more than 200 French deputies call on Paris to veto

more than 200 French deputies call on Paris to veto

More than 200 French deputies from both left and right called on Monday, November 4, the government to block the conclusion of the expected free trade agreement between the EU and the Mercosur countries, which according to them ” betrays » European ambition.

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The agreement, negotiated by the European Commission, twice betrays what theEuropean Union. It betrays the ambition to raise environmental, social and health standards. It also betrays the commitment to the food sovereignty of our continent “, write in a column these 209 parliamentarians, from the Democratic and Republican Left, Socialists, Ecologists, Ensemble Pour la République (EPR), Democrats, Horizons, Liberté Indépendants Overseas and Territories, and Republican Right groups.

We refuse to open European markets to chicken doped with antibiotics, to beef raised against a backdrop of deforestation, to corn treated with atrazine… “, they write, rejecting “ an agreement whose content, negotiated since 1999, still does not contain any solid commitment on the environmental, social and health levels. »

For them, “ while the France has lost 100,000 farms in ten years, that it risks losing the same number in the coming decade, while 75% of deforestation in Brazil is linked to cattle breeding, this agreement would amount to sacrificing our deep values ​​to short-term commercial and geopolitical interests, to a race for influence and new markets “.

Also read“France must put forward its arguments” on the EU-Mercosur agreement according to Sophie Primas

The President of the Republic made commitments to farmers and environmental organizations, united in this fight, they emphasize. We, MPs from all sides, call on the government to block the conclusion of the agreement […]and for the European Commission to respect this French veto. »

Among the signatories are the communist André Chassaigne, the socialists Dominique Potier, Guillaume Garot, François HollandePhilippe Brun, the ex-Insoumis François Ruffin, the LR Julien Dive, Corentin Le Fur, Olivier Marleix or even the elected EPR Sandrine Le Feur and Stéphane Travert, ex-minister of Agriculture.

Negotiations with the countries of Mercosur – Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay and Bolivia – have resumed in recent months under the leadership of European countries including Germany and Spain. The prospect of a conclusion provokes the anger of French agricultural unions, who announce a new mobilization for mid-November.

Also readTowards a signing of the EU/Mercosur agreement at the next G20 meeting?

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