Showing posts with label SPP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SPP. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Obama: Renegotiate NAFTA as You Promised

Pressure from individuals, civil groups, and Congress must be brought to bear so that Obama makes good on a campaign promise to renegotiate NAFTA--and the upcoming SPP summit would be a good time to put that process into motion.

by Manuel Pérez-Rocha and Stuart Trew; edited by Emily Schwartz Greco. Posted at Foreign Policy in Focus, July 27

Starting my first year in office, I will convene annual meetings with Mr. Calderón and the prime minister of Canada. Unlike similar summits under President Bush, these will be conducted with a level of transparency that represents the close ties among our three countries. We will seek the active and open involvement of citizens, labor, the private sector and non-governmental organizations in setting the agenda and making progress.

- Barack Obama, in a February 20, 2008
Dallas Morning News op-ed

Though Mexican President Felipe Calderón and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper have done everything to maintain the status quo on the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), President Barack Obama has promised to "push the restart button" on several trade deals. While it's debatable how much his administration actually differs from its predecessor in these areas, trade activists remain hopeful that Obama will stick to his promises to renegotiate NAFTA and reconsider its expansion through the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP).

Those promises include the above comment, which Obama made when he was still vying to become the Democratic presidential nominee.

Obama wrote those words shortly before the fourth annual SPP summit took place in New Orleans. By that time, the annual gathering of North American government officials and private-sector executives had become a lightning rod for criticism across the political spectrum and across borders. Indeed, the summits have been closed-door venues for pursuing a private sector-led agenda of deregulation and militarization, an agenda that calls for lowering environmental and consumer safety standards and curbing civil liberties, under the guise of making North America more "secure and prosperous."

Once Obama took office we became hopeful, despite the unwillingness of our countries' own leaders, Calderón and Harper, to widen the North American dialogue. However, more than six months into this administration, with the next North American leaders' summit coming up on August 9 and 10 in Guadalajara, trade activists like us are more in the dark than ever about what the United States would like to accomplish during the next phase of these trinational talks.

Will opening up the summits to greater civil society participation become just another forgotten campaign pledge? Will the Obama administration continue to ignore calls from concerned citizens in Canada, Mexico, and the United States to renegotiate a free trade agreement that increasingly serves only the slimmest of elite interests and needs a complete overhaul?

Security for Whom?
The Guadalajara meeting will be the fifth such gathering since the current three North American leaders' predecessors — former presidents Vicente Fox and George W. Bush and former Canadian prime minister Paul Martin — committed, in Waco, Texas in 2005 to deepen the NAFTA relationship and expand it into areas not covered by that agreement. The three leaders, nicknamed the "three amigos," called this new trilateral arrangement the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP). It included different attempts to merge policies in the three countries on a number of areas: border security and anti-terrorism measures, energy sector integration, environmental protection, emergency preparedness, safety standards and more.

While regional cooperation in many of these areas is desirable, it became clear early on in the SPP process that the ultimate policy objectives were less so, at least for the public interest.

The SPP has meant the escalation of U.S.-led militarization in Mexico via the Mérida Initiative and other mechanisms that haven't stopped Mexico's growing human rights violations or the unstoppable violence in a failed "war on drugs." In Canada, new Homeland Security-RCMP policing operations (such as the Shiprider project on the Great Lakes and shared Pacific waters) blur traditional state borders, allowing armed U.S. Homeland Security officers to operate on Canadian soil.

Prosperity for Whom?

The SPP's economic agenda has included efforts to "harmonize" how and what all three governments regulate with the stated aim of "reducing the cost of doing business across borders."

Effectively, this business-driven demand has meant deregulation in areas as important as food safety — moving to industry self-regulation — and environmental protection, including increased pesticide residue limits on hundreds of fruits and vegetables.

Other corporate demands have resulted in plans to cut the "transaction costs of exports" — like NAFTA's rules of origin — by $100 billion, according to the leaders' latest joint statement (although a report from governments of how much has actually been cut is pending). Rules of origin can guarantee the inclusion of local and national content in goods traded across borders, and their elimination affects small producers who could use them, with the help of development agencies, to provide input in trinational trade. In practice, eliminating these rules means renegotiating NAFTA in closed-door ministerial meetings.

The SPP's "energy integration" provisions have meant churning out five times more dirty oil from Canada's tar sands and pressure on Mexico to privatize its state-owned oil and gas industry, which does nothing to help the North American region to transition away from fossil fuels, while further tying Canadian and Mexican resources to insatiable U.S. energy needs, and deepening U.S. dependence on foreign energy sources.

And finally, whose partnership are we talking about here? Our leaders have pursued these goals without any public oversight. Legislators haven't been consulted, and working groups often were dominated by big business. The North American Competitiveness Council, comprised of 30 of the continent's largest corporations, has been the SPP's only advisory body and the only group invited to the annual summits like the one coming up in Guadalajara. Business groups are currently waiting in the wings, ready to "offer strategic advice and support to the leaders," in the words of the Canadian and U.S. Chambers of Commerce, "either through the NACC or its successor mechanism."

Failed Model
The abject failure of NAFTA and its SPP offshoot to bring "security and prosperity" to North America is clear with the economic, environmental, and social crises now affecting this region and much of the world. Unemployment is high, global warming is escalating, and the need to transition away from carbon-intensive energy sources is irrefutable. Multiple food and consumer product safety scandals, notably the recent swine flu epidemic that has been linked to poorly regulated meat processing plants that have spread throughout Mexico since NAFTA came into effect, have called the bluff of business lobbies seeking further deregulation. So has the financial crisis — which resulted from unregulated trade in novel financial products totally detached from the real economy.

Mexico in particular is sinking into an unprecedented social and economic crisis. The drug war, perpetrated by Calderón with U.S. military help, has only exacerbated the nation's plague of violence. Since 2006, an estimated 12,000 people have died because of this war — the body count in 2009 so far is 3,363. There are also reports of a six-fold increase in human rights abuses also since 2006.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has just announced that while most of the world is seeing signs of recovery, the contraction of the Mexican economy this year will be double what was predicted just three months ago: a 7.3% rate. The fact that Mexico has become so vulnerable makes it crucial to critically analyze why NAFTA has not helped the country, even when trade and investment has increased.

New Model
The "free-market" ideology at the heart of NAFTA and its expansion to the realms of security through the SPP must be replaced with a people-focused model of sustainable economic growth that puts human rights, environmental protection, and job creation ahead of profits. These were Obama's promises as a candidate, when his refreshing new ideas tore through the language of "security" and "prosperity" to reveal the divisive policies these euphemisms hide.

Will the U.S. president turn back on his promise by simply reviving, even if it's under a new name, the failed Security and Prosperity Partnership dialogue? Or will he heed, for example, the advice of over 100 U.S. members of congress and civil society networks who want to revisit NAFTA, to strengthen environmental and labor standards and promote just investment rules and fair trade among other changes?

Maybe Obama hasn't made his mind up yet. In that case, we offer a simple piece of advice: In Guadalajara, make it clear that you will reverse the corporate coup d'etat that took over North American relations; announce that you're closing down the SPP and push the reset button. Agree with Calderón and Harper to start renegotiating NAFTA. Give us hope that another North America is possible.

Read more...

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Is the Trans-Texas Corridor dead?

According to the Associated Press, among others, state officials are scrapping the Trans-Texas Corridor, a transportation component of the Security and Prosperity Partnership.

Since 2002 Texas Governor Rick Perry had promoted the corridor, which was envisioned as a huge set of highways, rail and utility lines crisscrossing the state but had been under fire almost since its inception. Rural landowners in particular were opposed to giving up their property for the project. Scaled-down plans are now in the works, reducing corridor width from a proposed 1,200 feet to 600 feet.

A wait and see attitude might be the wisest. After all, the Dallas Morning News reports that Perry "suggested that the Texas Department of Transportation's decision to pull the plug on one of his biggest initiatives – the Trans Texas Corridor – was mostly a name change, and that public-private partnerships on toll roads would continue."

Read more...

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Project Censored: SPP is #2 on their 2009 "Censored Stories" list

Project Censored has named the Security and Prosperity Partnership as #2 on their "Top 25 Censored Stories" list. Their research focuses on the agreement's militarization of the border regions and the privatization agenda of the North America Competitiveness Council, creating what Connie Fogal of Canadian Action Party says is a "hostile takeover of the apparatus of democratic government . . . a coup d’etat over the government operations of Canada, US and Mexico." You can read what they have to say here.

Read more...

Thursday, July 31, 2008

Plan Mexico and SPP on Democracy Now!

Today's Democracy Now broadcast features a report on Plan Mexico, a $400 million "war" on Mexican drug traffic. The program has been widely criticized for relying almost entirely on military and security fixes, rather than addressing underlying economic and social problems that exacerbate the drug trade. Most funding will go to military contractors and the Mexican army, and the final version of the bill, which has been approved by the Bush administration and Congress, removed ties between funding to protection of human rights.

Laura Carlsen, director of the Americas Policy Program of the Center for International Policy, and author of "A Primer on Plan Mexico," tied Plan Mexico to the Security and Prosperity Partnership as a way of "arming NAFTA"--not her quote, but a quote from an administration trade official. Laura is joined by Avi Lewis of Al Jazeera English, and journalist John Gibler.

View or listen to the show in various formats here.

Read more...

Monday, July 28, 2008

Atlantica: myths and realities

A great, short explanation of what's driving economic integration along the northeast Canadian-US border, and how the corporate vision of superhighways and deepwater ports has very little to do with the real economic and environmental needs of New England, upstate New York, and the maritime provinces. The speaker is Canadian trade specialist Scott Sinclair, speaking in 2006 at the Council of Canadians 21st annual general meeting. Thanks to videographer Martha Spiess; check out her work on YouTube, here.

Read more...

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Maine Citizens Trade Policy Commission discusses SPP

“Atlantica,” the eastern Canada and Northeastern US section of the Security and Prosperity Partnership, came under discussion recently at a meeting of the Maine Citizens Trade Policy Commission, which Bonnie Preston, national council member, attended. She reports that the commission was very interested in both Atlantic and the broader SPP agenda. The trade commission assesses the impact of international trade policies and agreements on Maine’s laws, business environment and working conditions.

Speaking in favor of the Atlantica development program was Brian Crowley, president of the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies. Leo Broderick, of Council of Canadians, offered the perspective of several groups, including AfD, who see both Atlantica and SPP as inherently undemocratic and unsustainable. Broderick gave the context of Atlantica in global trade terms and pointed out, among other things, that Crowley completely the emerging crises of global climate change and peak oil. Broderick also linked Atlantica to the larger Security and Prosperity Partnership.

Bonnie noted that part of the SPP program on transportation—a super-highway into the US from a deepwater port in Halifax—is getting press attention in Maine. The proposed highway would cut east-west across the northern part of the state, be privately constructed, and be financed by multinationals.

Read more...

Monday, June 2, 2008

Janet Eaton on SPP

In March, Boston/Cambridge Alliance organizer Dave Lewit interviewed Janet Eaton and Karen O'Donnell on the Security and Prosperity Partnership. Janet is an independent researcher and educator, as well as the Sierra Club of Canada’s International Liaison to the Corporate Accountability Committee and Water Privatization Task Force. Karen O'Donnell is a labor activist, former representative in the Massachusetts state legislature, and is also associated with the Sierra Club.

Thanks to the South Puget Sound Alliance for Democracy for posting the video. You can watch video from their Reclaiming Democracy tv show online at their website, here.

Read more...

Monday, April 28, 2008

Ruth Caplan featured in Free Speech Radio story on SPP summit

Following up on the New Orleans SPP and People's Summit, here's a story that aired on Free Speech Radio News featuring AfD's Ruth Caplan, speaking in DC. Follow this link for the story.

Read more...

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Second SPP article up on Progressive Populist site

For a perspective on what the Security and Prosperity Partnership will do to the midwest, see Nancy Price and Ruth Caplan's second article on SPP, up on the Progressive Populist website here.

Entitled, "What Corporate Takeover Means for the Heartland," it focuses on three of the six massive transportation corridors--rail, truck highways, and pipelines--planned to carry imported goods from deepwater ports in Mexico, factory farm products from the Midwest, and water and fuel from Canada.

The corridors have been planned without Congressional oversight or civic input, but with taxpayer money, plus the help of 30 multinationals organized through the North American Competitiveness Council. If completed, the corridors promise more economic and environmental hardship for the American midwest, compounding the agribusiness takeover of family farms and the offshoring of manufacturing jobs

Read more...

More on the New Orleans SPP summit

The "People's Summit" has a website up here--it's a tremendous "go-to" resource for background on Katrina profiteering and SPP, with links to great organizations and articles. The Summit's workshops focus on undermining of democracy, militarization, forced migration and diminishing labor standards, privatization and deregulation in resource management, and energy/environmental issues, with an emphasis on community protection and sharing knowledge and info at the grassroots.

Read more...

Monday, April 21, 2008

Urgent! Call Congress Today to Oppose SPP

President Bush is meeting today and tomorrow in New Orleans with Mexican President Calderón and Canadian Prime Minister Harper to discuss implementation of the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP). Corporate America is represented at the meetings by the North American Competitiveness Council (NACC), a formal arm of the SPP. Working groups, made up of government officials and corporate executives, will also be meeting. Today the Alliance for Democracy, along with 17 other national organizations, has sent a letter to all members of Congress calling on them to

  • Require the Bush administration to immediately halt SPP implementation and submit the process to Congressional oversight.
  • Hold congressional hearings in which the process and goals of the SPP are thoroughly aired and input is invited from a broad cross-section of the public.
  • Make subject to congressional vote the decision of whether SPP implementation should proceed.

Read a copy of the letter below. For this letter to be effective, it is essential that members of Congress receive calls from their constituents. Please call today!

Representatives Marcy Kaptur, Maurice Hinchey, Peter DeFazio, Dennis Kucinich and 10 other members of Congress have also sent a letter to President Bush calling for a halt of the SPP "until the mechanisms of the SPP negotiations are made transparent and proper legislative oversight has been established."

AfD's critique of the SPP is far deeper than the need for Congressional oversight, since the SPP further establishes the corporate state and is based on an economy of "endless more." However, the immediate action is to reinforce today's letter to Congress.

Your phone calls will be in solidarity with protestors who are holding a People’s Summit in another part of New Orleans.

To reach your members’ offices, call the US Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121 (toll free at 800-828-0498) and ask to be connected to your House and Senate members.

For more information on the SPP, visit this page at the Alliance for Democracy website.

For the text of the letter, click on "Read More" below:

April 21, 2008
Dear Member of Congress,
On the occasion of the 4th Leaders Summit of the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), to be held in New Orleans on April 21-22, we take this opportunity to call on all members of Congress to educate themselves on the SPP, which was never brought to Congress for debate or vote.

Our concerns include the opaque and undemocratic nature of the SPP, its definition of “prosperity” as the expansion of a failed trade model, and its definition of “security” as the expansion of military force and the restricting of civil liberties.

Congress has been entrusted with oversight on such issues of trade and security. It is imperative that they exercise their responsibility on this matter by examining what prosperity and security really mean. Rather than proceeding along the failed path of NAFTA, all efforts should be made to implement a trade agenda that focuses on the needs of communities and people. That agenda should include the voices of those populations most affected, as well as their advocates in civil society.

Therefore, as civil society advocates, we call upon the U.S. Congress to:
Require the Bush administration to immediately halt SPP implementation and submit the process to Congressional oversight.
Hold congressional hearings in which the process and goals of the SPP are thoroughly aired and input is invited from a broad cross-section of the public.
Make subject to congressional vote the decision of whether SPP implementation should proceed.

The SPP is an executive-level, tri-national pact between Mexico, the United States and Canada, agreed upon in 2005 by the chief executives of the three countries. According to the official website, the SPP seeks to "provide the framework to ensure that North America is the safest and best place to live and do business." It includes ambitious security and prosperity programs to keep our borders closed to terrorism yet open to trade.

What differentiates the SPP from other security and trade agreements is that it is not subject to Congressional oversight or approval. The SPP establishes a corporate/government bureaucracy for implementation that excludes civil society participation.

As at past SPP summits the New Orleans meetings will be open only to government officials and representatives of the corporate sector. Civil society will be kept on the other side of the fence, their voice silenced. The leaders will hear reports from the various SPP working groups and receive advice and input from the North American Competitiveness Council (NACC). The NACC is made up of 30 large corporations, 10 from each of the three countries. Their interest is in maximizing profit and removing all impediments to such profit by lowering or removing “non-tariff barriers to trade.” In common language this includes local and state regulations such as food safety and environmental laws, labor rights and other measures designed to protect and enhance quality of life.

The SPP aims to reach its goal of economic growth by facilitating the flow of goods and capital, while ignoring the needs of people and communities. This translates to a further expansion of the neo-liberal agenda manifested through free trade agreements such as NAFTA and DR-CAFTA, except that approval from Congress is neither sought nor required. These trade agreements, while boosting investment and exports, have failed the vast majority of citizens in participating countries. NAFTA’s impacts have been well documented: the loss of over a million decent US manufacturing jobs to exploitative Mexican factories, the decimation of Mexico’s small-scale agriculture and subsequent rise in migration, the subordination of environmental law to investment rules, and the annulling of consumer protections in the name of corporate protections. After 14 years of such devastating legacy, the SPP now proposes to move even further in the same direction.

Meanwhile, the security side of the agreement seeks to "develop a common security strategy" and to create a common security perimeter for North America. The recent agreement between the U.S. and Canadian militaries (without Congressional approval) to allow cross-border, domestic military action can be viewed as integral to the SPP. In addition, the announcement last fall of the Merida Initiative, a program to provide $1.4 billion in training, intelligence and military aircraft to Mexico has been linked to SPP by critics of the agreement. Though not officially a part of SPP, it is a manifestation of the “deep integration” that is the core of the SPP strategy. Through implementation of the SPP, the U.S. is also exporting its War on Terror to Canada and Mexico through agreements on the sharing of intelligence, airline passenger lists, border surveillance programs and the further militarization of the border between the U.S. and Mexico.

As New Orleans prepares to host the SPP summit, recent changes in the city foretell the SPP’s security objectives. In a move that could only be described as opportunistic the disaster resulting from Katrina is being used to alter the character and demographic makeup of New Orleans. The city has been highly militarized, with both National Guard and private military firms providing "security." Documented cases of abuse and violence directed at residents of the city by these "security" providers show that the interest is not in protecting the residents, but in "securing" the city for developers. In this respect New Orleans is the perfect backdrop for the SPP summit, put forth as a model for the future of North America.

Facing a worrisome pact pushed forward in secrecy, it is time for Congress to halt this undemocratic approach and establish a process based on openness, accountability, and the participation of civil society. While civil society may be kept away from the SPP summit, their voices will still be heard in New Orleans at the People’s Summit. This gathering of residents, activists and other concerned people will link the Gulf Coast struggle to the fight for the survival of communities in Mexico, Canada and the rest of the United States.

Signed by the following members of U.S. civil society,
Alliance for Democracy
Alliance for Responsible Trade (ART)
APEN (Asian Pacific Environmental Network)
ASOCOL (Association for the Sovereignty of Colombia)
Campaign for Labor Rights
Center of Concern
Chicago Religious Leadership Network on Latin America
CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador
Coalition for Justice in the Maquiladoras
Democratic Socialists of America
Fellowship of Reconciliation Task Force on Latin American and the Caribbean
Global Exchange
Global Ministries of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Grassroots Global Justice Alliance
Institute for Policy Studies, Global Economy Project
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
National Family Farm Coalition (NFFC)
National Network for Immigrant Refugee Rights (NNIRR)
New York CISPES (Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador)
NYC People's Referendum on Free Trade
Nicaragua Network
Portland Central America Solidarity Committee
Portland Jobs with Justice Center
SHARE Foundation: Building a New El Salvador Today
United Church of Christ
Vermont Workers' Center
Witness for Peace

Read more...

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

What are you doing on Tax Day?

This April 15, “show some defiance”—join with your Alliance friends and allies at your local post office. Invite some people over for refreshments a few days in advance and get creative with your signs and slogans.

April 15 is a great time to bring attention to the SPP Summit, which is coming up on April 21-22 in New Orleans. Read our Action Alert, Fact Sheets, and other materials for inspiration. Write a “Letter to the Editor” for your local paper. Click "Read More" to see two sample letters to start you off, written by David Delk, Co-chair of AfD Portland, OR.

1. "Have you heard of the SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership)? If you are like most people, you answered “No.” In spite of the lack of news coverage, the SPP is changing your world. The SPP joins government officials with CEOs of the largest multinational corporations (UPS, Wal-Mart, Lockheed Martin, Ford, GE, etc) to make important decisions on everything from energy policy to water privatization; homeland security to public health, transportation to immigration and much more. Call your Congressperson now! Demand public hearings on the SPP! Demand that the SPP be stopped!"

2. "As the American people increasingly realize the importance of buying local and being green, powerful forces are planning and enacting a very different world. This world encourages more trade, more consumption, more imports, more trucks, more pollution and less local control.

"The Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), “enacted” by a handshake between Bush (US), Fox (Mexico) and Martin (Canada) in 2005, brings together government officials and the CEOs of the world's largest multinational corporations in a undemocratic, unaccountable, non-transparent alliance, one to which you, average Americans, are not invited. Even though the SPP has never even had a hearing in Congress, it daily makes decisions which affect the nation in profound ways."It is time for the American people to be part of this discussion. Let's shine the light in. Let's have Congress hold hearings on the SPP."

Read more...

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Global Exchange talk planned for Olympia WA

The Alliance for Democracy's Olympia chapter will be hosting three speakers for a presentation on "Better Neighbors: A New Way Forward for North America--A Critical Look at the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP).

The presentation will take place on Wednesday, April 2, from 7 to 9 p.m. at Traditions Cafe and World Art, 300 5th Avenue SW (360-705-2819).

The talk features Carleen Pickard from the Council of Canadians, Hector Sanchez, from Global Exchange, and John Gibler, an independent journalist and Global Exchange fellow. Hear about the failures of NAFTA, and its behind-closed-doors evolution into the Security and Prosperity Partnership. The speakers will provide an incisive overview of economic and security policies under SPP and the links between bad trade policies and accelerated Mexican migration to the US.

The SPP will affect virtually every aspect of our lives. Yet it is being orchestrated without public or congressional scrutiny or vote. Please join us to learn more about its wide-ranging impacts. Suggested donation, $3.

Read more...

AfD organizers bring Progressive Populist's readers up to date on SPP


Visit the AfD Headlines blog to read a primer on the Security and Prosperity Partnership by Nancy Price, AfD Co-chair, and Ruth Caplan, Chair of AfD's Defending Water for Life campaign, and Co-chair of AfD's Corporate Globalization and Positive Alternatives campaign. Their article appears in the April 1 issue of the Progressive Populist. Progressive Populist editor Jim Cullen also has a great editorial on free v. fair trade and the need to renegotiate NAFTA here.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 5, 2008

Mass. chapters educate on the Security and Prosperity Partnership, outreach to support globalization impact bill

Several members of the Boston/Cambridge Alliance and North Bridge AfD are working in coalition with local groups to host a two-part forum on the SPP and the Colombia FTA. The first part of the program, Sunday, March 9 at MIT, features Carleen Pickard, Council of Canadians, Hector Sanchez, policy education coordinator for Global Exchange’s Mexico program, and Manuel Perez Rocha, Institute for Policy Studies. They are on a nationwide SPP tour sponsored by Global Exchange. Speakers on the Colombia FTA include author Maria Clemencia Ramirez of the Colombian Institute of Athropology and History, and Luis Fernando Castro of Colombia Vive.
For more information on the event, visit www.newenglandalliance.org. For action alert, flyers, powerpoint presentations and articles on the SPP go to www.thealliancefordemocracy.org and scroll down to “Featured Today.”

Chapter members are also building support for a bill pending in the Massachusetts Legislature to create a state commission to advise lawmakers on the local impact of international trade agreements. HR 374 has been introduced in the past, always “dying” in committee, but with “free” versus “fair trade” getting renewed attention as an election issue, AfD members hope that by educating the legislators the bill will get to a House vote this time around.

The local AfD chapters will be hosting Canadian anti-globalization activist Janet Eaton speaking Monday, March 24 at the Boston Public Library. AfDers hope to arrange a meeting between Janet and interested state legislators to introduce them to the SPP and its impact on Massachusetts and the region.

Read more...

Thursday, February 28, 2008

SPP Action Alert - Say to the Coroporate SPP Coup d'État

ACTION ALERT -- There is no time to lose!

Say No to the Corporate SPP Coup d'État


Exposing the Security and Prosperity Partnership
for what it is ...
the
Stealth, Profit and Power Corporate Take-Over

In his State of the Union address, President Bush announced that the fourth North American Summit of Canada, Mexico and the United States will take place April 21-22 in New Orleans. He didn’t say the words Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), probably because nobody has heard of it...and that’s no accident. At the last SPP summit in Montebello Canada in August 2007, protestors came out in large numbers. Seems lots of Canadians have heard of the SPP. Now we have to spread the word that the SPP Summit is coming to the U.S.

Read More ...

Read more...

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Dollars and Sense article on SPP

Katherine Sciacchitano, a former labor lawyer and organizing currently teaching at the National Labor College in Silver Spring, has an excellent article on the Security and Prosperity Partnership Act of North America in the current issue of Dollars and Sense magazine. She writes,

While left activists and researchers in Canada and Mexico have been spreading the word about the Security and Prosperity Partnership for several years, so far in the U.S. the SPP has mainly caught the attention of the right wing, which sees it as a stealth plan to impose a European Union-style government on the continent. The SPP is not a North American version of the EU. But it is a stealth plan—one aimed at bypassing the kind of international solidarity that halted the Free Trade Agreement of the Americas and the Multilateral Agreement on Investment.
The article is an excellent overview of the history of SPP, and the corporate rationale behind it, and outlines the harms the agreement will do to the rights of labor and communities, the environment, local economies, and civil liberties.

Read more...

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Stop SPP - Web Resources for News and Background

The Alliance for Democracy is working in coalition with the Alliance for Responsible Trade along with Canadian and Mexican groups that oppose the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP). The SPP features more than 300 initiatives designed to “harmonize” US, Mexican, and Canadian policies on food, drugs, security, immigration, refugees, manufacturing, the environment and public health. But will this harmonization benefit transnational corporations or local economies and resource protection? If you're new to SPP and the threat it poses to sustainability and democracy, here are some resources and links.

  • A short Powerpoint presentation by Ruth Caplan on the SPP shown at the convention's Saturday evening panel will shortly be posted to our website along with AfD’s new SPP flyers and a U.S. map of the six north-south Canada to Mexico Super-Corridor routes (these Super-Corridors are not a “myth” as some would have you think).
  • Click here for a longer, 55-slide presentation, entitled “Threats to Our Water: NAFTA, SPP, Atlantica, Super Corridors.”
  • Other SPP material is available at our website.
  • The Council of Canadian’s/Conseil des Canadiens “Integrate This!” website now has a new feature: SPP WATCH. The site is updated regularly, so bookmark it and check back regularly.
  • For a good analysis of the SPP and comparison with the European Union, see “Divergent U.S. Critiques of the Security and Prosperity Partnership,” by Manuel Pérez Rocha, September 2007, at www.art-us.org/node/288
  • Finally, there's been some planning at the chapter level for a possible SPP teach-in this Spring in Portland--keep watching for updates.

Read more...

Friday, February 16, 2007

"Security and Prosperity Partnership"--upcoming forum and web resources

Boston/Cambridge Alliance members are planning a forum on the new Security and Prosperity Partnership for North America (SPP) for May.

The new SPP was signed by Bush without democratic debate and vote in Congress. This Supra-NAFTA military and corporate neo-liberal plan is exposed on AfD's homepage (www.thealliancefordemocracy.org) under "Featured Today." The SPP would create cross-border regions such as Atlantica that unites NE Canada and New England by super-transportation corridors for cars and trucks, and would also include water pipelines.

Read Dave Lewit's article, "Atlantica! SuperCorridor! Without Congress, a Borderless Corporate World" and "The Security and Prosperity Partnership. How Bush, the Military and Corporate America Plan to Tighten Their Control Over Our Lives," by Nancy Price here.

Read more...