Nick Dearden writes:
A group of German judges have just dealt a serious blow
to the European Commission’s desperate TTIP ‘compromise’.
They’ve issued a
damning indictment on
the proposal for an ‘international investment court’, which the EU Commission
hoped would get them out of the deep mess that the TTIP negotiations are in.
To recap: millions of people
across Europe have expressed outrage at the proposal in the US-EU trade deal –
known as TTIP – for a corporate court system which allows foreign corporations
to sue governments in secret arbitration panels.
Formally known as ISDS, the
corporate courts are already being used in countless other treaties to sue
governments for anything from raising the minimum wage to protecting the
environment.
Rather than
operating an ad hoc corporate court system, she wants to
set up a proper, permanent international court for investors, with proper
judges and more transparency.
The problem, of course, is that
this simply lends a whiff of legitimacy to a system which puts the profits of
corporations ahead of the rights of ordinary people.
But the #noTTIP campaigners
feared the compromise might win a few important votes over in the European
Parliament.
Thank heavens, therefore, for the Germany’s biggest association of
judges, who’ve injected some sense into the discussion.
Their statement ‘rejects the
proposal of the European Commission to establish an investment court’ saying
‘neither is there a legal basis nor the necessity’ for such a court.
A primary concern of the judges,
and one shared by campaigners, is that,’the creation of special courts for
certain groups of litigants is the wrong way forward’.
Creating special legal privileges
for big business and other investors (who can already afford more access to the
law than ordinary people), is clearly the path to further inequality in our
already deeply unequal society.
In fact, the judges question
whether ‘the European Union has the competence to institute an investment
court’ given that it would force member states to submit to that court, and
therefore undermine their sovereignty.
The court ‘would not only limit
the legislative powers of the Union and the Member States; it would also alter
the established court system within the Member States and the European Union’.
The judges are really clear on
this point: the court would be ‘outside the institutional and judicial
framework of the Union’ and would ‘deprive courts of Member States of
their powers in relation to the interpretation and application of European
Union law and the Court of its powers to reply.’
Anyone who says they are
concerned about our sovereignty in the upcoming debate on the EU, surely has no
choice but to oppose TTIP.
The judges also criticise the
independence of ‘judges’ foreseen under the investor court proposal, saying
‘the pool of judges will be limited to the circle of persons already
professionally predominantly engaged in international arbitration’.
In other words, the investment
court merely becomes a permanent version
of the ISDS system that is proving to be so unpopular. Which is exactly what
campaigner are worried about.
His is a really important
opinion. The judges show that the assumptions behind the corporate courts –
that investors aren’t properly protected – lacks a ‘factual basis’.
What’s more, even if it was the
case, such concerns ‘should be taken up with the national legislature’.
Of course, this hasn’t happened.
That’s because the whole point of TTIP is not to redress a genuine problem, but
to rewrite the rules of the global economy in favour of big business.
Today, a
group of German judges made that a little bit harder to do.
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