http://www.citizen.org/documents/statement-fast-track-motion-fails-senate-may-2015.pdf



For Immediate Release:                                  Contact: Symone
Sanders, [email protected]

May 12, 2015



*Motion to Advance Fast Track Legislation Fails in Senate*

*Statement of Lori Wallach, Director, Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch*



The Fast Track train went off the rails today. The U.S. Senate vote was
supposed to generate momentum for Fast Track in the U.S. House of
Representatives, where it’s in deep trouble, with almost every House
Democrat and a significant bloc of GOP lawmakers opposing it.



The only reason to upend the required procedures for a “revenue bill” and
bring up Fast Track in the Senate first was to get a huge victory to build
momentum in the House. But that strategy backfired and Democrats in the
House remain committed to standing up for their beliefs that the trade
package would do a lot more harm than good.



President Barack Obama would now enjoy broad support for a forward-looking
trade agenda if only he had implemented the reforms he announced as a
candidate, including to “replace” the Fast Track procedure created by
Richard Nixon with a more inclusive, democratic mechanism. Instead,
Congress is unlikely to revive the 1970s Fast Track trade authority Obama
seeks.



Congress has denied Fast Track for all but five of the past 21 years, with
171 Democrats and 71 GOP rejecting President Bill Clinton’s request in
1998. Since 1988, only Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush have
persuaded Congress to delegate Fast Track authority.


Fast Track for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is an especially bad
idea. After six years of negotiations, the text is almost complete. Yet
under the Hatch-Wyden-Ryan Fast Track bill, the pact would remain secret
from the public until 30 days after its text is locked. That the text would
be made public 60 days before the formal signing ceremony is irrelevant,
because it would be too late to fight for needed changes.



The rhetoric being used to sell the trade package is really far off from
the reality of what is in it. It is like being in the twilight zone. Thanks
to WikiLeaks, we know the TPP includes an expanded version of the
investment provisions found in the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) that incentivize the offshoring of high-wage American jobs and the
investor-state dispute settlement system that exposes U.S. policies to
attack in foreign tribunals.



The administration chose to use the weak labor and environmental standards
that President George W. Bush included in his last trade deals. It was the
2007 Peru Free Trade Agreement, not the TPP, that was the first U.S. trade
agreement to have labor and environmental standards in core text
enforceable by the same terms as the commercial provisions. A 2014
Government Accountability Office investigation found these labor and
environmental standards now also used for the TPP failed to improve working
conditions.



What has leaked out already is deeply troubling. Many members of Congress
who – unlike the public – are allowed to read the TPP are warning us that
this is a bad deal.



At Nike, President Obama said that those concerned about the TPP rolling
back food safety, environmental or financial regulation “are making stuff
up” and no trade agreement can do that.



In fact, these rollbacks have happened repeatedly under past pacts. The
“sovereignty” provisions found in Section 8 of the Hatch-Wyden-Ryan Fast
Track bill are nothing new and appear in implementing legislation for past
U.S. trade agreements under which U.S. food safety and environmental
policies have been rolled back already. Examples of rollbacks due to trade
deals include:



·         Gutting rules about importing only food that “meets or exceeds”
U.S. safety standards, so we now import food that does not meet U.S.
standards; and

·         Rolling back environmental laws and regulations – from Clean Air
Act regulations to U.S. labeling of dolphin-safe tuna and more.



Please see the top reasons to oppose Fast Tracking the TPP
<http://www.citizen.org/documents/top-reasons-to-oppose-fast-tracking-tpp.pdf>
and the Myths vs. Facts
<http://www.citizen.org/documents/2015-fast-track-myths.pdf> about the Fast
Track legislation.





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