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  • In May 2016, French President Francois Hollande announced that the country would reject the

  • Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership in its current state. This comes just months

  • after US President Barack Obama’s visits to the United Kingdom and Germany, where thousands

  • of protesters urged him to stop TTIP negotiations. Opposition to the trade deal is nothing new,

  • and disputes among leaders on both sides of the Atlantic have stalled the treaty for nearly

  • three years. So what exactly is the TTIP and why is it so controversial?

  • Well, the TTIP is a potential trade agreement between the United States and the European

  • Union. The deal aims to make trade easier between the US and Europe by reducing tariffs

  • and altering regulations on goods, which vary from country to country. For instance, the

  • US has different food safety standards than countries in Europe, meaning that trading

  • meat and agricultural products is often difficult or impossible. The TTIP aims to resolve this

  • by harmonizing US and EU safety and production standardsnot just on food, but on clothing,

  • pharmaceuticals and a slew of other goods. This is not unlike the TPP, or Trans Pacific

  • Partnership, which has almost identical goals, but exists mostly between Pacific Rim countries.

  • The Obama Administration and other proponents of the TTIP argue that the deal will boost

  • commerce between the US and Europe, thus creating millions of jobs in those regions and elsewhere.

  • According to the European Commission, the TTIP would lead to about $140 billion dollars

  • of economic growth for the EU, and nearly $110 billion dollars for the US over the next

  • decade.

  • But most of the controversy centers around the deal’s potential changes to regulation

  • and safety standards, particularly those in Europe. Activists and politicians have voiced

  • concern that the TTIP would force Europe to sacrifice their food, environmental and labor

  • standards in order to conform to the US’s comparatively lower standards. For example,

  • many US meat producers treat their chicken with chemicals like chlorine before its sold

  • to consumers, a practice that has long been outlawed in Europe out of fear that the chemical

  • is cancer-causing. Many speculate that should the TTIP go through, it would coerce European

  • chicken producers to adopt this controversial practice. Moreover, critics worry that the

  • deal gives corporations too much power, as it would allow foreign businesses to sue sovereign

  • governments if their regulations are deemed unfairly restrictive.

  • These speculations gained major footing in May 2016, when Greenpeace Netherlands leaked

  • 248 pages of classified documents regarding the TTIP. The documents acknowledgedirreconcilable

  • differences between US and EU standards, particularly in animal testing, engineering, drug safety

  • and the environment. However even after the leak, most TTIP negotiations have stayed confidential,

  • as negotiations are extremely secretive, even among lawmakers.

  • But many Europeans, particularly business leaders, have strongly advocated for the TTIP.

  • This, in part, comes from the fear that if the EU does not adopt the deal, Europe will

  • then have to increase trade with China, which in many cases has even lower production and

  • safety standards than the US.

  • And although vocal opposition may suggest otherwise, the TTIP is generally viewed as

  • beneficial among Europeans. A 2015 Pew report showed that nearly 60 percent of Europeans

  • favor stronger trade ties between Europe and the US Still, all 28 EU member states and

  • the European parliament must approve the TTIP before it takes effect. With France and other

  • European countries still opposed to the deal, it will likely be years before we see anything

  • come to fruition.

  • The TTIP’s sister agreement, the TPP, is just as controversial, if not moreso. You

  • can learn more about the Trans Pacific Partnership by watching this video. Thanks for checking

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In May 2016, French President Francois Hollande announced that the country would reject the

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