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by Star Fox
August 01, 2015
from
EyesOpenReport Website
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Star Fox is a U.S.
based journalist who contributes to Eyesopenreport.com.
His works have been
published by recognizable alternative new sites like
GlobalResearch.ca, ActivistPost.com and Intellihub.com. |

Curtis Ellis of World Net
Daily
reports:
Negotiations stalled when national
governments failed to accede to corporatist demands to open
their borders and allow "people, goods, capital and information
to flow freely through the zone," as Japanese Trade Minister
Akira Amari described TPP's goals at a
news
conference Friday evening.
***
Striking a deal over how long to protect data used to develop
biologic drugs was described as the biggest source of
frustration by a source from a non-U.S. negotiating nation.
U.S. drug manufacturers want 12
years, but Australia wants five.
A compromise of seven or eight
years is seen as a possible compromise.
"The US was on one side of the
issue, while practically every other country were on the
other side," the source told Associated Press.
Division between the U.S. and Japan over
cars and New Zealand's reluctance to set terms on dairy also played
a role in the halting of finalization, reports ABC Australia.
The talks in Hawaii were expected to
bring about the finalization of the economic regulatory deal which
spans 12 nations.
This would have satisfied the
Obama
Administration who had pressed congress earlier in the summer to
delegate their ability to amend treaties to the president for quick
ratification.
As Curtis Ellis of WND
concludes, the negations are likely now to stretch into the upcoming
presidential election.
"The failure to reach an agreement
assures TPP will be an issue in next year's presidential
contest.
Insurgent candidates Donald Trump on
the right and Bernie Sanders on the left oppose the deal,
pressing establishment candidates to take a stand on a pact that
is deeply unpopular with voters across the political spectrum,"
Ellis writes.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
has been described as the largest economic regulatory deal to come
under negotiation.
The deal involves the nations of,
-
Brunei
-
Chile
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Singapore
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New Zealand
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Australia
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Canada
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Japan
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Malaysia
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Mexico
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Peru
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the United States
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Vietnam,
...encompassing 40 percent of global
GDP.
The TPP has come under harsh scrutiny
due to the level of secrecy surrounding the deal. Members of the
U.S. congress have been threaten with reprisal if they speak
publicly about the treaty's contents.
What's also extremely concerning is the
fact members of congress must enter a
private room in the basement of the capital,
where they must surrender their belongings while totally absent of
legal assistance in order to review some of the text in the treaty.
Some have even argued that the TPP has
very little to do with trade.
TPP: The Dirtiest Trade Deal You've Never Heard Of
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