Protesters scaled the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative on Monday and dropped banners calling for greater transparency and an end to “corporatocracy” over the ongoing and secretive Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement currently in the works between the United States and several Pacific nations.
Those negotiations, which have been brokered entirely behind closed doors, are certain to put corporate profits ahead of both human rights and environmental concerns, opponents of the pact have argued.
Today’s banner drop comes as part of a series of actions that started with a rally on Friday outside of the trade office and will continue throughout the next several days.
Groups involved in the ongoing protests include FlushTheTPP.org, CODEPINK, Veterans for Peace, Earth First!, Communications Workers of America, Friends of the Earth, Food and Water Watch and Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch.
“Regulating Wall Street is what we need. It’s time to flush the TPP,” Melinda St. Louis, international campaigns director for Public Citizen, said to the crowd on Friday as she stood in front of a large cardboard-constructed roll of toilet paper labeled the TPP Death Star.
“Protecting workers is what we need,” she said.
“Americans cannot afford another back-room deal that offshores manufacturing and service jobs, reduces tax revenues and pushes down wages and benefits in the jobs that remain,” Arthur Stamoulis, executive director of Citizens Trade Campaign said Friday. “Unless exposed to the light of day and real public participation, the TPP is poised to enrich corporate interests at the expense of the economy, the environment and public health at home and abroad.”
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