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Elwood P Dowd

(11,443 posts)
Wed May 27, 2015, 10:26 PM May 2015

Don't fall for anything you hear about TPP from the USTR. Its nothing more than a front for

the corporate crooks who cook up these fake free trade scams. USTR is a revolving door, with industry insiders moving back and forth to push the corporate agenda. Been that way for decades.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-switch/wp/2013/11/26/heres-why-obama-trade-negotiators-push-the-in

<snip>

Two major factors contribute to the USTR's strong pro-rightsholder slant. An obvious one is the revolving door between USTR and private industry. Since the turn of the century, at least a dozen USTR officials have taken jobs with pharmaceutical companies, filmmakers, record labels, and technology companies that favor stronger patent and copyright protection.

A more subtle factor is the structure and culture of USTR itself. In its role as a promoter of global trade, USTR has always worked closely with U.S. exporters. That exporter-focused culture isn't a problem when USTR is merely seeking to remove barriers to selling U.S. goods overseas, but it becomes problematic on issues like copyright and patent law where exporters' interests may run directly counter to those of American consumers.

<snip>

According to his official biography at the site of the Biotechnology Industry Associaiton, Joseph Damond "was chief negotiator of the historic U.S.-Vietnam Bilateral Trade agreement" during his 12 years at USTR. He then spent five years at the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America before moving to BIO. Justin McCarthy went through the revolving door in the other direction. According to a USTR press release, McCarthy was responsible for intellectual property issues at the pharmaceutical company Pfizer from 2003 to 2005 before he was hired at USTR. He now works at a lobbying firm.
"What's the next job that everyone at USTR has," asks Jamie Love. "It's working for some industry trade group." Love is the director of Knowledge Ecology International, a group that seeks to liberalize patent law in order to expand access to medicines in developing countries. Love believes the revolving door gives industry groups undue influence over U.S. trade negotiators.

<snip>

https://img.washingtonpost.com/wp-apps/imrs.php?src=&w=1484

<snip>

After posting a bit about Michael Froman, the new nominee for USTR, I was already skeptical that he'd be any improvement over the predecessor, Ron Kirk. After all, Froman was deeply involved in three of the worst free trade agreements that the US has negotiated over the past few years, which more or less set the model for the ambitious and dangerously misguided ACTA and TPP agreements. However, some others have pointed out that it may be even worse, highlighting a Felix Salmon blog post from 2009, in which he calls Michael Froman out as being an "egregious example" of the revolving door problem we've highlighted between regulators and the businesses they regulate.

[Michael Froman's] one of the most egregious examples — up there with Bob Rubin, literally — we’ve yet seen of the way the revolving door works between business and government generally, and between Citigroup and Treasury in particular.

That's troubling, to say the least. Salmon points to a Matt Taibbi piece for Rolling Stone that highlights some very questionable activity on the part of Froman, including keeping his job at Citibank while helping to select the economic team for Obama's first term... the very folks who would be in charge of regulating Citibank.

<snip>

And, from here on Democratic Underground in 2014.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/10024362435

USTR Michael Froman Refuses To Show Up For Senate Hearing On TTP Fast Track
USTR Refuses To Show Up For Senate Hearing On Fast Track

from the how's-that-for-working-closely-with-congress dept

One of the biggest concerns that we've heard from Congress about the USTR's desire for fast track authority is the fact that the USTR has been positively dismissive of Congressional attempts at transparency. While the USTR pretends that getting fast track actually means great cooperation with Congress, apparently USTR boss Michael Froman decided to bend over and tell Congress to kiss his ass by not even bothering to show up for the Senate's hearing on fast track authority.


Several committee members said they were puzzled and disappointed that USTR Michael Froman passed on an opportunity to convince some skeptical lawmakers they need to establish Fast Track authority for President Barack Obama’s priority Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) agreement.

“I wish they were here,” said Portman, a member of the committee and a former US trade representative under President George W. Bush. “It’s important.”


This shows the kind of disdain that the USTR appears to hold Congress in. Congress remains a mere nuisance in the USTR's ongoing efforts to put forth the best agreement possible for a bunch of crony friends who will soon be offering USTR staffers new jobs as lobbyists. (* See article Below)

http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20140116/23071625916/ustr-refuses-to-show-up-senate-hearing-fast-track.shtml
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*The USTR's Revolving Door With Copyright And Patent Maximalists Removes All Credibility

from the it's-all-about-jobs...-their-own dept

Tim Lee, over at the Washington Post's The Switch, has an excellent, detailed look at why the USTR seems to think that patent and copyright maximalism is in the best interests of America. There are two key reasons, which I'll paraphrase as (1) the employees at USTR have strong connections to copyright and patent maximalists, and there's a constant revolving door between USTR and IP maximalists, and (2) they're basically ignorant of how the digital world works today.

The ignorance issue is disturbing, but somewhat understandable. As we pointed out just recently, the USTR relies heavily on Industry Trade Advisory Committees (ITACs), which are deeply involved in these things. Members get access to the documents -- much more access than even Congress, and certainly a lot more access than the public which gets none at all. The IP ITAC is almost entirely made up of legacy industry players who come from a different era, and who know little about today's innovation. In fact, they tend to fight against innovation. As Lee notes, the USTR used to work mostly with exporters -- companies who ship stuff to foreign countries, and their general outlook on everything is from that perspective. But that makes no sense when you're talking about information. Rather than crafting export policies, they're creating information infrastructure policy, when the very flow of information is critical to innovation. And they simply don't get that. At all.

<snip>

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Don't fall for anything you hear about TPP from the USTR. Its nothing more than a front for (Original Post) Elwood P Dowd May 2015 OP
Recommend~ KoKo May 2015 #1
Yes they are nadinbrzezinski May 2015 #2
What's sad is that a tiny minority of DU members actually post USTR statments as proof Elwood P Dowd May 2015 #3
Qui Bono nadinbrzezinski May 2015 #4

Elwood P Dowd

(11,443 posts)
3. What's sad is that a tiny minority of DU members actually post USTR statments as proof
Wed May 27, 2015, 11:49 PM
May 2015

that TPP is the greatest achievement in the history of world trade. I doubt they have a clue about who actually wrote the damn thing.........industry insiders who will move on up the corporate ladder by pulling yet another fake free trade scam on workers and consumers.

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