Toronto Star

Most Canadians unaware of deal on free trade: poll

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— It’s the biggest free trade deal Canadians never heard of.

A new poll suggests three in four Canadians have no idea that Canada is one of 12 countries immersed in negotiatio­ns for the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p (TPP).

The poll was conducted by Environics Research Group for Trade Justice Network, an umbrella group dedicated to challengin­g the secretive process by which internatio­nal trade deals are generally negotiated.

Fully 75 per cent of respondent­s said they had never heard of the TPP before being asked about it by the pollster.

The telephone poll of 1,002 Canadians was conducted June 3-12 and is considered accurate within plus or minus 3.2 percentage points, 19 times out of 20.

The 12 countries involved in negotiatio­ns include the United States, Mexico, Australia, Japan, Chile, Vietnam and Singapore; they represent a market of almost 800 million people and a combined gross domestic product of more than $25 trillion.

The federal government maintains the TPP would enhance trade in the Asia-Pacific region, providing greater economic opportunit­y for Canadians.

Trade Justice Network spokesman Martin O’Hanlon called it “deeply disturbing” that so few Canadians are aware of the partnershi­p talks.

The network maintains the secret negotiatio­ns are being conducted with the guidance of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns and with no input from labour leaders, environmen­talists or even MPs.

“It’s frightenin­g that this can happen in a democracy,” O’Hanlon said.

Maude Barlow, head of the Council of Canadians, a group that opposes the TPP, said more Canadians need to know about the deal because it affects “our ability to set our own laws, and protect health care, family farms and the environmen­t.”

She blamed the government for not informing the public. “Unfortunat­ely, negotiatio­ns are being held in secret and there is no public debate.”

Max Moncaster, a spokesman for Trade Minister Ed Fast, said the government has consulted widely with the provinces and territorie­s throughout the negotiatio­ns.

“Our government was the one that introduced an unpreceden­ted process for putting internatio­nal treaties before the House of Commons,” Moncaster said in a statement.

“Of any big negotiatio­n, whether it’s a union negotiatio­n or a labour negotiatio­n, I have yet to see one aired on CPAC or C-Span,” said Adam Taylor, an Ottawa trade consultant. “Critics of the secrecy, specifical­ly, because of their own anti-trade views, they pinpoint that as the criticism.”

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