The petition to the Senate reads:
"Don’t confirm the anti-consumer, anti-internet user, pro-SOPA lobbyist Robert Holleyman to be deputy U.S. trade representative. Giant corporations already have too much influence on our trade policy, and confirming Robert Holleyman would only stack the deck further in favor of corporate interests."
It's already bad enough that
the Obama administration is pushing the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
-- a corporate power grab disguised as a "trade" agreement.Making matters worse,
President Obama recently nominated Robert Holleyman, a former lobbyist
who was a key backer of a bill that would have ended the internet as we
know it (the Stop Online Piracy Act, more commonly called "SOPA"), to be
deputy US trade representative.1 If confirmed by the Senate, Holleyman will play a key role in negotiating the TPP and other “trade” deals.
Giant
corporations already have far too much influence over our trade policy.
The confirmation of Robert Holleyman would only stack the deck further
in favor of corporate interests.
SOPA was a terrible bill
pushed by giant American media content companies and copyright holders
that, in the name of halting online piracy, would have curtailed our
free speech rights and raised the prospect of jail time for someone
uploading a video to YouTube. It looked like it was on
course to easily pass into law, but after a truly massive amount of
grassroots pressure it was dropped like a hot potato.
While the TPP negotiations
are happening in secret, we do know thanks to a recently leaked draft
“intellectual property” chapter that SOPA-like provisions have made
their way into the document.
These provisions would grant unprecedented snooping and censorship powers to ISPs, copyright holders, and governments. Indeed, the TPP has many bad intellectual property provisions that
the Electronic Frontier Foundation called the leaked chapter an
“anti-user wish list of industry-friendly policies."2
If
the Senate is serious about protecting internet freedom and the rights
of internet users, it won’t support the nomination of someone so clearly
opposed to these principles.
Tell the Senate: Don’t confirm Robert Holleyman.
We
need to make sure the Senate knows that we expect them to take a stand
for internet freedom and reject the nomination of Robert Holleyman.
Click the link below to automatically sign the petition:
Matt Lockshin, Campaign Manager
CREDO Action from Working Assets
CREDO Action from Working Assets
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