Hamilton residents challenge Tim Groser over NZ trade deal
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) in negotiation with Trade Minister Tim Groser is being challenged by Hamilton city residents.
Hamilton residents are attempting to prevent Trade Minister Tim Groser to sign off on a secret Pacific nations trade agreement that will benefit 600 multinational corporations.
The residents have made submissions asking Hamilton City Council (HCC) to lobby central government for full disclosure of the TPP and that it be debated in Parliament.
HCC communications advisor Natalie Palmer said the submissions would be spoken to at the hearing for the draft 2014-15 Annual Plan on May 21.
Democrats For Social Credit Hamilton East candidate Carolyn McKenzie said the TPP negotiations had all been done in secret.
âNo participating person is allowed to let any of this information out. The government itself will not know whatâs in the agreement until four years after theyâve signed it.
âProfessor Jane Kelsey at Auckland University can show you how theyâre going to dismantle Pharmac from the inside out. New Zealand and Canada are able to get cheap drugs [medications] for their people. This will be the end of it.â
The TPP agreement is made up of 29 chapters. Only five of these chapters actually deal with trade. The remaining 24 chapters deal with restrictions, regulations, and litigation.
TPP legislation could override local legislation through suspension of local laws in any of the signatory countries.
âWe actually lose sovereignty. We lose the ability to make our own law,â McKenzie said.
The Renewables Motueka Facebook group member Greg Rzesniowiecki aka gregfullmoon is currently on tour with The Campaign Against Foreign Control (CAFCA). The tour landed in Hamilton on Monday May 12.
Rzesniowiecki said, the Renewables mounted a successful project to get Tasman District Council to look seriously at the TPP.
âWe now aim to get all of the remaining councils to do likewise.â
Submissions to councils that have either been accepted or are in process so far include Auckland, Wellington, Nelson, Tasman, Horizons Wairarapa-Wanganui, Palmerston North, Horowhenua, Christchurch, Dunedin , Kaitaia, Tauranga, and now Hamilton.
Rzesniowiecki defines the action as a project to engage civil society in a matter of vital public interest.
- The trade agreement known as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is being considered by 12 Pacific nations including Australia, Brunei, Chile, Canada, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, the United States, and Vietnam.