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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsCaving to Public Pressure, EU Lawmakers Delay Key TTIP Vote
In a move that campaigners say highlights the power of public pressure, European lawmakers this week postponed a debate and vote on a key and highly contentious resolution within the pending Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), stalling the advancement of the world's biggest so-called free trade agreement.
On Tuesday, European Parliament President Martin Schulz decided to delay the provision vote and on Wednesday Parliament members, known as as MEPs, voted to push back debate, as well.
Growing public opposition to the controversial trade agreement has split European lawmakers, with those on the left arguing that the pact will only further entrench corporate power, as well as water down European food, pesticide, labor, pharmaceutical, and other regulations in order to remove so-called "trade barriers."
Following the 183 to 181 vote on Wednesday, Irish MEP Sean Kelly said, "The votes postponement is a response to the enormous pressure from civil society," in reference to an anti-TTIP petition, already signed by 2 million Europeans.
European trade negotiators already hold the 'fast track' powers currently being sought by U.S. President Barack Obama, and therefore MEPs only have the ability to veto the final text. The vote was supposed to establish their first formal position on the agreement.
Sam Cossar-Gilbert, economic justice and resisting neoliberalism coordinator at Friends of the Earth International, explained in a column Wednesday, "This profound change in public sentiment is because these deals no longer have much to do with trade. Rather they are about reshaping and limiting the ability of governments to regulate in the public interest."The next round of TTIP negotiations will be held in Brussels, Belgium from July 13 to 17.
Meanwhile, opponents say they will continue to mobilize until the European Parliament rejects the pact outright "because it is a threat to our democracy as well as protection standards for labour rights, the environment and public health."
As Cossar-Gilbert concludes: "It remains uncertain if our elected representatives will cave in to pressure from corporate interests or defend the rights of ordinary citizens and stop these Trojan horse deals. What is certain is that the public is increasingly aware and more involved in discussing the wide-ranging implications of these trade agreementsand that is a big step in the right direction."
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http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/06/10/caving-public-pressure-eu-lawmakers-delay-key-ttip-vote
djean111
(14,255 posts)Public pressure should always trump corporate pressure. There should not BE corporate pressure. This is how thorough the corporate takeover is - when doing what the public wants is called "caving".