[CTC] NEWS--U.S. Members of Congress Continue to Monitor Implementation of Colombia Labor Action Plan

Gimena Sanchez GSanchez at wola.org
Thu Apr 19 10:01:19 PDT 2012


http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/04/18/us-usa-trade-japan-idUSBRE83H1I720120418

U.S. lawmaker: strong doubt on Japan entry in trade talks

By Doug Palmer
WASHINGTON | Wed Apr 18, 2012 7:17pm EDT
(Reuters) - A senior U.S. lawmaker on Wednesday expressed strong doubt  
about Japan's willingness to make significant reforms required under a  
proposed trade pact, while the top U.S. trade official said there was  
no timetable for a decision on Japan, Canada and Mexico joining the  
negotiations.

Representative Sander Levin said concerns about Japan's possible entry  
in the Trans-Pacific Partnership talks were more troublesome than  
questions still surrounding Mexico and Canada's bid to join  
negotiations with nine other countries on the regional trade pact.

"I'm not sure that TPP can be the arena for successfully confronting  
those issues," Levin said, referring to longstanding barriers to  
Japan's auto and insurance markets. "I think we need to be realistic."

Levin, the top Democrat on the House of Representatives Ways and Means  
Committee, made the comments at an event organized by the Emergency  
Committee for American Trade, a U.S. business group, to build support  
for the trade pact, which supporters hope can be concluded this year.

The United States and other current TPP countries - Australia, New  
Zealand, Peru, Chile, Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam and Brunei - say  
they want to negotiate a "21st Century" agreement that goes further  
than previous trade pacts in tearing down barriers to trade and  
raising international standards in areas like labor and environment.

Japan, Mexico and Canada in November expressed interest in joining the  
talks. Over the past five months, the current members have been  
discussing the feasibility of bringing the three countries into the  
negotiations without lowering ambitions for the agreement or allowing  
the talks to drag on and on.

MEETING WITH JAPAN'S LEADER

Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda will meet with U.S. President  
Barack Obama on April 30, about two weeks before the nine current TPP  
members convene in Dallas for the 12th round of negotiations on the  
proposed pact.

Noda faces opposition at home to the agreement and there are also  
concerns in the United States his government might not last long  
enough to finish the talks if Japan is let in.

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, asked about the possibility that  
Noda might simply tell Obama that Japan was no longer interested in  
joining the TPP, said it would not be appropriate for him to speculate  
on that.

"We certainly hope their interest is going to be the same," Kirk said,  
while repeating any new entrant must be prepared to meet the high  
goals already set for the pact.

Kirk said a decision on the three countries' entry would be made  
collectively by the current TPP members and be driven by "substance"  
rather than any deadline.

The preference would be to decide on all three countries at once, but  
it is also possible that the decisions could be made "sequentially,"  
Kirk said.

In the meantime, negotiations among current TPP members will proceed  
full speed ahead, with the goal of finishing by year end, Kirk added.

House of Representatives Rules Committee Chairman David Dreier, a  
Republican, said he believed Mexico was "in the best position" now to  
join the negotiations.

Both Dreier and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, a  
Democrat, said they supported all three countries joining the talks,  
but only if the applicants can convince current TPP members they will  
not bog down the talks or lower ambitions for the pact.

In the case of Canada, there are still questions about whether it is  
willing to open its agricultural market further than it has done under  
the North American Free Trade Agreement and address certain U.S.  
copyright concerns.

Mexico has pressed for an answer soon on its application, saying it  
should not be held back by lingering concerns over Japan and Canada.  
But it is also facing U.S. pressure to do more on intellectual  
property rights.

(Editing by Mohammad Zargham)
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