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Brexit and the City
23 April 2014

IJT/Bütikofer: Opposition against TTIP is not outflow of anti-Americanism


The TTIP is mobilising a lot of emotions among the younger generation, often critical ones, observes MEP Bütikofer for the Initiative Junge Transatlantiker.

Most of the reactions towards TTIP that I have heard have clearly been raising very critical opinions. So is TTIP maybe becoming the one transatlantic issue that is best understood as an indicator of how far both sides of the Atlantic Ocean have moved apart?

Not so fast. The criticism that is spreading throughout ever-larger parts of the European public is not really of European origin alone. Take the strong opposition against investor protection policies like ISDS – Investor State Dispute Settlement – as an example. Many of the arguments that you will find being used originate with US consumer protection groups like Public Citizen’s Trade Watch. 

Undeniably there are some vague anti-American sentiments floating around which should not come as a surprise to anybody. But it would be utterly foolish to portray the opposition against TTIP as an outflow of anti-Americanism. It is rather two very fundamental issues that feed and motivate the criticism:

  • On one hand TTIP is giving rise to a deep going debate about the quality of life that young people expect for themselves and are willing to fight for. For them technical discussions about norms and standards, about chlorine chicken and GMOs and hormone beef and REACH and so on boil down to the very emphatic question: how do I want to live?
  • And secondly the controversy touches upon the sensitive question of democratic responsibility and democratic choice. Doesn’t the lack of transparency in the TTIP negotiation question democratic participation on an issue that might have an extremely broad impact on our daily lives? Wouldn’t ISDS undermine legitimate choices that parliaments are democratically elected to make? Wouldn’t the Regulatory Cooperation Council (RCC), which is being discussed, limit the scope of future legislation?

TTIP has adequately been described as a trade and investment treaty "like none before". If trade is to be a tool to improve our societies and not just an instrument to promote narrow corporate interests, then we should be happy about the kind of discussions we are seeing and not dodge them. Unfortunately, in the public eye TTIP has largely been hijacked by what I would call a corporate lobbyists’ wet dreams agenda. Business sectors, most notably the agro-industrial complex, want to use TTIP as an opportunity to finally achieve selfish goals that they have pursued for years without success.

Is Europe possibly so much in need of some growth impulse from somewhere that it might be willing to give up on standards is has defended staunchly for so long? I am really happy and proud that young people stand up against such a challenge. Harmonizing standards across the Atlantic in order to promote low carbon technologies, like e-mobility for instance, or to avoid duplication in safety routines, where the level of consumer protection is in fact the same on both sides, that does make sense. And in all the discussions I have had, I have rarely met anyone questioning that. But, to mention just one highly controversial field of concerns, undermining European data protection standards through TTIP makes absolutely no sense, infringes on citizens’ liberties and freedom and deserves to be opposed full force.

Young people are sending a very clear message to European and US leaders: ignore our demands, disregard our democratic ambitions, forget our concerns about the way of life that we want to choose and we will fight your TTIP-agenda with all we have.

Maybe leaders should listen better to the younger generation. After all, they are the future.

Full article



© Initiative junger Transatlantiker (IjT)


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