Government blocks public hearing on trade agreement
Government blocks public hearing on trade agreement
The government has blocked a request for a select committee hearing on the implications of the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement.
A
parliamentary petition The groups include the
New Zealand Council of Trade Unions and individual unions
including TEU, as well as Oxfam, the NZ Public Health
Association and the NZ Society of Authors. TEU has
regularly expressed concern The
Foreign Affairs Defence and Trade select committee only
agreed that the first signatory, NZCTU President Helen
Kelly, could present additional written information. "This
hearing would have been an opportunity for those who support
the agreement to make their case and for those with concerns
to be heard before the negotiations proceed any further",
said Robert Reid, who signed the petition on behalf of the
National Distribution Union.
NZCTU President Helen Kelly
expressed concern that the select committee's action
"reinforces widespread criticism that the government is not
allowing this hugely important agreement to informed public
scrutiny before the deal is signed and sealed." "We have
many concerns about the effects of the proposed agreement,
including on the cost of health care and public health such
as tobacco control, development of well-paid jobs through
use of government buying power to favour local firms, and
the powers it gives to overseas investors to sue the
government." ENDS
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