Brent Labour councillor Claudia Hector has said she will not vote Labour in the European elections on May 22nd because of Labour's lack of concern over the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). The TTIP would open up public services to privatisation and un dermine workers' rights. In a Twitter exchange Cllr Hector expressed frustration at Labour Mep Calude Moraes' failure to engage on the issue:
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At the Green Party's Spring Conference, leader Natalie Bennett had this to say about the TTIP:
TTIP is a huge
threat to hard-fought-standards for the quality and safety of our food,
the sources of our energy and our privacy and risks undoing decades
worth of EU progress on issues like worker’s rights.”
Bennett stated
that the proposed deal threatened to “blow apart the power of our
democratic decision making.” She raised the spectre of the Edward
Snowden revelations to demonstrate that the US state was “profoundly
untrustworthy”.
It’s not
surprising, really, when we hear Lib Dems trumpeting the proposed US-EU
free trade deal as some kind of economic saviour. The Lib Dems are the
lapdogs of corporate Europe, while the Tories are its war horses. In
their support for the trade deal, the Lib Dems are reiterating the
propaganda of multinational companies interested only in swallowing up
new markets, consuming new societies whole.
Let’s make no
mistake, the proposed free trade deal is a huge threat to
hard-fought-for standards for the quality and safety of our food, the
sources of our energy, workers’ rights and our privacy. One of the great
contributions of the EU is to set a foundation of these standards – not
good enough, not high enough – but a start. The proposed free trade
deal is a supertanker of dynamite that would blow those foundations
apart.
And more, it
would blow apart the power of our democratic decision making. The deal
provides corporations with new rights to sue the Government for
legislating in the public interest – that’s definitely not acting for
the common good.
The banking lobby
is so happy with the financial services proposals it has said that the
text could have come straight from its own brochure – that’s acting in
the interests of the 1%, not the common good.
And there’s more.
It’s a deal being proposed with a state that the bravery of Edward
Snowden demonstrated is profoundly untrustworthy. Yet there’s no
openness – no democracy – about the negotiations: the mandate that the
EU Council gave to the Commission is still classified as ‘secret’.