US
House passes standalone fast track bill giving president more
authority in TPP talks
18
June, 2015
The
US House has passed Trade Promotion Authority bill that boost
presidential authority in negotiating trade deals. This version of
the legislation is not linked to any other bill.
It
was passed around noon today with a vote of 218-208.
The
sister legislation to the TPA, the Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA),
would provide assistance to workers who lose jobs as a consequence of
the trade deals and foreign competition. It was easily defeated in
the House last week. Initially lawmakers were set to vote once again
on the TAA this week, but on Thursday they agreed to vote again on
standalone TPA. Though the TPA and the TAA were passed the Senate,
the TPA will now return to the Senate in its standalone form.
Obama
has requested “fast-track” authority to negotiate the
Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership (TTiP) deals. Republican lawmakers back both
initiatives, but the President’s own party is opposed.
The
vote was split along partisan lines, with Republicans overwhelmingly
voting in favor at 190-50, and Democrats being strongly against with
a 28-158.
The
sister legislation to the TPA, the Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA),
would provide assistance to workers who lose jobs as a consequence of
the trade deals and foreign competition. It was easily defeated in
the House last week. Initially lawmakers were set to vote once again
on the TAA this week, but on Thursday they agreed to vote again on
standalone TPA. Though the TPA and the TAA were passed the Senate,
the TPA will now return to the Senate in its standalone form favored
by Republicans.
The
TPP, which seems to be close to coming into existences, covers
countries which together comprise 40 percent of the global economy.
President Obama has promoted the deal as a way of solidifying the
economic relating between the United States fast-growing Asian
countries.
Republicans
in the House of Representatives sought to resurrect Barack Obama’s
trade agenda and plans for a Pacific Rim free trade zone, joining
with a small band of pro-trade Democrats to vote to grant the
president the “fast-track” authority he needs to conclude such
pacts – meaning that the president will be empowered to ask
Congress for a simple yes-or-no vote on trade agreements without any
debate or amendments.
“This
is a vote to re-establish America’s credibility,” said
Representative Paul Ryan (R-Wisconsin), the former Vice Presidential
candidate that ran against the Obama who has now has been championing
the President’s favored the legislation in the House.
Representative
Nancy Pelosi (D-California) had different thoughts on the matter,
despite being a top Democrat and traditional ally to the President.
She said that she and members of the party were against the TPP, not
against the president himself.
“This
has been a longstanding dispute within the Democratic party having
nothing to do with the president but everything to do with our
bosses, our constituents,” she
said.
"It’s hard to imagine #TPP passing muster when we consider values other than economic growth." http://t.co/mlXRNOILk5pic.twitter.com/3q7G1qkKDu
— Feminist Majority (@FemMajority) June 16, 2015
Senator
Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) is a vocal critic of the deal
because of a provision called Investor-State Dispute Settlement
(ISDS). The provision would mediate disputes between foreign
investors and a government, which Warren believes will inhibit
regulation and pose a threat to American sovereignty.
ISDS
is designed to address the problem of uneven national economic
policies in an interconnected global economy. Foreign investors have
to deal with the risk of having their investments seized if and when
a new government comes to power and decides to nationalize the
businesses of foreign industries. While this isn’t a risk in a
stable company with a strong judicial system like the United States,
it is a genuine risk in other countries without such stability. ISDS
is an arbitration process that uses sanctions to put pressure on
governments who have unfairly seized property.
That
means that ISDS would allow foreign investors to make complaints
against the United States, which is a point that many take issue
with. Warren argues that the agreement could “tilt
the playing field in the United States further in favor of big
multinational corporations.”
Many
opponents of the TPP worry that multinational corporations could
argue that environmental, financial and minimum wage regulations
could qualify for a dispute under ISDS, potentially costing the
United States expensive damages.
Also
controversial are secretly negotiated provisions called
the “Healthcare Annex,” which was only seen by the public when
they were published by WikiLeaks.
The
secret TPP negotiations showed that an addition to the do has been
seeking to regulate state schemes for medicines and medical devices.
According to WikiLeaks, it “forces
healthcare authorities to give big pharmaceutical companies more
information about national decisions on public access to medicine."
Legal
privileges such as patents are instituted in to encourage research
and development to encourage pharmaceutical company to develop new
drugs without worrying about someone immediately copying them. These
privileges expire eventually, allowing generic versions of the drugs
to come to market.
Nearly every leaked TPP document has shown the Obama administration pushing a pro-pharmaceutical company agenda @C3glz @Gion_Gion— Call me Ishmael (@fqxjv) June 12, 2015
"The
TPP has been lobbied by large pharmaceutical company to include these
provisions to further delay the introduction of generic drugs.
The
leaked TPP document "shows that the pact could expose Medicare
to pharmaceutical company attacks and constrain future policy
reforms, including the ability of the US government to curb rising
and unsustainable drug prices," consumer
rights advocacy group Public Citizen said in a statement.
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