and links to
the the Congressional letters are
athttp://www.ftamalaysia.org/article.php?aid=331. “The
Trade Promotion Authority legislation allows the President
to submit trade deals to Congress for a yes or no vote
without any amendments within 90 days. This is needed to
give other countries confidence that any trade deal they
reach with the United States will be approved by Congress.
But months of negotiations have failed to produce a Bill,”
said Dr. Ranald.
The Republican Letter states: “We are
strong supporters of American trade expansion. We are also
strong supporters of the U.S. Constitution. Article I-8 of
the Constitution gives Congress exclusive authority to set
the terms of trade. …we do not agree to cede our
constitutional authority to the executive through an
approval of a request for “Fast Track Trade Promotion
Authority.” The Democrat letter also opposes trade
promotion authority and outlines their concerns over a lack
of congressional consultation in the TPP talks. It
states:“. Many have raised concerns relating to reports
about the agreement’s proposed content…Twentieth Century
“Fast Track” is simply not appropriate for 21st Century
agreements and must be replaced. The United States cannot
afford another trade agreement that replicates the mistakes
of the past. We can and must do better.” “The US is
pressuring Australia and other countries to agree to extreme
demands like rights for investors to sue government and
stronger patents for higher medicine prices by the end of
the year. But the deal lacks support in its own Congress.
The Australian government should not agree to an arbitrary
deadline, should take more time for public consultation and
release the text of the TPP for public and Parliamentary
scrutiny before it is signed by Cabinet”, said Dr.
Ranald. Patricia
Ranald ENDS