Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved
as Congressional-Executive Agreements
Rather Than as Treaties

Jeanne J. Grimmett
Legislative Attorney
September 8, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
97-896
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Summary
U.S. trade agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), World Trade
Organization agreements, and bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) have been approved by
majority vote of each house rather than by two-thirds vote of the Senate—that is, they have been
treated as congressional-executive agreements rather than as treaties. The congressional-executive
agreement has been the vehicle for implementing Congress’s long-standing policy of seeking
trade benefits for the United States through reciprocal trade negotiations. In a succession of
statutes, Congress has authorized the President to negotiate and enter into tariff and nontariff
barrier (NTB) agreements for limited periods, while permitting NTB and free trade agreements
negotiated under this authority to enter into force for the United States only if they are approved
by both houses in a bill enacted into public law and other statutory conditions are met;
implementing bills are also accorded expedited consideration under the scheme.
The President was most recently granted temporary trade negotiating authority utilizing this
approach in the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002 (BTPAA), contained in Title
XXI of the Trade Act of 2002, P.L. 107-210. Although the authority expired during the 110th
Congress, agreements entered into before July 1, 2007, remain eligible for congressional
consideration under the expedited procedure. Implementing bills for eight FTAs were signed into
law under the 2002 act; agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea remain pending.
Implementing legislation for the U.S.-Colombia agreement was introduced in April 2008 (H.R.
5724, 110th Congress), but House leadership considered that President Bush had submitted the bill
without sufficient coordination with Congress, and the House subsequently voted to make key
procedural rules for expedited consideration inapplicable to the legislation (H.Res. 1092, 110th
Congress). In late June 2010, President Obama announced that, after certain outstanding issues
involving the U.S.-Korea FTA are resolved, he intends to present Congress with an implementing
bill for the agreement “in the few months” following the G-20 meeting to be held in Seoul in
November 2010.
In addition, the United States Trade Representative (USTR), on behalf of the President, notified
the House and Senate in December 2009 by letter that the President intends to enter into
negotiations aimed at a regional, Asia-Pacific trade agreement, known as the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) Agreement. Although the trade agreement authorities of the BTPAA have
expired, the USTR has stated the Administration was observing the relevant procedures of the act
with respect to notifying and consulting with Congress regarding these negotiations.
A federal appeals court held in 2001 that the issue of whether the NAFTA should have been
approved as a treaty was a nonjusticiable political question (Made in the USA Found. v. United
States, 242 F.3d 1300 (11th Cir. 2001)). The U.S. Supreme Court denied review in the case.

Congressional Research Service

Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Contents
Statutory Authority for Trade Agreements ................................................................................... 1
Development of the Statutory Trade Agreements Program ........................................................... 2
Constitutionality of the Congressional-Executive Trade Agreement: Judicial Views..................... 5

Contacts
Author Contact Information ........................................................................................................ 7

Congressional Research Service

Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Statutory Authority for Trade Agreements
The broad-gauged trade agreements entered into by the United States in the 1990s—the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement,
and the multilateral trade agreements that a country must accept as a condition of WTO
membership—were negotiated by the President and submitted to Congress under the terms of the
Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 (OTCA) and the Trade Act of 1974. The OTCA
provided the President with authority to negotiate and enter into tariff and nontariff trade barrier
(NTB) agreements until June 1, 1993, authority that was later extended to April 15, 1994, in order
to complete the GATT Uruguay Round (P.L. 100-418, § 1102, 19 U.S.C. § 2902, as amended by
P.L. 103-49).
The OTCA also provided that NTB agreements negotiated under the statute could not enter into
force for the United States unless, among other things, the agreements were submitted to
Congress along with an implementing bill and the bill was enacted into law (P.L. 100-418, §
1103, 19 U.S.C. § 2903). Such legislation was entitled to so-called fast track or expedited
consideration; expedited procedures are set forth in § 151 of the Trade Act of 1974, 19 U.S.C. §
2191. Section 151(a) defines “implementing bill” as a bill that contains, inter alia, a provision
approving the trade agreement or agreements and, if changes to existing laws are needed,
provisions “necessary or appropriate to implement such trade agreement or agreements, either
repealing or amending existing laws or providing new statutory authority.” It is the provision
approving the agreement or agreements, once enacted, that makes the Uruguay Round
agreements, as well as the NAFTA, other free trade agreements and earlier GATT-related
agreements, congressional-executive agreements.1

1 Note Canadian Lumber Trade Alliance v. United States, 425 F.Supp.2d 1321, 1359-63 (Ct. Int’l Trade 2006), where
the court distinguished between approval of a trade agreement, described as an action “approving the United States’
international legal obligations specified by the Agreement,” and the amendment of statutes to conform U.S. law to
agreement obligations.
The negotiation, entry into, and implementation of trade agreements implicates the President’s Article II authority to
negotiate treaties and international agreements and to conduct foreign affairs, see United States v. Curtiss-Wright
Export Corp., 299 U.S. 319 (1936), and Congress’ express power to impose duties and tariffs and to regulate foreign
commerce. U.S. Const., Art. I, § 8, cls. 1, 3. Because of Congress’s express power in this area, the President may not
impose, reduce, or effect any other change in existing duty rates through an executive agreement unless he has been
delegated the authority to do so by Congress. See United States v. Yoshida Int’l Inc., 526 F.2d 560, 572 (C.C.P.A.
1975)(“no undelegated power to regulate commerce, or to set tariffs, inheres in the Presidency”)(emphasis in the
original); Canadian Lumber Trade Alliance, 425 F.Supp.2d at 1357 (“Indeed, when the President exercises authority in
regulating foreign commerce, he or she does so as Congress’ ‘agent.’”); United States v. Guy W. Capps, Inc., 204 F.2d
655, 660 (4th Cir. 1953)(“Imports from a foreign country are foreign commerce subject to regulation, so far as this
country is concerned, by Congress alone.”). Regarding the President’s authority to enter into agreements involving
foreign commerce, see Consumers Union of U.S., Inc. v. Kissinger, 506 F.2d 136 (D.C.Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 421
U.S. 1004(1975)(mandatory or enforceable, but not voluntary agreements limiting exports to the United States are
superseded by trade laws).
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Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Development of the Statutory Trade Agreements
Program

The trade agreement authorities and requirements embodied in the OTCA reflect a congressional
approach to international trade policy that evolved over a number of years.2 As early as 1890,
Congress delegated tariff bargaining authority to the President and authorized him to suspend
existing duty-free treatment on particular items by proclamation. The Supreme Court
subsequently held that the authorizing statute, § 3 of the Tariff Act of 1890, 26 Stat. 612, did not
unconstitutionally delegate either legislative or treaty-making authority to the President.3 In the
Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934, as amended and extended, Congress authorized the
President, for limited periods, to enter into reciprocal tariff agreements with foreign countries
and, within a designated range, to proclaim tariffs needed to implement these agreements without
subsequent congressional approval. This authority was used to enter into numerous reciprocal
trade agreements, to proclaim new tariffs as a result, and to enter into the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The President’s modification of tariffs under this statute was likewise
held to be valid under the Treaty Clause, federal courts having acknowledged that not all
international undertakings of the United States are concluded as treaties and that congressional-
executive trade agreements could find a constitutional basis in the joint exercise of Congress’s
tariff and commerce authorities and the President’s foreign affairs power.4
As GATT parties began to negotiate more extensively to eliminate nontariff trade barriers in a
number of areas, Congress enacted legislation that would both provide the President with
negotiating credibility and ensure that Congress carried out its constitutional responsibilities
regarding legislative implementation of the agreements. Since NTB agreements could address a
variety of regulatory matters (e.g., subsidies, government procurement, product standards), these
agreements might require more elaborate changes in federal law than tariff agreements, which for
the most part could be implemented through a pre-authorized presidential proclamation reducing
tariffs on particular items. In contrast, if legislation were needed to implement NTB agreements,

2 The use of the congressional-executive agreement in the trade area has been viewed as a recognition of the House’s
constitutional role in revenue raising. RESTATEMENT (THIRD) OF THE FOREIGN RELATIONS LAW OF THE UNITED STATES §
303, Reporters’ Note 9 (1987). Senate deference to the use of the congressional-executive agreement for the Uruguay
Round agreements may arguably be inferred from its 76-16 vote to amend the OTCA to extend the date by which the
President could enter into the agreements pursuant to this statute, the yeas constituting more than two-thirds of that
body. 139 Cong. Rec. 14805 (1993).
3 Field v. Clark, 143 U.S. 649 (1892). In denying a motion for a temporary restraining order against tariff reductions on
electronic equipment, the U.S. Court of International Trade ruled that plaintiffs were unlikely to prevail in their
argument that the tariff proclamation authority used was an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority. Kemet
Electronics Corp. v. Barshefsky, 969 F.Supp. 82, 86 (Ct. Int’l Trade 1997). While the court viewed the principles by
which the President was to be guided as “allow[ing] a great deal of discretion,” it did not find them to be
“unintelligible.” Id. at 86; see also Kemet Electronics Corp. v. Barshefsky, 976 F.Supp. 1012, 1019 (Ct. Int’l Trade
1997)(motion for preliminary injunction denied). The statute at issue was § 111(b) of the Uruguay Round Agreements
Act, 19 U.S.C. § 3521(b), under which the President could modify tariffs in order to implement certain trade
agreements whose negotiation had begun but had not concluded during the Uruguay Round provided he first consult
with Congress. The President proclaimed WTO-agreed tariff reductions on information technology, distilled spirits,
pharmaceuticals, and chemical products under this authority. Pres. Proc. 7011, 62 Fed. Reg. 35909 (1997); Pres. Proc.
6982, 62 Fed. Reg. 16039 (1997).
4 Star-Kist Foods, Inc. v. United States, 169 F.Supp. 268 (Cust. Ct. 1958), aff’d 275 F.2d 472 (C.C.P.A. 1959). See
generally
Congressional Research Service, Treaties and Other International Agreements: The Role of the United States
Senate; A Study Prepared for the Senate Comm. on Foreign Relations
76-86 (2001)(S. Prt. 106-71).
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Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Congress could choose not to vote on such legislation or could add amendments that might be
viewed as inconsistent with agreement obligations. At the same time, overly broad delegations of
authority to the President to implement NTB agreements or legislative vetoes of executive
implementing actions might not comport with constitutional requirements regarding the passage
of legislation. In the Trade Act of 1974, Congress provided the President with new authority to
negotiate multilateral trade agreements for a limited period of time, allowing him to proclaim
certain tariff reductions and modifications but requiring him to submit NTB agreements to
Congress, which would vote on their approval and on legislation necessary or appropriate to
implement them.5 Because of the complexities of multilateral negotiation, Congress sought to
provide the President with a sound negotiating posture by providing that it would consider trade
agreement implementing legislation submitted under the terms of the statute (including
requirements that the President notify and consult with Congress) within a prescribed period of
time and without amendment.6 To this end, § 151 of the act sets out procedural rules according an
introduced bill expedited consideration and ensuring a final floor vote.
The fast-track procedure in the 1974 act was first used with respect to the GATT Tokyo Round
Agreements, which were approved and implemented in 1979 (P.L. 96-39). Temporary statutory
authority for bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) was added in the Trade and Tariff Act of 1984
(P.L. 98-473, § 401) and was again provided for in the OTCA. Congress approved bilateral FTAs
with Israel and Canada, the NAFTA, and the GATT Uruguay Round agreements under one or the
other of these authorities (P.L. 99-47, P.L. 100-449, P.L. 103-182, P.L. 103-465). The FTA with
Jordan was statutorily implemented in 2001, though not under a fast-track authorizing statute and
without an express approval provision (P.L. 107-43).

5 Modifying an Administration proposal, the House in 1973 approved legislation that would have authorized the
President to negotiate tariff and nontariff barrier (NTB) agreements for a given period. Once the agreements were
concluded, the President would submit them to Congress along with any needed draft implementing orders and
proclamations. The agreements and orders and proclamations would become law (thus superseding inconsistent prior
statutes) provided neither House had passed a resolution of disapproval by majority of those present and voting within
90 days. See H.Rept. 93-571, at 6, 23-34, 41-42. The Senate, whose Finance Committee viewed the veto approach to be
of doubtful constitutionality, prevailed in the adoption of the current requirement for two-House legislative approval of
NTB agreements and enactment of implementing legislation on a fast-track basis. See S.Rept. 93-1298, at 14-15, 22,
76, 107. Objections to the one-House veto procedure had also been raised earlier in dissenting views in the House
report. H.Rept. 93-571, at 199. The Supreme Court eventually held legislative vetoes unconstitutional in Immigration
and Naturalization Service v. Chadha
, 462 U.S. 919 (1983).
6 S.Rept. 93-1298, at 77, 107. While these agreements could be submitted to the Senate as treaties (see H.Rept. 93-571,
at 24; S.Rept. 93-1298, at 86), neither the agreements nor their implementing legislation would be entitled to expedited
legislative consideration. Moreover, while the House would have a role in approving any implementing legislation, it
would not expressly approve the agreements, that is, it would not vote on whether the United States should accept the
international obligations therein. The United States has assumed trade obligations in treaties, specifically its bilateral
friendship, commerce and navigation (FCN) treaties, which require parties to accord most-favored-nation tariff
treatment and other trade benefits to each other’s goods. With the conclusion of many bilateral tariff agreements under
reciprocal trade agreements legislation, the development of GATT agreements, and the entry by the United States into
WTO and free trade agreements, trade obligations between the United States and its trading partners are now primarily
defined by these more recent undertakings.
Some have suggested using a statute providing a legislative framework for international negotiations and procedures
for expedited legislative consideration of any resulting international agreement and its implementing legislation in areas
of international concern other than trade. See, e.g., Nigel Purvis, Paving the Way for U.S. Climate Leadership; The
Case for Executive Agreements and Climate Protection Authority (Resources for the Future 2008), at
http://www.rff.org/documents/RFF-DP-08-09.pdf.
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Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Renewed trade negotiating authority was granted the President in the Bipartisan Trade Promotion
Authority Act of 2002 (BTPAA), contained in Title XXI of the Trade Act of 2002, P.L. 107-210.
Although the authority expired during the 110th Congress, implementing bills for trade
agreements entered into before July 1, 2007, remain eligible for expedited legislative
consideration.7 Eligibility continues because only the agreement needed to be entered into before
July 1, 2007, for its implementing legislation to be eligible for consideration on an expedited
basis. The 2002 act does not require that implementing legislation for any such agreement be
submitted to Congress by a given date.
The BTPAA procedures were used to approve FTAs with Chile, Singapore, Australia, Morocco,
Bahrain, and Oman, as well as the Dominican Republic-Central America-United States FTA (DR-
CAFTA). The Administration also entered into FTAs with Peru, Colombia, Panama, and South
Korea, and had been negotiating other FTAs as well as multilateral agreements in the WTO Doha
Round, before Title XXI authorities expired.8
Implementing legislation for U.S.-Peru agreement was approved and signed into law in the 110th
Congress (P.L. 110-138); agreements with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea remain pending.
Although implementing legislation for the U.S.-Colombia agreement was introduced in April
2008 (H.R. 5724, 110th Congress), House leadership considered that President Bush had
submitted the bill without sufficient coordination with Congress,9 and the House subsequently
voted 224-195 that rules in § 151 of the Trade Act of 1974 providing for automatic committee
discharge, a deadline for a vote on final passage, as well as motions to proceed to House floor
consideration, would be inapplicable to the legislation (H.Res. 1092, 110th Congress).10 On June
26, 2010, President Obama announced that, after certain outstanding issues involving the U.S.-
Korea FTA are resolved, he intends to present Congress with an implementing bill for the
agreement “in the few months” following the G-20 meeting to be held in Seoul in November
2010.11 There has been no legislative activity involving the agreement with Panama.12

7 The procedures, referred to in the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act (BTPAA) as “trade authorities
procedures,” originally applied to bills for agreements entered into before July 1, 2005, but could be extended to bills
for agreements entered into before July 1, 2007, if the President requested an extension and neither House of Congress
adopted an extension disapproval resolution before July 1, 2005. P.L. 107-210, § 2103(c), as amended, 19 U.S.C. §
3803(c). No such resolution was voted upon. The President’s authority to negotiate and enter into agreements
addressing both tariffs and nontariff barriers is set out at § 2103(b) of the act, 19 U.S.C. § 3803(b). The BTPAA
required the President to notify Congress at least 90 days before he entered into an agreement.
8 For additional information on the WTO Doha Round negotiations, see CRS Report RL32060, World Trade
Organization Negotiations: The Doha Development Agenda
, by Ian F. Fergusson. For further information on concluded
trade agreements and ongoing negotiations in 2007-2008, see CRS Report RL33463, Trade Negotiations During the
110th Congress
, by Ian F. Fergusson.
9 Bush Sends Up U.S.-Colombia FTA Bill; House Speaker Seeks Timetable Change, 25 INT’L TRADE REP. (BNA) 510
(Apr. 10, 2008).
10 It has not been definitely determined whether expedited procedures provided for in the BTPAA would apply to the
U.S.-Colombia agreement’s implementing bill if the legislation were to be introduced in the 111th Congress.
Reportedly, the House Parliamentarian concluded in 2006 that a trade agreement implementing bill may only be
introduced once under the BTPAA process, while the Senate Parliamentarian informally advised in 2008 that the
Senate may continue to apply expedited procedures to a reintroduced bill. Free Trade Agreements, 26 INT’L TRADE
REP. (BNA) 123 (Jan. 22, 2009); Senate Parliamentarian Says Colombia FTA Has Fast-Track Next Year, INSIDE U.S.
TRADE , Aug. 8, 2008, at 1; Implementing Legislation Can Only Be Submitted Once under Fast Track, INSIDE U.S.
TRADE , Nov. 10, 2006, at 5. For further information on the U.S. agreement with Colombia, see CRS Report RL34470,
The Proposed U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement: Economic and Political Implications, by M. Angeles Villarreal.
11 See Obama Says Korea FTA to Move Forward; Resolve Issues by November G-20 Meeting, 27 INT’L TRADE REP.
(BNA) 970 (July 1, 2010). For further information on the agreement, see CRS Report RL34330, The Proposed U.S.-
(continued...)
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Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Additionally, in December 2009, the United States Trade Representative (USTR), on behalf of the
President, notified the House and Senate by letter that the President intends to enter into
negotiations aimed at a regional, Asia-Pacific trade agreement, known as the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) Agreement.13 Though the trade agreement authorities of the BTPAA have
expired, the USTR stated in a December 2009 Federal Register notice that “USTR is observing
the relevant procedures of the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2009 (19 U.S.C.
3804), which apply to agreements entered into before July 1, 2007, with respect to notifying and
consulting with Congress regarding the TPP trade agreement negotiations.”14
Along with the United States, TPP negotiating parties currently include Australia, Brunei, Chile,
New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam. The group may be expanded, however, to include
other countries in the Asia-Pacific region. As noted above, bilateral FTAs are currently in force
between the United States and Australia, Chile, Peru, and Singapore. Negotiators have not yet
made a final decision on the structure of the TPP agreement in light of these existing FTAs.15
Constitutionality of the Congressional-Executive
Trade Agreement: Judicial Views

The question whether trade agreements could constitutionally be entered into as congressional-
executive agreements rather than treaties emerged during consideration of Uruguay Round
implementing legislation. The question originally was posed because of the perceived effect of
the agreements on states.16 The issue also arose in a judicial challenge to the NAFTA, in which it
was alleged that the failure to use the treaty process rendered the agreement and its implementing
legislation unconstitutional. In Made in the USA Foundation v. United States, an Alabama federal
district court held in July 1999 that “the President had the authority to negotiate and conclude
NAFTA pursuant to his executive authority and pursuant to the authority granted to him by
Congress in accordance with the terms of the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 ...
and section 151 of the Trade Act of 1974 ... and as further approved by the [NAFTA]
Implementation Act.”17 In the court’s view, the Foreign Commerce Clause, combined with the

(...continued)
South Korea Free Trade Agreement (KORUS FTA): Provisions and Implications, coordinated by William H. Cooper.
12 For further information on this agreement, see CRS Report RL32540, The Proposed U.S.-Panama Free Trade
Agreement
, by J. F. Hornbeck.
13 Text of letters at http://www.ustr.gov/webfm_send/1559.
14 Request for Comments Concerning Proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership Trade Agreement, 74 Fed.Reg. 66720 (Dec.
16, 2009); see also Request for Comments Concerning an Environmental Review of the Proposed Trans-Pacific
Partnership Trade Agreement, 75 Fed. Reg. 14479 (Mar. 25, 2010).
15 Decision on TPP Structure Among Key Challenges Facing Negotiators, INSIDE U.S. TRADE, Dec. 18, 2009, at 3. For
further information on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, see CRS Report R40502, The Trans-Pacific Partnership
Agreement
, by Ian F. Fergusson and Bruce Vaughn.
16 See Special Report, INSIDE U.S. TRADE, July 22, 1994. Legal arguments and discussion may be found in
“Memorandum to Ambassador Michael Kantor, U.S. Trade Representative, from Walter Dellinger, Assistant Attorney
General, Office of Legal Counsel, re: Treaty Ratification of the GATT Uruguay Round: Additional Memorandum”
(Nov. 22, 1994), at http://www.usdoj.gov/olc/1994opinions.htm. See also S. 2467, GATT Implementing Legislation:
Hearings before the Senate Comm. on Commerce, Science, and Transportation
, 103d Cong., 2d Sess. 285-381 (1994).
17 Made in the USA Found. v. United States, 56 F.Supp.2d 1226 (W.D.Ala. 1999). Note also Ntakirutimana v. Reno,
184 F.3d 419 (5th Cir. 1999), cert. denied, 528 U.S. 1135 (2000), where the federal appeals court upheld U.S. entry into
the 1995 extradition agreement between the United States and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda by
(continued...)
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Necessary and Proper Clause and the President’s Article II foreign relations power, provided a
constitutionally sufficient basis for the agreement. The court preliminarily held that institutional,
but not individual plaintiffs, had standing to sue, and that the political question doctrine did not
bar it from ruling on the merits.
On appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit, while agreeing that appellants had
standing, held that the issue of whether an international commercial agreement such as the
NAFTA is a treaty that must be approved by two-thirds of the Senate was a nonjusticiable
political question.18 The court dismissed the appeal and remanded to the district court with
instructions to vacate. The Supreme Court denied certiorari (534 U.S. 1039 (2001)). Under the
political question doctrine, a court will decline to rule on the merits if it finds that the underlying
matter is committed to the discretion and expertise of the legislative and executive branches. In
the case at hand, the Eleventh Circuit applied a tripartite inquiry that it said was suggested by
Justice Lewis Powell in Goldwater v. Carter, 444 U.S. 996 (1979), a distillation of criteria for
determining justiciability originally identified in Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186 (1962). The three
questions posed by the court were: “(i) Does the issue involve resolution of questions committed
by the text of the Constitution to a coordinate branch of government? (ii) Would resolution of the
question demand that a court move beyond judicial expertise? (iii) Do prudential considerations
counsel against judicial intervention?”
Regarding the first question, the court stated that “with respect to commercial agreements, we
find that the Constitution’s clear assignment of authority to the political branches of the
Government over our nation’s foreign affairs counsels against an intrusive role for this court in
overseeing the actions of the President and Congress in this matter,” pointing to the “vast”
express constitutional grants of power conferred upon the political branches in foreign affairs and
commerce, and the Supreme Court’s long-standing recognition of the power of the political
branches to conclude “agreements that do not constitute treaties in the constitutional sense.”
Regarding the second question, the court concluded that a ruling on the merits would require it to
consider areas beyond its expertise, noting, inter alia, that the Treaty Clause did not set forth
circumstances under which Clause procedures must be followed when approving international
commercial agreements, and that having to determine the “significance” of an international
agreement as the key factor in determining whether it should be a treaty or not would
“unavoidably thrust [the court] into making policy judgments of the sort unsuited for the judicial
branch.”
Addressing the third question, the court cited, inter alia, the need for the nation to speak with
uniformity in the area of foreign affairs and commerce, and the fact that a judicial order declaring
the NAFTA invalid “could have a profoundly negative effect on this nation’s economy and its
ability to deal with other foreign powers,” noting that such an order “would not only affect the
validity of NAFTA, but would potentially undermine every other major international commercial
agreement made over the past half-century.”


(...continued)
means of a congressional-executive agreement rather than by treaty.
18 Made in the USA Found. v. United States, 242 F.3d 1300 (11th Cir. 2001).
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Why Certain Trade Agreements Are Approved as Congressional-Executive Agreements

Author Contact Information

Jeanne J. Grimmett

Legislative Attorney
jgrimmett@crs.loc.gov, 7-5046


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