The TILMA (Trade, Investment and Labour Mobility Agreement) and the SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership) are two trade agreements in Canada that are similar in process and in outcome.
They both have been constructed away from public view, and have not been debated in the B.C. or Alberta Legislatures (TILMA) or in Parliament (SPP). Both agreements have had input only from business sectors, yet both are threatening policies, standards and institutions that have been put in place over decades by democratic processes. In this sense both of these trade agreements are anti-democratic.