Over 200 Economics & Law Professors Urge Congress To Reject Corporate Sovereignty Provisions In Trade Deals
from the more-of-this-please dept
We've written quite a lot for years about the massive problems with "corporate sovereignty" provisions in trade agreements -- so-called "investor state dispute settlement" (ISDS) provisions -- that allow companies to "sue" countries for regulations they feel are unfair. These aren't heard by courts, but rather by "tribunals" chosen by the companies and the countries. Some supporters of these provisions claim that there's really nothing wrong with them because they help encourage both investment in different countries and more stable and fair regulations.If that's the case, though, why are over 200 economics and law professors signing a letter to Congress telling them to reject any trade agreements with these provisions?
Through ISDS, the federal government gives foreign investors – and foreign investors alone – the ability to bypass that robust, nuanced, and democratically responsive legal framework. Foreign investors are able to frame questions of domestic constitutional and administrative law as treaty claims, and take those claims to a panel of private international arbitrators, circumventing local, state or federal domestic administrative bodies and courts. Freed from fundamental rules of domestic procedural and substantive law that would have otherwise governed their lawsuits against the government, foreign corporations can succeed in lawsuits before ISDS tribunals even when domestic law would have clearly led to the rejection of those companies’ claims. Corporations are even able to re-litigate cases they have already lost in domestic courts. It is ISDS arbitrators, not domestic courts, who are ultimately able to determine the bounds of proper administrative, legislative, and judicial conduct.The letter appears to have been organized by famed law professor Laurence Tribe and famed economist Joseph Stiglitz -- as an update to a very similar letter they sent last year -- with many fewer signatories.
This system undermines the important roles of our domestic and democratic institutions, threatens domestic sovereignty, and weakens the rule of law.
In addition to these fundamental flaws that arise from a parallel and privileged set of legal rights and recourse for foreign economic actors, there are various flaws in the way ISDS proceedings are meant to be conducted in the TPP. In short, ISDS lacks many of the basic protections and procedures of the justice system normally available in a court of law. There are no mechanisms for domestic citizens or entities affected by ISDS cases to intervene in or meaningfully participate in the disputes; there is no appeals process and therefore no way of addressing errors of law or fact made in arbitral decisions; and there is no oversight or accountability of the private lawyers who serve as arbitrators, many of whom rotate between being arbitrators and bringing cases for corporations against governments. Codes of judicial conduct that bind the domestic judiciary do not apply to arbitrators in ISDS cases.
Many of the people who signed are really well-respected (including some I consider friends), but both Tribe and Stiglitz are fairly well-known for where they come from on the political spectrum -- and it would have been nice to have found equal weight from other parts of the political spectrum to balance this letter out a bit. It's still a good letter, and one whose message I agree with, but I fear that many in Congress will just dismiss it as "another Tribe/Stiglitz letter." That's too bad, because it really is a good letter.
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Filed Under: corporate sovereignty, economists, isds, joseph stiglitz, laurence tribe, law professors, tpp, trade agreements
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US Congress: What is it Good For?
It's nice that over 200 economic/law professors have urged congress to reject corporate sovereign provisions in pending trade deals but will congress listen?
How many experts have testified before congress in regard to encryption standards and how adding known (to the government) exploits potentially weakens the encryption?
Has congress taken heed of their expert security advice?
No, we still have a collection of know-nothing nincompoops (Feinstein/Burr/McCain etal) running in circles and flailing about in front of the cameras while repeating their tired tale of going dark and the need for the government to have "special" access for national security purposes. Otherwise the terrorists and drug dealers would win.
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WHAT A STANK, STUNK, STINK
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And when you realize that you and I are not a party to these "arrangements", it makes it VERY CLEAR why the TPP is a ROBUST FAILURE! WOW, WOW, WOW! Great stuff!... and what a bunch of skunks!
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Please!... no emails!
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Re: US Congress: What is it Good For?
Every Nation gets the Government it Deserves.
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Re: WHAT A STANK, STUNK, STINK
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Re: Re: US Congress: What is it Good For?
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Re:
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Odds
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Vote harder!
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Re: Re: WHAT A STANK, STUNK, STINK
It is approximately 6,000 pages long, broken up into several documents(though at least one non-government group, The Washington Post collected it and made it searchable), and when the government isn't singing it's praises as The Most Awesome Thing Ever they're generally silent on the subject, meaning the only way to learn what's actually in it is to try to dig through the legalese on your own or find someone else that's done it for you. But again, 6,000 pages.
2015 wasn't an election year for President, Senate or House, meaning even if the public wanted to vote everyone involved out they had no opportunity to do so.
2016 is for all three, but thanks to 'Fast Track Authority' which was passed June 2015 any 'trade' deal only needs 50 votes to make it through the Senate, meaning even voting out every single person possible in the Senate wouldn't be enough if the 2/3rds left were in favor. As for the House... well, this little thing called 'gerrymandering' makes sure that those seats tend not to change very often(approximately 10% of the time).
And of course there's this little thing called... oh what was it... ah yes, 'The 2016 presidential election' that tends to attract people's attention away from other topics like a 'trade' deal that most people know effectively nothing about, if they know about it at all.
But by all means, feel free to explain how the public which was kept in the dark for years should have been able to wade through 6,000 pages of legalese in the course of a year, with the first opportunity to vote those claiming support of the 'trade' deal out coming before the actual vote regarding it happens, is totally at fault for not voting those politicians in favor of it out.
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Re: Re: US Congress: What is it Good For?
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Re: Re: Re: WHAT A STANK, STUNK, STINK
We don't need your stinkin facts!!!
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Re: Vote harder!
We also need to discuss what they get up to on our social media accounts and get as many other people on board as we can. I'm an activist; I'm calling on you all to become activists, too. At the very least, it means regularly contacting your representatives to discuss those things that bother you about the things that go on. In Britain, it means attending MP's "surgeries" to complain about TTIP, etc. This really does work.
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Re: Re: Re: WHAT A STANK, STUNK, STINK
If we're not willing to campaign for change, don't be surprised when it doesn't happen. That campaign fatigue is a thing is the problem: THEY don't get tired of screwing us, so we should not allow ourselves to grow weary of pushing back.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: WHAT A STANK, STUNK, STINK
Yeah - right. More likely there would be several dead and many more injured as a result of protesting.
Pro Tip: The riche elite ruling class does not care about the proles.
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