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Trans-Pacific Partnership: Bad for Ohio Workers?

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Wednesday, March 4, 2015   

COLUMBUS, Ohio - After five years of negotiations, the Trans-Pacific Partnership is getting closer to being presented to Congress - and labor, manufacturing and government watchdog groups maintain the results could be disastrous.

The TPP is a massive international trade agreement between the United States and 11 other nations. Candice Johnson, communications director for the Communications Workers of America, said the major concerns are that the negotiations have been secret, and the president wants to fast-track the deal.

"If people knew what was in this, it would go down in flames," she said. "So the idea is 'Well let's push it through before it really resonates with the American public, before there could be a true outcry to stop it.' So, we're hoping to change that."

If fast-track authority is approved, Congress would have to vote on the 1,200-page bill with limited debate and without the ability to make amendments.

Supporters argue that fast-track gives the president leeway in negotiations. But because the agreement covers trade deals that represent about 40 percent of the global economy, Johnson said, more transparency is critical.

Johnson said the only things known about the proposal have come out through leaks, including a section that would extend the patents on pharmaceuticals.

"That will put back or delay the development of generic drugs," she said, "so that means pharmaceutical drug prices, prescription drug prices go up - and there just are not generic drugs that most people can afford."

Johnson said other leaks suggest that the agreement would make it more difficult for workers in Ohio and other states to compete for international business.

"It's just a system that is very much geared for multinational corporations," she said, "and will only cause harm unless it's changed and geared for working families and people in the U.S."

Supporters say the agreement will be a boon to international trade, but opponents counter that it will undercut local jobs and manufacturing.


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