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7 Things Harper Doesn't Want You To Know About The China Trade Treaty (And A Few He Does)

7 Things Harper Doesn't Want You To Know About The China Trade Treaty
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper addresses media alongside Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott (not pictured) during a joint press conference in Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Canda on June 9, 2014. AFP PHOTO/ Cole BURSTON (Photo credit should read Cole Burston/AFP/Getty Images)
COLE BURSTON via Getty Images
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper addresses media alongside Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott (not pictured) during a joint press conference in Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Canda on June 9, 2014. AFP PHOTO/ Cole BURSTON (Photo credit should read Cole Burston/AFP/Getty Images)

I'm going to go out on a limb and say the Harper government doesn't want attention drawn to the deal it just signed with China.

Why? Because after two years of delays, the official announcement of an investor-protection treaty with the world's second-largest economy came in the form of a press release late Friday afternoon. That's how you release information if the idea is to bury it.

Not to mention the two years of delays to begin with. Harper made the surprise announcement of a Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement, as it's known, on a trade mission to Vladivostok, Russia, in 2012. China finalized the deal quickly, but Canada sat on it.

The holdup may have had to do with that fact that even some members of Prime Minister Stephen Harper's own government had doubts about the deal. And CBC suggests Harper signed the deal because of an upcoming photo op in Beijing.

But then Canadian leaders sign these sorts of deals all the time — Canada already has 17 of these types of investor-protection treaties in place, and is negotiating a dozen more.

So whatever the reasons, we've got an investor protection treaty with China. Here are seven things Harper probably doesn't want you to know about the trade deal (and a few he's probably OK with you knowing):

Chinese investors will have the right to challenge our laws with no recourse to Canadian courts

Canada-China FIPA

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