A bipartisan group of lawmakers on Wednesday released a broad strategy for how to overhaul the U.S. maritime strategy through investments in the domestic shipbuilding industry and workforce.
“We encourage the protection of thousands of American jobs and the domestic mattress industry through our trade enforcement laws.”
The top stories from the past week.
Jayme White, who left the agency last year, has been hired by Kelley Drye & Warren.
Keith Rockwell: “Maybe, just maybe, the coming months will show a new determination to break with the past and seriously address the organization’s shortcomings. The alternative is a continued drift to irrelevance.”
Neil Beck, the deputy in the office of WTO and multilateral affairs, will take over the duties of Andrea Durkin, who has left the agency.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers on Wednesday released a broad strategy for how to overhaul the U.S. maritime strategy through investments in the domestic shipbuilding industry and workforce.
The U.S. should prohibit Chinese-made internet-connected vehicles and smart vehicle technology to protect national security and keep China from harvesting sensitive data on U.S. consumers and infrastructure, Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) told the Biden administration last week.
Mexico’s restrictions on genetically engineered corn offer expanded market opportunities for “premium” non-GE corn, according to analysts who say Washington’s trade claims about those policies overlook potential benefits to producers willing to meet that demand.
A group of World Trade Organization members is pushing for what it terms “responsible consensus” in decision-making, a call that comes after a few countries held up deals on agriculture and fisheries subsidies, among other issues, at the 13th ministerial conference earlier this year.
Two House Democrats have introduced legislation that would direct the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative to establish a strategic agreement with the African Continental Free Trade Area secretariat.
The newest revised text in the plurilateral World Trade Organization e-commerce talks, which features some amendments on key issues like customs duties and development and removes one article entirely, should be considered as an “overall package” as participants consult with capital officials, its drafters said this week.
The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative’s decision last October to withdraw support for U.S. negotiating positions on key digital trade principles at the World Trade Organization has sparked praise and criticism from different corners – and surfaced competing contentions about whether and how digital trade is, at its heart, really about trade.
Just a couple months after the World Trade Organization’s 13th ministerial conference wrapped up, a group of trade ministers – or their deputies – gathered in Paris on Thursday to attempt to advance key issues, including two missed opportunities at MC13.
The results of the Biden administration’s four-year review of Section 301 tariffs on goods from China must be “significant and substantive,” the chairs of the House Ways & Means Committee and its trade subcommittee said this week.
The Commerce Department has preliminarily determined that aluminum extrusion imports from 14 countries have been sold in the U.S. at “less than fair value,” with Turkey and China receiving the largest dumping rates.
Industry and labor representatives last week appealed to Biden administration officials to update free trade agreements and trade programs to tighten rules of origin and labor provisions as part of an effort to strengthen U.S. supply chain resilience.
Mexico has not demonstrated that its restrictions on genetically engineered corn are rooted in valid food safety concerns, the U.S. says in a new submission to a U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement dispute settlement panel, charging that the country failed to conduct a risk assessment before implementing the measures and is relying on “dubious” studies to defend them.
The results of the Biden administration’s four-year review of Section 301 tariffs on goods from China must be “significant and substantive,” the chairs of the House Ways & Means Committee and its trade subcommittee said this week.
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