Same as the old boss: Justin Trudeau ready to sign Harper's EU free trade deal

B00Mer

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Sep 6, 2008
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Same as the old boss: Justin Trudeau ready to sign Harper's EU free trade deal



CETA is a Canada/EU "free trade agreement," negotiated in secret and containing the notorious "Investor-State Dispute Settlement" (ISDS) clause, which lets corporations sue governments in confidential tribunals in order to force them to repeal their environmental, safety and labour laws.
If that sounds familiar, it should: CETA was negotiated in the same corrupt, secretive process that the old Harper government deployed for the Trans Pacific Partnership and the Canada/China deal.
Newly elected Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, arch-rival to Stephen Harper, has gone on record promising business-as-usual in passing and enacting CETA, with all of Harper's crony-capitalist gifts to multinational industry intact.
Lucky for Canada, many EU governments are deeply sceptical of CETA and may block it from the other side. But it's a timely reminder that having a tattoo and smoking weed doesn't make you anti-establishment: opposing the establishment makes you anti-establishment.
"The number of MEPs opposing ISDS is much higher than the number of MEPs opposing CETA," he continued.
"ISDS is the thorn in the flesh of CETA. This reflects a high degree of social mobilisation in a few large member states of the European Union," Moisa said. "The only way to solve the problem is to confront it head-on."
CBC News reported Thursday that EU officials saw an opening in Canada's change in government, and went back to Canadian negotiators looking for a rework of the ISDS provisions in CETA.
A proposal now on the table would create a new court system for arbitrating trade disputes under CETA — something the EU characterizes as not re-opening negotiations, but simply refining the legal text under the guise of the ongoing scrubbing process.
Justin Trudeau to talk over troubled trade deal with European Parliament head [Janyce McGregor/CBC News]
 

FiveParadox

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Dec 20, 2005
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Same as the old boss: Justin Trudeau ready to sign Harper's EU free trade deal



CETA is a Canada/EU "free trade agreement," negotiated in secret and containing the notorious "Investor-State Dispute Settlement" (ISDS) clause, which lets corporations sue governments in confidential tribunals in order to force them to repeal their environmental, safety and labour laws.
If that sounds familiar, it should: CETA was negotiated in the same corrupt, secretive process that the old Harper government deployed for the Trans Pacific Partnership and the Canada/China deal.
Newly elected Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, arch-rival to Stephen Harper, has gone on record promising business-as-usual in passing and enacting CETA, with all of Harper's crony-capitalist gifts to multinational industry intact.
Lucky for Canada, many EU governments are deeply sceptical of CETA and may block it from the other side. But it's a timely reminder that having a tattoo and smoking weed doesn't make you anti-establishment: opposing the establishment makes you anti-establishment.
"The number of MEPs opposing ISDS is much higher than the number of MEPs opposing CETA," he continued.
"ISDS is the thorn in the flesh of CETA. This reflects a high degree of social mobilisation in a few large member states of the European Union," Moisa said. "The only way to solve the problem is to confront it head-on."
CBC News reported Thursday that EU officials saw an opening in Canada's change in government, and went back to Canadian negotiators looking for a rework of the ISDS provisions in CETA.
A proposal now on the table would create a new court system for arbitrating trade disputes under CETA — something the EU characterizes as not re-opening negotiations, but simply refining the legal text under the guise of the ongoing scrubbing process.
Justin Trudeau to talk over troubled trade deal with European Parliament head [Janyce McGregor/CBC News]

This isn't really a full disclosure of the Liberals' position.

The Government of Canada wants to be able to consult Canadians on the future of the Trans-Pacific Partnership; however, to provide enough time to have that conversation, the TPP needs to be signed very soon so that Canada is not dropped as a signatory. Even once the agreement is signed, it still needs to be ratified through enabling legislation; this means that, if the Liberals determine, in consultation with Canadians, that we need to back out of the TPP, the ratification stage is where that would happen.

Refusing to sign the TPP, so soon into a new Government, would be presupposing what Canadians are going to have to say.
 

PoliticalNick

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Mar 8, 2011
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This isn't really a full disclosure of the Liberals' position.

The Government of Canada wants to be able to consult Canadians on the future of the Trans-Pacific Partnership; however, to provide enough time to have that conversation, the TPP needs to be signed very soon so that Canada is not dropped as a signatory. Even once the agreement is signed, it still needs to be ratified through enabling legislation; this means that, if the Liberals determine, in consultation with Canadians, that we need to back out of the TPP, the ratification stage is where that would happen.

Refusing to sign the TPP, so soon into a new Government, would be presupposing what Canadians are going to have to say.

Unless you are Kevin O'Leary or in his circles signing the TPP or any other such deal is detrimental to Canadians and our right to self governance. Only a corporatist or a moron would think any different.
 

PoliticalNick

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Mar 8, 2011
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Good. Trade makes us wealthier.

Trade is good. Trade the citizens don't control is not so good. The TPP and CETA give international corporations control over not just trade but the regulations and laws controlling it and allow them to claim $billions in compensation if we were to stop them importing anything even if it is an inferior product or poses health risks or dangers to people or the environment.

Even a broken watch is right at least once a day.

Usually right twice a day but who's counting
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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TPP isn't going away. We are 15 years into building the infrastructure long overdue in Western Canada.

The EU deal allows expansion of Eastern Infrastructure.

We lucky. Open to the Globe.

Call it NAFTA2...Non American Free Trade Agreements