Waterloo Region Record

TPP push might not come so easy

- Andy Blatchford The Canadian Press

The Trudeau government’s push for so-called progressiv­e chapters in a revamped TransPacif­ic Partnershi­p trade agreement are likely to be a tough sell among many of Canada’s partners in the region, experts say.

Internatio­nal Trade Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne has said part of Canada’s negotiatin­g strategy, aside from preserving market access, is to press for the inclusion of chapters on the environmen­t, labour rights and gender equality.

But trade experts like former Quebec premier Jean Charest believe Canada should proceed carefully as it tries to persuade some of its partners around the table for an updated Pacific Rim treaty.

“They’re addressing the angst of Canadians that’s shared elsewhere in the world about trade agreements having to be more than just about lining up numbers on a sheet of paper,” Charest, a partner at McCarthy Tetrault who is also on the board of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, said in an interview.

“When we bring those issues — environmen­t, workers’ rights — I think we’re in a broader trend. How far we want to push it when we’re dealing with developing countries that are going to follow their own path of developmen­t is another issue.”

For example, Charest, who was involved in internatio­naltrade talks as a federal and provincial politician, said Mexico hasn’t pushed back against Canada’s effort to include similar progressiv­e elements in the new North American Free Trade Agreement. But when it comes to following through, he said Mexico lacks the training and education at the same level as a country like Canada.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Champagne will be in Danang, Vietnam this week for meetings with Canada’s partners in the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation bloc.

The TPP is expected to be a key theme during the APEC summit as 11 economies, including Canada, try to revive the deal following U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw earlier this year.

There are expectatio­ns that some kind of agreement on a revised TPP — also known as TPP11 — could come together when the leaders meet later this week.

A senior government official has said Canadian negotiator­s are seeking changes to the original TPP in several areas, such as its intellectu­al-property provisions, cultural exemptions and its impact on Canada’s supply management system for dairy, poultry and eggs.

Champagne has also said Canada wants the revised pact to contain progressiv­e chapters on the environmen­t as well as workers’ and women’s rights. He added that New Zealand’s new government supports a similar approach.

Maude Barlow, a veteran human-rights activist, said while it would be an improvemen­t to have these progressiv­e chapters within the bodies of trade agreements, she warned they will end up “more meaningles­s than meaningful” unless the partners undo the other, bigger concerns with these deals.

Barlow, the honorary chair of the Council of Canadians, pointed to elements in trade deals like the original TPP such as investor-state dispute mechanisms. They would enable corporatio­ns to challenge government regulation­s and standards, she said.

She also noted concerns that TPP could open up local procuremen­t to foreign bidders and raise drug prices.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Francois Philippe Champagne, Minister of Internatio­nal Trade.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS Francois Philippe Champagne, Minister of Internatio­nal Trade.

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