This year marks the 20th anniversary of NAFTA, which has been a complete failure (unless you’re a multinational corporation) and put family farms out of business, off-shored U.S. jobs and triggered a race to the bottom in terms of wages resulting in pushing the U.S. middle class downward economically.

Now there is an attempt to rush through the largest trade deal in history. The Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) is being widely described as “NAFTA on steroids.”

This new trade regime involves 11 nations (mostly in Asia) and has been negotiated entirely in secret, with only leaked portions providing an insight. Citizens and most lawmakers have been locked out of the negotiation process and kept in the dark about the details of this proposed agreement.

Let’s be clear — these trade deals take power away from local and state elected representatives and make us subject to a virtual undemocratic corporate, global constitution that could undermine the U.S. Constitution, state constitutions, federal and state laws and local control laws. Laws such as Country of Origin Labeling (COOL) would be in jeopardy — COOL is supported by the majority of farmers and consumers, but opposed by corporate agribusiness.

The TPP agreement would elevate multinational corporations to the same legal status as sovereign nations. For example, corporations would be able to sue a nation for enforcing its food safety standards as being “illegal trade barriers.” These lawsuits would be decided before an unelected foreign tribunal where the only deciding factor would be whether a nation’s standards on a product would restrict the plaintiff corporation’s ability to make a profit. Taxpayer money would then be paid in the form of a fine or settlement due to this litigation.

If the TPP means the United States can be sued and the issue cannot be heard by our courts or our Congress, it would give the American taxpayer zero influence, and it’s a deal breaker.

To make matters worse, the Obama administration appears to be pushing hard for “fast-track” authority to develop and finalize the TPP. This would give the president power to make trade deals without consulting Congress, subverting normal processes where our elected representatives can bring forth amendments and changes.

Missourians value local democracy, and the people of this state have fought hard to maintain the right of local control. Fast track and the TPP are a direct attack on this mainstay of Missouri values.

Trade is something most Americans are inclined to support as long as it’s done in an equitable manner. That’s not what’s going on here. This type of trade agreement dramatically increases the profits of huge agribusiness corporations at the expense of U.S. farmers, our rural economies and farmers around the world.

Jim Compton is a family farmer in Buffalo.