Workday Minnesota | August 23, 2013
Hundreds of Minnesota activists march against free trade deal
By Staff
Hundreds of labor, fair trade, environmental and community activists marched through downtown Minneapolis Tuesday to protest the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a massive trade deal that could jeopardize American jobs, wages, consumer safety, health care and environmental standards.
“We are building people power. We are movement building,” Communications Workers of America President Larry Cohen told the crowd.

Cohen was joined by Minnesota Fair Trade Coalition Director Josh Wise, TakeAction Minnesota Executive Director Dan McGrath, CWA Minnesota State Council President Mona Meyer and other coalition allies.
CWA Local 7250 member Alanna Galloway (right) leads chants during the march through downtown Minneapolis.
The United States and 11 other Pacific Rim countries will meet this week in Brunei to discuss what could be the largest trade agreement in U.S. history. But the only people at the negotiating table are corporate lobbyists and government officials – not the groups fighting for workers, public health, free speech, environmental regulations and consumer protections.
While the draft text of the agreement has never been officially released to the public, leaked documents reveal disconcerting proposals to grant multinational corporations new political powers, ration lifesaving medicines, extend restrictive intellectual property laws and more.
“Democracy does not function unless the people have a spot at the table,” noted Wise. “The big corporations want to keep this as secret as possible.”

“Secrets, secrets are no fun. TPP hurts everyone,” the protesters chanted.
For more information
Learn more about the TPP at the Citizens Trade Campaign website