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Speakers who took to the floor denouncing the proposed CETA deal were raucously cheered and clapped by their colleagues but to no avail, as the landmark agreement was eventually passed by 408 to 254 following three hours of debate. Proponents for the pact had earlier made nervous speeches to the house ahead of the vote, imploring MEPs not to scupper one of the EU’s flagship projects and deliver another devastating blow to Brussels’ battered reputation. But one German MEP was loudly booed as he defended the proposed agreement after embarking on a rambling attack against French populist leader Marine Le Pen and new US president Donald Trump.

EbS Marine Le Pen launched a blistering attack on CETA today

In the end though enough parliamentarians rowed in behind the scheme, meaning a planned visit by Candian prime minister Justin Trudeau to the European parliament tomorrow will go ahead in happy circumstances for Brussels. MEPs stood and applauded as the parliament's president Atonio Tajani announced that CETA had been passed, although the deal still has to run the gauntlet of parliamentary votes in all 28 member states. CETA has endured a difficult birth, with its initial implementation blocked by the Belgian region of Wallonia following widespread public protests amid fears it will hand too much power to big business.

EbS Socialist politician Anne-Marie Mineur said the pact will erode worker's rights

EbS But German MEP Manfred Weber defended CETA

French presidential hopeful Marine Le Pen launched a blistering attack on the proposed deal today, saying it would further enrich the powerful at the expense of working families. She raged: “The CETA agreement was carefully hidden from citizens because none of you can justify it. You voted on it in private because debating in public, that’s something you hate. “When citizens understand all of this they will never trust you again. That is why this is a terrible agreement. It will undermine thousands of jobs in Europe.” To loud applause she blasted: “Are you not ashamed? You’re giving away our rights to legislate and you’re robbing our citizens of the protection of their rights that they expect from their representatives. “You’re making it possible for multinationals to attack member states so you make sure no new legislation will displease them. “It’s a disastrous picture and if this treaty is voted for this will show once again to citizens that you cannot defend them. “This is why it’s important for each country to find it’s sovereignty and determine its own future and the French public will have one possibility to change this fate and that will be the presidential elections. “It is up to nations to negotiate their agreements and not a non-elected structure which defends its own interests and not the interests of its citizens.”

Her attack followed a withering assessment of the CETA pact by Tiziana Beghin, from the Five Star Movement, who said the powers it would hand to corporations were so wide-ranging it was an effective “coup d’etat”. Attacking what she claimed will be watering down of food standards, she said: “What has been promised is totally unrealistic. This will lay waste to European producers and manufacturers. “We’re being carried down a very dangerous corridor with no regulations. Our citizens on the dining room table will be seriously affected.” The Italian MEP also attacked the controversial Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS) system, which allows big corporations to sue member states over laws which run counter to their commercial interests. She said: “It is a very reprehensible shameful closed justice system creating a triangle relationship between those in power. This is not the type of agreement we want. “CETA is a technocratic, non-elected construct that will be created. It is a silent coup d’etat. It is an institutional change which is masquerading as a trade agreement.”

When citizens understand all of this they will never trust you again Marine Le Pen

Socialist politician Anne-Marie Mineur appeared in the chamber clutching a bundle of papers containing 3.5 million signatures against CETA and wearing a t-shirt with the slogan “people before profits”. In an emotional attack on the proposed pact she said: “We’re just putting ourselves in the hands of multinationals. We’re undermining the rule of law and putting our democracy at stake. “CETA is a threat to all of us and I don’t understand the liberals, the EPPs (conservatives) and I certainly don’t understand the socialist and democrats who are not fighting against an agreement of this type with all the risks it entails. “CETA is a bad agreement. It is just good for multinationals and we’re not in favour of that we’re in favour of the choice of millions. People before profit stop CETA.” Employment committee lead Georgie Pirinski was treated with a rapturous reception as he denounced the pact, accusing it of watering down workers’ rights and helping profiteering investors. The Bulgarian MEP roared: “The committee’s recommendation to parliament is to decline giving its consent for the conclusion of CETA.”

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