Mr. Speaker, I welcome the opportunity to participate in the take note debate this evening on the free trade of the Americas trade agreement that is under negotiation.
I want to pick on that brief exchange that took place a moment ago around the concern that we have expressed again and again, as have members of the Bloc Quebecois, about the lack of transparency of the government in making available to Canadian citizens precisely what it is negotiating on our behalf. Of all the unconvincing, disingenuous arguments that the government has put forward, the worst is that it would like to be free and would be in favour of releasing the text. However because some of the other governments are not in full agreement with that, it cannot do it.
I think the test of whether the text ought to be released or not to Canadian citizens is whether Canadian citizens are asking that it be released. I do not think there is any question that Canadians, who have concerned themselves with the corporatist agenda of the government and the fact that by and large the trade agreements that the government has signed on to or has been actively promoting in recent years that are corporate driven and corporate dominated, absolutely want to know what it is that is being negotiated on their behalf.
Who is opposed to the details and the text of the FTAA being released? It is not the citizens on whose behalf the government claims to be negotiating, it is the corporate elite who want to be sure that they have their fingers all over it. They want to have the kind of preferential access that the government seems quite prepared to give them and to heck with whether citizens are happy or not with what is being negotiated on their behalf.
I am sure some members may have heard Bruce Cockburn. He is a well known and much admired Canadian artist, singer and musician. He recently spoke at his induction to the Canadian Music Hall of Fame. On that occasion he expressed, in a way that I think was very dramatic and welcomed and which struck a really responsive chord with a lot of people, his dismay over the fact that a genuine citizens' movement around the world to build community is being effectively hijacked by the greedy movement of global commerce.
He summed up his feelings in the following way “The mercantile system sucked when they tried it in the 1700s and it sucks now. This is our community. This is our world”. I think the reason why Bruce Cockburn struck such a responsive chord is that this is exactly the way citizens are increasingly feeling about what the government claims to be doing on their behalf in negotiating the FTAA.
We welcome the debate this evening. I listened carefully to the words of the international affairs minister and the foreign affairs minister. I listened to the words of the international trade minister who basically said, and I could not believe my ears, that everything is fine and that there is nothing to worry about because the FTAA represents a vote of confidence for the hemisphere's future.
What on earth does that mean? I would say that is about as vague as most of the answers the Liberals have given to the dozens of questions that we have been posing in parliament day in and day out, week in and week out, to try to get at the substantive issues that citizens are genuinely concerned about.
We heard government members again tonight, as well as official opposition members, suggest that the New Democratic Party is somehow not in favour of trade. For the record, let me say at the outset that we unequivocally represent the importance of trade to our economy, to jobs and to future prosperity. It is precisely because we recognize the importance of trade that it is critical that we enter into proper trade deals. That is why New Democrats talk about free trade not in some absolutely open ended uncritical way, but about fair trade. That is why we insist on talking about the model for trade and about the specific principles that underlie the kinds of trade agreements that we enter into.
Let us say again very clearly for the record, and I do not know how many times we have to say it, that we are absolutely in favour of rules based trade. That is what it means to enter into trade agreements. However the rules that are contained in the trade agreements that we sign need to be rules that protect the rights and advance the interests of our citizens.
The reason there is a growing mobilization of civil society in this country, and in many other countries around the world against the model of free trade that is being advanced by the Government of Canada and many other governments, is that the principles underlying those trade deals and the details contained in them are not about advancing and strengthening the rights and improving the prospects of citizens. They are about responding to the dictates and the demands of corporations in our society.
The concern that is growing goes beyond that. It is a struggle to get our governments to address the genuine and legitimate concerns that exist regarding the trade deals to which we are now a party, concerns that have been documented and that have arisen out of decisions that were made out of the implications which have flowed directly from trade deals. The government is completely ignoring these concerns. In a very real sense, a lot of our citizens see that it is more than a struggle for a particular kind of trade agreement. It has become a struggle for democracy itself.
One thing under negotiation regarding the trade agreement, which is of enormous concern, is the extraordinary powers that will be awarded to corporations. It is absolutely unprecedented. It is literally true that the FTAA will be the most extensive trade deal negotiated in the history of the world. It is not an exaggeration to say that.
What would the trade deal do? We would be very happy to hear that we are dead wrong about this, but that trade deal would take some of the elements of NAFTA that already are a concern and clearly need to be addressed and remedied. It rolls them together with some of the very elements of the MAI, that undemocratic multilateral agreement on investment that caused people to mobilize around the globe. It wraps them in a bow and says that this trade deal will literally reinforce the right of corporations to sue democratically elected governments that dare or have the audacity to stand in the way of their maximizing profits.
That is why it has taken on the aura of a struggle for democracy itself. It is not just because of what is in the proposed NAFTA. It is also because of how the government refuses to react, to respond, to engage with civil society in any meaningful way, and to allow for citizens to have some real input into the FTAA agreement which is so extensive in its scope and in its detail.
We have heard the minister ask what we are talking about. He said that the government is letting citizens have a say, but we should look at what is shaping up with respect to the Quebec summit scheduled for mid-April. People are genuinely dismayed at the extent to which the government is preoccupied with the protection of visiting politicians, decision makers and bureaucrats who will be coming together in Quebec. They are being protected from having to even know about, let alone take into account, the genuine concerns of citizens who will be there to protest.
It is a fundamental democratic right of citizens to have the opportunity to engage in meaningful peaceful protest. It is a right that has been practised with important effect in the world. Democracy itself depends upon it. It has been through meaningful peaceful protest that some of the most important progressive gains around the world have been made.
One of the reasons the New Democratic Party caucus has made a decision to be in Quebec during the FTAA summit is that we intend to stand shoulder to shoulder with citizens who are coming together by the tens of thousands to say that we do not want to have our world transformed in the image of corporate demand and dictates. We want to ensure that we have a say in what is happening.
A lot of people are very concerned, as we are, at the extraordinary attempts that have gone into trying to discredit and dismiss the concerns of protesters. That is why my colleagues and I have been participating in community meetings across the country. There is an unprecedented mobilization of citizens who are saying they want to inform themselves. The government is not interested in informing them so they are informing themselves. They are coming together in teach-ins, forums, debates and discussions to talk about what a citizen based, citizen centred free trade deal would look like.
What would a fair trade deal be? How could we ensure that we do not embrace a corporate model of trade that drives a race to the bottom, a model that says we would do nothing to protect labour standards that have been hard fought and won, nothing to protect environmental standards and nothing to protect cultural diversity? How could we ensure that human rights are absolutely at the centre of trade deals and do not get sacrificed?
That is why a people's summit is taking place. I heard a member of the Alliance somewhat dismiss the notion of the importance of a people's summit. A people's summit is a coming together of people who say that they understand the importance of trade but insist that trade deals should address the real needs of people and are not just crafted to respond to the dictates of corporations.
We will be at that people's summit. We will have the opportunity to hear what the people who come to Quebec have to say. I hope government members will take the opportunity to be there to listen to those people.
I have had the opportunity in the last week to be at two major mobilizations with a lot of young people coming together, but not exclusively young people. I was in Halifax last week and in Fredericton last night, where literally over 150 people came together to say that they want to talk about what kind of trade deals they want the government to negotiate on their behalf.
We insist on registering our protest over the extent to which the government seems intent on walling off democracy by putting up a three metre fence and cordoning off where the discussions will be taking place so that the leaders who are coming together do not even have to be aware of the kind of protest that will be expressed in Quebec. People are concerned about what it means when there is a kind of criminalization of dissent taking place.
It is so ironic to have heard the trade minister and the foreign affairs minister say that the FTAA was about enhancing democracy. This is being said while the government virtually ignores the democratic demands of citizens to have their concerns addressed in Canada, in many other parts of the world and throughout the Americas with respect to this hemispheric agreement.
I am proud of the fact that I represent a political party which when it met in early February talked about the issue of the FTAA being one of the top priorities for the parliamentary agenda. I wish to make reference to the resolution that was adopted by the New Democratic Party federal council. I will not read it in its entirety, but the resolution reiterated its support for an alternative approach to globalization to achieve a stable rules based global economy which promotes and protects the rights of workers and the environment, provides for cultural diversity and ensures the ability of government to act in the public interest.
Of all the concerns that are widely shared by citizens who have informed themselves, and they are doing so in increasing numbers, the concern that is most profound is that it appears the government is intent on entering into another trade agreement which basically erodes the capability and the powers of government itself to serve the public interest.
The government seems absolutely intent on the notion that we should commercialize, commodify or treat as a commodity to be traded, bought and sold everything that is important to people in their daily lives. This is a concern with respect to the FTAA despite the government's insistence that our concerns are not well founded. It is also a major concern with the GATS round of negotiations that are under discussion. It is the notion that things as fundamental and valued by citizens as our health care, education, environmental apparatus, and other things as basic as our water and sewer services should be treated as commodities, not understood to be part of the public good, to be traded, bought and sold.
The government cannot pretend it does not understand that chapter 11 of NAFTA is a very major concern. It has placed Canada in the position that when it acts in the public interest, when it insists upon protecting our environment or health care, it could be sued by corporations which demand compensation because it interfered with their profits.
I am pleased that we have had the opportunity this evening for all members to participate in this important debate. I look forward to the government beginning to address some of these questions now that it has engaged in the usual rhetoric about how all of society's ills will be solved by the trade deal that it is intent on signing on to in the form of the FTAA.