One of the most influential members of the Parliamentary Labour Party, John Healey writes:
Today
MPs hold a short Commons debate on the proposed transatlantic trade and
investment partnership – TTIP.
As a pan-EU trade deal with the US it is being
negotiated by the European Commission, with a mandate and direction from member
state governments including our own.
Despite the fierce extra-parliamentary debate the planned deal has
provoked, this will be only the third time in the 18 months since negotiations
started when there will be any debate at all in the House of Commons chamber.
In total, the three debates will amount to less than one day’s full business on
a binding treaty that could have wide-ranging effects on our national economy
from aerospace to agriculture, metals to motor vehicles and public services to
pharmaceuticals.
Each debate has been instigated by backbench MPs, not
ministers, and with no prospect of a binding vote.
The truth is that Westminster lacks any proper ways to hold
ministers to account for what they do or decide in Europe.
Voters often worry
decisions on Europe are taken by people beyond their reach or influence, and
this fuels anti-European sentiment.
TTIP is the biggest-ever bilateral trade agreement. The public
have an important stake in it, and so deserve a say through their own UK
Parliament.
There is an overwhelming case for all Party leaders to guarantee a
Commons vote on TTIP, whether or not the content of the EU-US agreement
formally requires member state approval.
After all, if a government can’t win a
debate and majority in the House of Commons for a binding trade treaty, then it
has no business backing and ratifying it on behalf of the British people.
There’s also an overwhelming case for a better system for
scrutinising EU matters more widely. Just look at our European neighbours.
In the Netherlands, the Dutch equivalent of select committees are
each responsible for scrutiny in their own areas of expertise.
The committees
decide what policy areas to prioritise in any given year based on the European
Commission’s work.
Ministers are accountable directly to the relevant sectoral
committee, and must appear in advance of Council meetings to explain the Dutch
government’s position.
In Denmark, the Danish Folketing places scrutiny powers in the
hands of a ‘European Affairs Committee’.
A central pillar of the Danish system
is this committee’s ability to issue formal, binding mandates to ministers in
advance of Council meetings and negotiations on any issues considered to be
important.
In Germany, another central committee has important matters
referred to it by other sector-specific MP committees, and the federal
government is obliged to take account of the Bundestag’s opinion which in some
cases is binding ahead of EU summits.
Government is also obliged to
notify the German Parliament comprehensively, and as early as possible, on matters
concerning the EU.
In the UK by contrast, at the moment we have a European Scrutiny
Committee that is on the margins.
Take this week’s row with the European Arrest
Warrant. Despite approval in the Commons last November, it was only on Monday
that the Committee able to seek any answers from the Home Secretary.
In
Parliament more generally, Ministers typically come to the Commons only once
they have come back from Europe, not before they go out.
It’s out of date. It makes Parliament look out of touch and the
European Union out of reach to British people.
If we want to tackle the chronically low level of information,
debate and influence available on Europe to the British public – and make EU
decisions work better for Britain – then alongside arguing for EU reform, we
should get our own House in order. Starting with TTIP.
John
Healey is Labour MP for Wentworth and Dearne.
See also here :
Dangerous
EU-US trade deal TTIP would stop governments renationalising utilities and the
railways — and even put Labour’s energy price freeze policy in danger, MPs will
hear today.
The latest warning on the shadowy Transatlantic Trade and
Investment Partnership currently being cooked up in Brussels comes as attention
is focused mainly on its impact on health.
But Swansea West MP Geraint Davies said the scope of a
clause allowing private companies to sue sovereign states did not stop at the
NHS.
The investor-state dispute settlements (ISDS) clause will
threaten policies in dozens of other areas.
If a political party wants “to freeze energy prices or
have a one-off tax on privatised utilities such as the Royal Mail or
renationalise the railways or tax fizzy drinks to protect people’s health, it
needs to realise that the big corporations are preparing to sue it through
investor-state disputes,” he warned.
“In other words, these corporations threaten our very
democracy as they intimidate and financially punish the will of the people.”
MPs will debate a motion today demanding parliamentary
power of scrutiny of TTIP — including the provisions specifically related to
corporate ability to sue governments.
Labour MP Mr Davies, who tabled the motion, said: “We
cannot accept governments being sued in arbitration panels hidden from public
view under ISDS rules to protect profits instead of people.”
The vote comes after shadow energy secretary Caroline
Flint attacked profiteering power firms in an opposition day debate on Labour’s
pledge to freeze energy prices until 2017, ensuring prices can fall but not
rise.
“Wholesale costs have fallen, consumers have not seen the
benefit and the reason is because competition is weak and the companies know
this government will never do anything about it,” she told Parliament.
The Labour motion, which also called on the government to
bring forward fast-track legislation immediately to impose a duty on regulator
Ofgem to force energy suppliers to pass on wholesale price cuts to customers,
was defeated 305 to 228 — a 77 majority.
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