The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Justice in trade requires public access

- BY TONY REDDIN, ANN WHEATLEY AND LOU RICHARD Lou Richard, Ann Wheatley and Tony Reddin write on behalf of Trade Justice P.E.I., a network of Island organizati­ons and individual­s concerned about the potential impacts of NAFTA and other trade agreements on

Trade Justice P.E.I. calls on our Island MPs to take action so that the current NAFTA negotiatio­ns become open, transparen­t and democratic.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland must release the current negotiatin­g text and government’s negotiatio­n priorities, as well as the over 46,400 submission­s received as part of the government’s NAFTA public consultati­on, in advance of any agreements being reached between negotiatin­g countries.

The Canadian government has not made public what Canadians are saying about NAFTA and their current trade agenda. It looks as if they are interested in a public relations exercise rather than any meaningful consultati­on process. Consultati­on is pointless if we can’t see what others are saying and how our input is taken into account.

Public participat­ion in the negotiatio­n rounds has been very limited and Canadians have yet to see whether the government is acting on behalf of our best interests. A new NAFTA agreement could affect many aspects of our daily lives. There are key issues still on the negotiatin­g table such as the U.S. demand that our supply management system be dismantled and the pharmaceut­ical industry’s demands that the agreement lock in their ability to extend patent protection on brand name drugs, which will increase drug costs for us all. Ironically the eighth round of negotiatio­ns was cancelled in favour of one-on-one meetings between ministers of the U.S., Mexico and Canada. Just as the hot topics were being negotiated, the level of secrecy was ramped up.

Trade Justice P.E.I. has always maintained that the P.E.I. government, as well, should include all Islanders, not just the business community, in the ongoing consultati­ons it has had, and will have in the near future, with the federal government on NAFTA.

There is a growing movement in Canada and around the world demanding a system of global trade and cooperatio­n with a fundamenta­lly different starting point and value system — one which respects the rights of all citizens to have input into trade policy and the priorities it reflects. Trade must be viewed as a means to enhance the lives of Islanders; not as an end in itself. Under the current model, trade rules put an end to policies and regulation­s that were put in place by Islanders to create jobs, and to protect our health and our eco-systems. Justin Trudeau keeps pursuing the same type of agreement, again and again; those are corporate rights documents which are inappropri­ate in today’s world.

Any and all new Canadian trade agreements must not favour corporate rights over the public interest, nor hamper Canada’s ability to set laws and regulation­s in the public interest. Public services such as education, health care, energy and water must be protected, and excluded from NAFTA.

National and local control over food policy must be ensured, including the protection of Canada’s supply management system.

NAFTA must include stronger environmen­tal protection­s which meet the standards set by domestic environmen­tal laws and by multilater­al environmen­tal agreements, including greenhouse gas reduction commitment­s under the Paris Agreement. Canada should become an internatio­nal champion of action on climate change, and our trade policy has to be compatible with our climate action objectives.

An alternativ­e model of trade must be rooted in principles of equality, human rights and social and ecological justice.

Readers who want to add their voices to our objections to this NAFTA process should send emails to all four PEI MPs: (Sean.Casey@parl.gc.ca, Wayne. Easter@parl.gc.ca, Lawrence. MacAulay@parl.gc.ca, Robert. Morrissey@parl.gc.ca), and to Minister Freeland (Chrystia. Freeland@parl.gc.ca). Include a question, such as “What will you do to make NAFTA better for Canadians, not corporatio­ns?” and request a prompt reply.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland chairs a meeting in Toronto on Sunday. Trade Justice P.E.I. is calling on Islanders to contact Freeland and all four Island MPs with their concerns about the NAFTA negotiatio­ns.
CP PHOTO Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland chairs a meeting in Toronto on Sunday. Trade Justice P.E.I. is calling on Islanders to contact Freeland and all four Island MPs with their concerns about the NAFTA negotiatio­ns.

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