By Robert Romano
Pee-yew. Or better yet, PU — a
Pacific Union — is the number one reason to oppose the 12-nation Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) trade deal,
warns U.S. Senator Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.).
“This new structure is known as the
Trans-Pacific Partnership Commission — a Pacific Union — which meets, appoints
unelected bureaucrats, adopts rules, and changes the agreement after adoption,”
said
Sessions in a Nov. 5 statement describing the 5,554-page trade agreement.
Here, Sessions is referencing
Article 27 of the TPP, entitled, “Administrative
and Institutional Provisions,” that
establishes the Trans-Pacific Partnership Commission that will have the power
to promulgate rules pursuant to the agreement, implement those rules, and
interpret those rules.
That will be legislative, executive,
and judicial powers all wrapped into an unaccountable, multinational commission
styled after the European Commission — with no separation of powers whatsoever.
And the commission will be
implementing the largest trade agreement in history regulating about 40 percent
of the global economy.
In other words, the trade deal
stinks. Sessions is right.
As
Americans for Limited Government President (ALG) Rick Manning described it in a
statement, the TPP, “will continue to outsource
American jobs overseas, fail to do anything about currency manipulation, and
once adopted, will create an international, unelected commission with broad
authority to implement and interpret the agreement without any votes of
Congress.”
“These regulatory and judicial
powers of the commission will be akin to rogue agencies and activist courts in
the U.S., that regularly issue edicts contrary to the law passed by elected
representatives,” Manning added.
Why would Congress vote to weaken
the economy that already has trouble competing globally because of the high
cost of doing business in the U.S., and create an international commission to
oversee it?
Another problem, Manning noted, is
that even when it comes to amending the agreement or allowing other countries
to opt into the agreement, it is not very clear whether that will require votes
of Congress.
Said Manning, “While the U.S. Trade
Representative provided a
chapter summary on its final provisions that
it would take votes of Congress to amend the agreement and to allow other
countries to dock into the agreement, the
text of the agreement is not nearly so explicit, leaving
significant concerns about how the trade agreement will function and whether
U.S. representative democracy will be meaningful in its wake.”
Manning said Obama needs to go back
to the drawing board before anything is approved, saying, “Before any agreement
is ratified, the language must be much stronger to make the need for Congress’
approval clear. A chapter summary is not the agreement itself. The danger of a
runaway commission is too great for this to be ignored.”
As it stands, President Barack Obama
has signaled to Congress that he will be signing the agreement as required
under the Trade Act of 2015 that provides for the trade agreement’s
consideration. The law requires that Obama notify Congress at least 90 days
prior to signing it.
Meaning, Obama could be signing the
agreement as soon as early February, right in the heart of the first in the
nation presidential primaries and caucuses.
After Obama signs the agreement,
then he has 60 days to provide Congress with a list of required changes to U.S.
law to implement the agreement.
And, then Congress must consider the
agreement on and up or down basis. Members will either take or leave it. They
should leave it.
After all, the last thing we need is
an unelected, supranational commission regulating the U.S. economy from afar
without any votes in Congress to implement a trade agreement that appears on
its surface to weaken U.S. competitiveness globally.
As ALG’s Manning noted, “since
Congress is forbidden from amending the agreement under terms of the fast track
trade authority granted President Obama earlier this year, and the agreement
will not be fixed later, the only recourse for members who share this concern
is to simply vote no.”
Or else, members of Congress might
find out that the trade deal is not the only thing that stinks — so will their
poll numbers headed into the 2016 elections.
Robert Romano is the senior editor
of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2015/11/why-the-pacific-trade-deal-stinks/
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