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17 Nov, 2014 17:34

‘Who’s government working for?’ Cameron backing TTIP at G20 slammed by campaigners

‘Who’s government working for?’ Cameron backing TTIP at G20 slammed by campaigners

David Cameron’s pledge at the G20 to fast-track a controversial EU-US trade deal has infuriated trade unionists and campaigners, who fear the permanent privatization of the NHS and erosion of Britain’s food standards.


Speaking at the summit in Brisbane over the weekend, Cameron said claims that TTIP would result in a National Health Service sell-off were “bogus nonsense.”

Signaling his intention to take on Britain’s trade unionists and others who oppose TTIP, the prime minister told G20 delegates he intends to fire “rocket boosters” under the EU-US trade agreement – a landmark deal he stresses that could bolster the British economy by £10 billion.

“It is time to take on some of the opponents of this deal and expose the arguments against it,” he said. “This is good for Britain – good for growth and British families.”

Speaking to crowds gathered at the summit, Cameron said arguments posed by UK trade unionists and campaigners against the trade deal were “weak.”

Regarding a potential NHS sell-off, the prime minister emphasized the health service was “in the public sector” and would remain so. “There is no direct threat to the NHS from TTIP,” he insisted.

He also said the cross-border deal would create employment, growth and investment by allowing Britain to trade more freely with America.

(L to R) Spain's President, Italy's Prime Minister , France's President, US President Barack Obama, Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy (far R) take part in a multi-lateral meeting with European leaders at the G20 Summit in Brisbane. (AFP Photo / Alain Jocard)

By contrast, trade unionists and campaigners opposed to the deal say their arguments against it are far from weak. They warn the EU-US trade agreement will undermine food safety standards and regulations, paving the way for British shops to stock sub-standard and genetically modified American produce.

Of equal concern is the suggestion that the free trade agreement will open up the nation’s public services to a private sector sell-off. This would allow multinational firms to purchase state assets and ultimately exploit them for profit, trade unionists and anti-TTIP campaigners argue.

Read more:Covert US-EU trade deal could make NHS privatization irreversible – trade unions

The Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) clause in the agreement, currently under negotiation, has created widespread concern. The mechanism, which raises questions over political sovereignty, could enable corporate firms to sue a country where domestic legislation negatively impacts upon their profits.

As EU-wide resistance to TTIP remains rife, the US is reportedly showing signs of impatience amid negotiations. EU-US talks reached an impasse regarding the ISDS over the weekend, with a decisive outcome on the matter yet to emerge.

Although Cameron dismissed claims TTIP poses a serious threat to the NHS, the British government has refused to respond to trade unionists and MPs’ demands to exclude it from the negotiation table.

The prime minister has also failed to meet the question head on of how private firms, American and otherwise, would receive a future UK government’s attempts to renationalize services tendered to poorly performing private firms.

Britain's General Secretary of Unite the Union Len McCluskey.(AFP Photo / Leon Neal)

Reflecting on Cameron’s G20 comments, the general secretary of Unite the Union, Len McCluskey, said the prime minister “is riding roughshod over the people of Britain by refusing to listen to their concerns over the threat this trade deal poses to the NHS.”

“When you see the links that the Tory party has to private healthcare you have to ask who the government is really working for.”

Last week, Conservative councilor Caroline Usher attempted to silence constituent protests over Cameron’s refusal to veto health from TTIP negotiations. Usher allegedly removed placards without permission, which bore slogans in defense of the NHS and its exclusion from TTIP's agenda. The placards, reportedly taken down overnight, were on private property in Balham, South London.

Local residents are seeking legal advice on the matter in conjunction with UK campaign group, The People’s NHS.

Cameron wants to put a 'rocket booster' under #TTIP, but to us it sounded more like a damp squib http://t.co/WNrwmPpEHz#NoTTIP#G20

— World Development (@GlobalJusticeUK) November 17, 2014

As the G20 summit came to a close, Cameron warned another potential recession loomed on the global economic horizon. Writing in The Guardian on Monday, the prime minister said economic problems throughout the eurozone, a general slowdown amongst emerging economies and geopolitical turmoil in the Middle East and beyond had led to a “dangerous backdrop of uncertainty and instability.”

Cameron wants to "detach" UK from "gathering economic storm". Doesn't realise UK *is* "gathering economic storm". http://t.co/DqGKFGGMN0

— James Meadway (@meadwaj) November 17, 2014

While Cameron suggests TTIP will offer Britain and Europe a much–needed economic boost, recent research from Tufts University’s Global Development and Environment Institute suggests it will culminate in job losses, slowed growth, lowered wages and a more volatile and unstable European economy.

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