The European Commission has received 149.399 responses to its Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP). But “nearly none of them was in favor of ISDS,” reports the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
35 percent of the total responses came from the United Kingdom, 23 percent from Austria and 22 percent from Germany. Nearly no one participated in the eastern European states. According to the Commission, 97 percent of all responses were mass replies acquired by non-governmental organizations.
This though is not the end of the free trade agreement with the United States, according to trade-commissioner Cecilia Malström. The consultation was not meant to be a referendum, sources close to the Swedish commissioner said Tuesday. “We now need an open Discussion on the basis of the consultation,” she said in Strasburg.
The paper stresses that Malström did not put forward concrete proposals to fix ISDS but only said the commission would work on several issues, such as “making sure, TTIP does not restrict rights of states in terms of protection of the environment and of consumers.”
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung adds that new discussions with the European Parliament, the member states and interest groups such as unions, consumer advocates and representatives of corporations further diminish hopes of a fundamental agreement on TTIP before the end of the year.
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