Protestors were ordered away from Simon Bridges' Third Avenue office in Tauranga yesterday after attempting to 'improve transparency” by washing the minster's windows.
Show Us Your Text activists are currently using action to highlight the lack of transparency over the Trans Pacific Partnership Agreement negotiations.
Show Us Your Text window washers outside Simon Bridges' office yesterday afternoon. Photos: Tracy Hardy.
'We are here to wash Simons Bridges' windows in an effort to improve transparency around the dodgy trade deals that are going on at the moment,” says Show Us Your Text Spokesman Deke Hobbs.
'For anybody who has done any research on the TPPA, it's pretty hard to get an idea of what it's all about when there is only a few people in our government who are privy to the text.”
The twelve nations negotiating the TPPA are the United States, Japan, Australia, Peru, Malaysia, Vietnam, New Zealand, Chile, Singapore, Canada, Mexico, and Brunei Darussalam.
Show Us Your Text is a campaigning organisation which is starting out with ‘low level' civil disobedience, says Deke.
'They will probably tell us to go, and when they do, we will go,” he said before approaching the offices.
However, the civil disobedience they have planned for Wellington at the end of the month will be somewhat different.
'We are campaigning to get the text released,” he explains, 'and if it's not released by the end of the month, we are going to try and organise civil disobedience action and an organised citizens search and seizure at Parliament, where we'll actually try and find the text.
'We are hoping to get it done without too much fuss. We are all about transparency and openness in this campaign, so we are telegraphing our punches.”
'The TPPA is not so much a trade agreement as a piece of legislation,” says Deke. 'It is going to be put in place in 12 different countries around the Pacific Rim, who will be granting sweeping powers to a bunch of really, really, big corporations around the world.
'I guess the corporations have gotten sick of lobbying governments, and now they are trying to get laws put in place so they don't have to.”

According to Deke, one of the more worrying aspects leaked about the agreement is the setting up of an international corporate court, where corporations can sue governments for loss of profits or loss of projected profits.
'Our government in the last couple of years has invited a group of oil companies to come here and do dangerous deep sea oil drilling in our waters,” he says.
'So if we were able to get a progressive government elected that didn't think that was such a good idea, then those companies could take our government to an international court run by corporate lawyers who could potentially sue our government for billions of dollars.
'It means that the tax payer would basically have to foot the bill for these huge, huge, companies.”
Wikileaks has the text and analysis.
'All we know about it so far is what had been leaked through some whistle blowers that have put their careers on the line to make it public,” says Deke.
The TPPA is the world's largest economic trade agreement that will, if it comes into force, encompass more than 40 per cent of the world's GDP.
However, concerns are being expressed internationally about the leaked content and the fact that while the public of the negotiating countries are denied access to the text, the corporations and their lawyers have full access and are involved in negotiations.
Signatory countries will be required to conform their domestic laws and policies to the provisions of the Agreement.



15 comments
Morons
Posted on 21-08-2015 11:01 | By How about this view!
We have all sorts of weirdos jumping up and down over "Ifs", "Maybes" and "Mights". When I see ACTUAL content from this UNSIGNED or AGREED TO document, I may be able to make a comment about what it will ACTUALLY MEAN. Just more stunts from the anti-everything watermelons. I hope that their stance against watching the rugby world cup comes back to haunt them in future elections and they are relegated to obscurity where they and their policies belong.
Simon does as he is told
Posted on 21-08-2015 12:14 | By Captain Sensible
Simon does as his beloved leader tells him. He is not interested in democracy, or what's best for this country. Just have a look at the way Simon has voted since becoming an MP.
show us indeed
Posted on 21-08-2015 13:12 | By PVS
To the contributor posting on behalf of Morons... it's great that you will be able to secure a copy of the TPP for review before it is signed, as has been the case for Parliaments in most of the participating countries, but not ours. Thank you for taking a moment away from precious rugby and for being concerned about New Zealand's commercial freedom and continued sovereignty, that is a tremendous community service on your part. When you secure the text, would you mind sharing it with the anti-ignorance watermelons?
Overit
Posted on 21-08-2015 13:18 | By overit
Good on them. I wish someone would organise a protest march to Parliament, I would take a car load down.
Negotiations
Posted on 21-08-2015 13:51 | By Brevig
The final agreement will be quite different from drafts that are circulated during negotiations. I get frustrated by people who think they should be able to comment on every step. If they had access it would ensure it never happened which is clearly their desire. The want us to live in a 3rd world backwater. If that happened you can bet they would swan off overseas to some country who trades better and is more secretive . Get Real!!
@ brevig
Posted on 21-08-2015 14:47 | By Captain Sensible
We do indeed live in a third world backwater. Democracy has passed us by with politicians forgetting the meaning of the word. In a democracy, the people tell the politicians what to do, NOT the other way round.
Ignorance is Bliss
Posted on 21-08-2015 14:54 | By Conzar
Transparency is required in order to have a democratic system where the public is able to take part in the discussion. Those of you saying the public shouldn't have a say, should move out of this country and go somewhere like China, North Korea, Iraq, etc. Then you can feel secure that the public will not have access to this sort of information.
use history to tell the future
Posted on 21-08-2015 15:15 | By Tracy Jane
I am NOT a weirdo - I am a mother, an osteopath, a wife of a mechanic, the daughter of orchardist. I was perfectly normal until I started reading and researching the TPPA and its impact on our government. By becoming more knowledgeable, all of a sudden, I am considered a moron and a watermelon. we don't have to read the exact TPPA to know how this turns out - we just look at how these massive 'FTAs' turn out for other countries that didn't know how to protect themselves from the might of the multi-national corporations. Instances of environmental degradation, misuse of corporate power to control and manipulate governments, loss of human rights, and more. Mostly to line the purses of the very wealthy. Get an appointment to ask your MP, 'how is the TPP going to improve the environment, reduce poverty, increase wealth, improve my life'?
Captain
Posted on 21-08-2015 16:07 | By Brevig
In a democracy the politicians do what most people think is right. Not what a noisy, politically motivated minority would like to impose. If the politicians get it wrong we vote them out. We are fortunate that we have that right. Commercial negotiations are always confidential, otherwise you give your competition a huge advantage. I know this from experience!
@ brevig
Posted on 21-08-2015 17:46 | By Captain Sensible
Switzerland has a real democracy, the rest of the world is a slap in the face to democracy. The National Govt have lied and backtracked from many promises they made pre elections. I have not seen anywhere near a majority support the TPPA, and in fact the government has not even asked us for an opinion. It's a done deal, with no consultation whatsoever....and that is not democracy!
@Brevig
Posted on 21-08-2015 22:13 | By Conzar
You are speaking of a Republic NOT a democracy. As for commercial negotiations, you are speaking of private corporations. Private corporations are NOT democratic. In fact, they are dictatorships. So suggesting that because dictatorships/corporations meet in secret doesn't mean that our government should also meet in secret especially when it comes to binding international laws that cannot be changed by a different elected government such as these treaties.
If, might, maybe, could....
Posted on 22-08-2015 00:02 | By How about this view!
Words to inspire fear and demonstrations? But then the watermelons enjoy a good get-together and a chant. We have a government that is still borrowing at an astonishing level to fund our first world demands for health services and social welfare of one kind or another and we still have the "Glass half empty brigade" whining-on about ifs and maybes. It would be pretty dimwitted to sign-up to an agreement that would have NO benefits to the nation, but then the decisions are being made by politicians, so anything may result from these TALKS (Kyoto for an example). Anyone that believes for one moment that the politicians take ANY notice of the electorate is living in LA LA land. We have a parliament full of seat-warmers that are accountable to no-one but the party leaders. They do NOT represent an electorate and therefore do not need to be accountable.
For Overit, 21-08 13:15
Posted on 22-08-2015 00:18 | By PVS
I have been contacted by local group "Tauranga TPPA Action Group". They inform that several vehicles with concerned citizens will be travelling to Wellington for the march on Parliament on Tuesday 15 September. The march is anticipated because the incumbent government will refuse to present any substantial detail of its negotiations to date, in the public interest, by the end of this month. Any notion that these are "commercial" negotiations to be conducted in secret is both naive and misinformed. It is not the people rallying against the TPPA who are misinformed, at all, despite the whining protestations of the Prime Minister.
Anti-democratic
Posted on 22-08-2015 09:19 | By ronillian
Any "agreement" that will be binding on us all for many years to come, AND which affects 40% of the global economy and difficult and extremely expensive to pull out of... MUST be transparent and involve full public discussion BEFORE signing. If corporations can see the text, the public have every right to know. More transparency. You don't have to be a "watermelon" to stand up for what's right and decent people will not be silenced or marginalised by such ignorant taunts or name-calling.
Excellent window cleaning
Posted on 22-08-2015 12:26 | By Annalist
By cleaning the windows this will save on part of the cost of maintaining the MPs office and is to be commended. Maybe they could do the Beehive too.
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