TPP Protestors to Foreign Negotiators: “Don’t Let U.S. Bully You”
When negotiators from the 12 countries in the Trans-Pacific Partnership gathered this week in Salt Lake City, Utah, they were met by the “TPP Welcoming Committee,” a coalition of environmental, social justice, and labor groups who did their best to show that there is opposition to the deal in the United States.
Foreign TPP negotiators thanked the protestors for their work.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership would affect laws and regulations involved in fields including agriculture, media, and medicine, and would cover . While the leadership of both mainstream political parties in the United States supports the deal, advocates of environmental and social justice, as well as some elected representatives, have criticized it.
The Sierra Club has said the TPP would result in an “.” Public Citizen called it a “.” And, in a letter signed by more than 130 Democratic members of Congress, representatives Rosa DeLauro and George Miller as “weakening … Buy America provisions, providing extraordinary investor-state privileges, and restricting access to lifesaving medicines in developing nations.”
One of the goals of this week’s protests was to raise the profile of the deal. The text of the TPP remains secret to everyone except the national negotiating teams and more than 600 corporate “advisers.”
That secrecy was dealt a blow last week, when Wikileaks published the TPP’s . The 95-page-long leaked document revealed that the United States’ negotiators are pushing for a number of policies opposed by most or all of the others—on issues such as the patenting of plants and animals, harsher fines for those accused of copyright violations, and the ability to prosecute individuals who use or share copyrighted content by accident.
As the Washington Post showed in a detailed, the leaked text seems to demonstrate that the United States has become isolated in the TPP talks.
Interactions in Salt Lake City this week between protestors and negotiators from other countries gave the same impression.
Bill Moyer is executive director of the Backbone Campaign, one of the organizations that participated in the actions. Moyer says that when some of those foreign delegates stepped outside of the hotel to view or photograph anti-TPP slogans that activists had projected on the hotel wall, they thanked the protestors for their work.
Then, at another point in the evening, Moyer shouted “Don’t allow yourself to be bullied by the United States” to a group of negotiators from Latin American and Asian countries, and they responded by saying, “We’re doing our best!”
Organizers used a variety of inventive tactics to express their feelings about the deal throughout the week. On Wednesday and Thursday nights, they used light cannons to project messages onto the walls of the Grand America Hotel, where the negotiations were being held. On Wednesday, they suspended a 75-foot-tall banner outside the hotel using weather balloons, and about 30 people marched to the hotel’s entrance while banging pots and pans.
“We completely undermined their attempts to keep the TPP invisible in the United States and elsewhere,” Moyer said. “We overcame the barriers of short notice and geography to show the country, the world, and the international delegates that resistance to the TPP is growing in the United States.”
Jesse Fruhwirth, a volunteer with the Salt Lake City-based climate justice group Peaceful Uprising, said the TPP is relevant to climate politics, too. The agreement is likely to make the permitting process for oil and gas drilling easier—bad news for those working to stop or mitigate climate change.
The issue of extraction is especially sensitive in Utah, which possesses valuable gas deposits as well as tar sands.
On Tuesday, as the local Bureau of Land Management for oil and gas leases, TPP opponents joined members of Peaceful Uprising and Utah Tar Sands Resistance in a rally at the auction site.
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