Media Release: TPP Watch Wednesday, 19 January 2011
“Release the Text” Campaign Demands End to Secrecy in Trade Talks
TPPWatch, a coalition of New Zealand unions, groups and individuals who oppose the proposed Trans Pacific Partnership
free trade agreement has launched a “release the text” sign-on letter to Prime Minister John Key, via its webpage TPPWatch.org.
The trade talks are currently taking place in secret, despite many commentators across the political spectrum condemning
the secrecy surrounding to the Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement (TPPA) negotiations in Auckland last month.
“We are calling on the government to tell Kiwis what it is proposing to do in our name in these negotiations, and permit
an open public debate on the proposed deal,” said TPPWatch spokesperson Andrew Campbell, the campaigns director for the
finance workers union Finsec.
“This trade agreement could increase the cost of pharmaceuticals, limit government controls over tobacco sales and give
new rights to foreign owners over land and strategic assets. We deserve to know what is going on,” said Campbell.
“The idea that binding and enforceable restrictions on future governments can be signed, sealed and delivered behind our
backs is what happens in a dictatorship, not a democracy. If the government is so confident the deal is a good one then
it should let us know what it is negotiating” said Campbell.
Campaigns are being launched across the TPPA countries to cast daylight on this deal, starting with release of the draft
texts and country papers.
The sign on letter echoes broader demands from the peak union bodies in almost all the TPPA countries that all working texts are published after each round of negotiations, along with
government position papers, on a neutral electronic forum that allows for a frank exchange of information and views.
“Three decades of free markets and free trade deals show that while big business tends to be the winner, workers and
poor communities, who have no say in the process, pay the price. These secret deals have to stop.”
“We call on the government to secure agreement to basic rules for transparency during the next TPPA talks in Chile in
mid-February,” said Campbell.
ENDS