Elizabeth Warren isn’t backing down one inch in her fight with President Obama over the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
On Saturday, just a few days after the President accused her of spreading “misinformation,” about the TPP trade deal I like to call SHAFTA, the Massachusetts senator hit back hard in a letter to the White House.
While the Obama administration has, she pointed out, given 500 or so corporate lobbyists inside access to TPP negotiations, it has left the public completely in the dark.
In fact, as
Warren went on to write, "It is currently illegal for the press, experts, advocates, or the general public to review the text of this agreement. And while… Members of Congress may 'walk over ... and read the text of the agreement' -- as we have done – [we] are prohibited by law from discussing the specifics of that text in public."
That’s right - members of Congress, the elected representatives of “We the People” can’t talk to the public about the biggest trade treaty in American history. And Warren isn’t making this up, as the Obama administration would have you believe, just to score political points.
A few years ago, before the TPP even became the hot-button issue it is now, Oregon
Congressman Peter DeFazio came on this show and talked about the kind of crazy hoops he had to jump through just to look at one of the more than 20 chapters in a draft version of the deal.
If you thought that was bad, though, here’s the real kicker: if the Obama administration gets it way, Congress won’t even get a chance to really debate the TPP before it becomes the law of the land.
That’s because right now, with the full backing of the White House, the House and Senate are considering bills that would give President Obama “fast track” powers in regards to the TPP and all other trade deals from now until the end of his time in office – and for the first four years of the next president.
If Congress does give President Obama fast track power, our elected representatives wouldn't be allowed to make any amendments whatsoever to trade deals like the TPP. Instead, the treaty would be sent right to the floor where it would only have to pass a simple up-or-down vote after debate limited to 8 minutes per member.
This, to paraphrase Joe Biden, is a big f**ing deal