Trump talks of re-joining TPPA, Government must tell NZers if the TPPA-11 is its bottom line
Yesterday, US President Donald Trump instructed his National Economic Council Director and the United States Trade
Representative to look into joining the Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement that he quit just over a year ago. This
follows his earlier suggestion that he would consider doing so, provided its terms were made more beneficial to the US,
according to Auckland University law professor Jane Kelsey.
‘Labour and New Zealand First, having opposed the original TPPA, justified their u-turn by claiming the TPPA-11 is a
significantly different deal. Now they face the prospect of being asked by the US to go even further’.
Parliamentary submissions close next week on the revised Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement on Trans-Pacific
Partnership between the remaining eleven parties, in which 23 of the original provisions have been suspended.
‘It won’t be good enough for the government to say the entry of the US is hypothetical or that it can’t show its hand
ahead of such negotiations. Parliament is about to consider an international agreement whose fundamental terms may be
about to change.’
‘The government needs to tell New Zealanders if it would veto the reactivation of the suspended items, such as those
that would gut Pharmac’s bargaining power with the pharmaceutical industry, and whether would it even consider
discussing additional concessions to the US beyond the original TPPA.’