Close X
Sunday, October 6, 2024
ADVT 
National

75 Per Cent Of Respondents Never Heard Of Biggest Free Trade Deal Yet: Poll

The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2015 12:02 PM
    OTTAWA — It's the biggest free trade deal Canadians never heard of.
     
    A new poll suggests three in four Canadians have no idea that Canada is one of 12 countries immersed in negotiations for the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
     
    The poll was conducted by Environics Research Group for Trade Justice Network, an umbrella group dedicated to challenging the secretive process by which international trade deals are generally negotiated.
     
    Fully 75 per cent of respondents said they had never heard of the TPP before being asked about it by the pollster.
     
    The telephone poll of 1,002 Canadians was conducted June 3-12 and is considered accurate within plus or minus 3.2 percentage points, 19 times in 20. 
     
    The 12 countries involved in negotiations include the United States, Mexico, Australia, Japan, Chile, Vietnam and Singapore; they represent a market of almost 800 million people and a combined gross domestic product of more than $25 trillion.
     
    The federal government maintains the TPP would enhance trade in the Asia-Pacific region, providing greater economic opportunity for Canadians.
     
    In a statement, Trade Justice Network spokesman Martin O'Hanlon called it "deeply disturbing" that so few Canadians are aware of the partnership talks.
     
    The network maintains the secret negotiations are being conducted with the guidance of multinational corporations and with no input from labour leaders, environmentalists or even MPs.
     
    "It's frightening that this can happen in a democracy," O'Hanlon said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Talking Terrorism: Harper And Obama Sound Like Yin And Yang

    Talking Terrorism: Harper And Obama Sound Like Yin And Yang
    WASHINGTON — The last few days have shown vivid differences in the way the leaders of Canada and the United States discuss terrorism and the threat posed by Islamist fighters.

    Talking Terrorism: Harper And Obama Sound Like Yin And Yang

    Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman

    Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman
    LAKE LOUISE, Alta. — A search and rescue technician with the Canadian military is missing in Banff National Park after being swept away in an avalanche.

    Ice Climber Missing In Banff National Park Was On Military Exercise: Spokeswoman

    Delhi Exit Polls Predict Aam Aadmi Party Win After Record Voting

    Delhi Exit Polls Predict Aam Aadmi Party Win After Record Voting
    A year after its 49-day stint in power ended abruptly, Arvind Kejriwal's AAP was set to return to power in Delhi, exit polls said Saturday after record voting in assembly elections whose outcome is bound to have national ramifications.

    Delhi Exit Polls Predict Aam Aadmi Party Win After Record Voting

    Bus Crash At No. 3 Road And Steveston Highway Knocks Out Power In Richmond

    Bus Crash At No. 3 Road And Steveston Highway Knocks Out Power In Richmond
    RICHMOND, B.C. — Thousands of homes in Richmond, B.C., were without power this morning after a transit bus crashed into a power pole at No. 3 Road and Steveston Highway.

    Bus Crash At No. 3 Road And Steveston Highway Knocks Out Power In Richmond

    Alberta Man With $50Million Lottery Ticket Says He Knew He Was Going To Win Someday

    Alberta Man With $50Million Lottery Ticket Says He Knew He Was Going To Win Someday
    ST. ALBERT, Alta. — Randall Rush says it sounds hokey, but he was sure he was going to win it big someday. The Alberta man says he started playing the lottery six years ago, after a vision of digits popped in his head. He wrote them down and a friend persuaded him to play.

    Alberta Man With $50Million Lottery Ticket Says He Knew He Was Going To Win Someday

    B.C. Takes Another Shot At Hunting Allocations After Triggering Hunter Uproar

    B.C. Takes Another Shot At Hunting Allocations After Triggering Hunter Uproar
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is taking a second shot at setting hunting allocation numbers after admitting its initial attempt at quotas for resident and non-resident hunters missed the target.

    B.C. Takes Another Shot At Hunting Allocations After Triggering Hunter Uproar