Fourth, an early area of focus has been on the membership. Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Indonesia, Paraguay, Taiwan, Türkiye, and the US are not listed as sponsors of the released text. This does not mean, it should be noted, that these WTO members will never become full JSI participants, but they are not currently on board. Indonesia, for example, has apparently not yet decided if the moratorium language in the JSI is acceptable domestically.
There has been a lot of early dismay that the United States was not able or willing to sign on to the stabilized text. There has been some suggestion that the release of the text could have been delayed until after the US election in November to give the US more of an opportunity to sign on to the deal. However, at this point there is little indication that either candidate in the US presidential election is prepared to make digital trade or, indeed, the WTO a priority in the near term. The JSI co-conveners appear to have decided that holding the entire text at bay on the off-chance that a new US presidential term would allow greater flexibility by the Americans was a poor bet.