Trade Promotion Authority (TPA):
Frequently Asked Questions

Ian F. Fergusson
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Richard S. Beth
Specialist on Congress and the Legislative Process
April 20, 2015
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R43491


Trade Promotion Authority (TPA): Frequently Asked Questions

Summary
Legislation to reauthorize Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), formerly called fast track, was
introduced as the the Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities and Accountability Act of 2015
(TPA-2015)(H.R. 1890/S. 995) in the Senate and the House on April 16, 2015.. TPA is the
authority Congress has in the past granted to the President for limited periods of time to enter into
reciprocal trade agreements. The authority lays out U.S. trade negotiating objectives, procedures
for congressional-executive notification and consultation, and expedited legislative procedures
under which bills implementing trade agreements negotiated by the executive branch are to be
considered. The most recent authority was enacted in December 2002 and expired as of July 1,
2007. Legislation to reauthorize TPA was introduced, but not considered, in the 113th Congress.
The United States is engaged in several sets of trade agreement negotiations. The issue of TPA
reauthorization has raised a number of questions regarding TPA itself and the pending legislation.
This report addresses a number of those questions that are frequently asked, including the
following:
• What is trade promotion authority?
• Is TPA necessary?
• What are trade negotiating objectives and how are they reflected in TPA statutes?
• What requirements does Congress impose on the President under TPA?
• Does TPA affect congressional authority on trade policy?
This report describes aspects of the proposed TPA-2015 introduced on April 16, 2015. . For more
information on TPA, see CRS Report RL33743, Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) and the Role of
Congress in Trade Policy
, by Ian F. Fergusson and CRS In Focus IF10038, Trade Promotion
Authority
, by Ian F. Fergusson

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Trade Promotion Authority (TPA): Frequently Asked Questions

Contents
Background on Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) .......................................................................... 1
What is Trade Promotion Authority? ......................................................................................... 1
Why has the issue of TPA renewal been raised now? ................................................................ 1
Has legislation been introduced to renew TPA in the 114th Congress? ...................................... 1
What is Congress’s responsibility for trade under the Constitution? ........................................ 2
What authority does Congress grant to the President by enacting TPA legislation? ................. 2
Is TPA necessary? ...................................................................................................................... 2
What requirements have been placed on the President under TPA? .......................................... 3
Is there a deadline for the President to submit a draft implementing bill to Congress? ............ 3
Along with the draft implementing bill, what other documents must the President
submit to Congress for approval? ........................................................................................... 3
When was TPA/fast track first used? ......................................................................................... 4
How many times has TPA/fast track been used? ....................................................................... 4
How has the lack of TPA affected current trade agreement negotiations? ................................ 4
Do other countries have a TPA-type legislative mechanism? ................................................... 4
Will TPA legislation be considered like other bills or be subject to expedited
procedures? ............................................................................................................................. 5
Trade Negotiating Objectives .......................................................................................................... 5
What are negotiating objectives? ............................................................................................... 5
Goods, Services, and Agriculture .............................................................................................. 5
What are some of the negotiating objectives for market access for goods? ........................ 5
Have U.S. negotiating objectives evolved on services trade? ............................................. 6
How did the negotiating objectives for agriculture differ from those laid out in the
2002 TPA Act? ................................................................................................................. 6
Foreign Investment .................................................................................................................... 7
How does TPA-2015 seek to protect U.S. investor rights with U.S. trading
partners? ........................................................................................................................... 7
To what extent did TPA address investor-state dispute settlement? .................................... 7
How have these provisions evolved over time? .................................................................. 7
Will foreign investors be afforded “greater rights” than U.S. investors under U.S.
trade agreements? ............................................................................................................. 8
Trade Remedies ......................................................................................................................... 8
How does TPA address trade remedies? .............................................................................. 8
Currency Issues ......................................................................................................................... 8
Have currency practices ever been addressed in a TPA authorization? ............................... 8
How are currency issues addressed under current TPA renewal legislation? ...................... 9
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) ............................................................................................. 9
What are the key negotiating objectives concerning IPR? .................................................. 9
Does the proposed TPA-2015 contain new IPR negotiating objectives? ............................ 9
What is the “May 10th Agreement”? .................................................................................... 9
Are the provisions of the May 10th Agreement incorporated into the
proposed TPA-2015? ...................................................................................................... 10
Labor and Environment ........................................................................................................... 11
What were the negotiating objectives on labor under the 2002 TPA and how do
they compare with the objectives on labor proposed under the proposed TPA-
2015? .............................................................................................................................. 11
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Trade Promotion Authority (TPA): Frequently Asked Questions

What are the environmental negotiating objectives under the proposed TPA-2015,
and how do they compare with the objectives on environment under the 2002
authority? ....................................................................................................................... 12
Would the labor and environmental provisions negotiated be subject to the same
dispute settlement provisions as other parts of the agreement? ..................................... 12
Regulatory Practices ................................................................................................................ 12
How does the proposed TPA-2015 seek to address regulatory practices? ........................ 12
Does the proposed TPA-2015 address drug pricing and reimbursement issues? .............. 13
Dispute Settlement (DS) .......................................................................................................... 13
What are the principal negotiating objectives on DS in FTAs? ........................................ 13
How did TPA address DS at the WTO? ............................................................................. 13
New Issues Addressed in the proposed TPA-2015 .................................................................. 13
What new negotiating objectives are contained in the proposed TPA-2015? ................... 13
Congressional Consultation and Advisory Requirements .............................................................. 15
How do the provisions on consultations in proposed TPA renewal legislation compare
with previous statutes? ......................................................................................................... 15
What are the Congressional Advisory Groups (CAGs) on Negotiations? ............................... 15
Who are Designated Congressional Advisors? ........................................................................ 16
What are the requirements to consult with the private sector and the public on trade
policy? .................................................................................................................................. 17
Do specific import sensitive industries have special negotiation and consultation
requirements? ....................................................................................................................... 18
Notification and Reporting Requirements ..................................................................................... 18
What have been the congressional notification requirements and would they change
under the pending legislation? .............................................................................................. 18
What is the role of the U.S. International Trade Commission? ............................................... 18
What are the various reporting requirements under the proposed TPA-2015? ........................ 18
Expedited Procedures and the Congressional Role ....................................................................... 20
What have been the expedited legislative procedures? Would they be changed under
the proposed TPA-2015? ...................................................................................................... 20
What is the purpose of the expedited procedures for considering implementing bills? .......... 20
Why do the expedited procedures for implementing bills prohibit amendments? .................. 21
What provisions are to be included in a trade agreement implementing bill to make it
eligible for expedited consideration? .................................................................................... 21
How does the proposed TPA-2015 treat agreements reached under the sets of
negotiations already launched?............................................................................................. 21
If Congress renews TPA, must it consider covered trade agreements under the trade
authorities procedures? ......................................................................................................... 22
What is the effect of an “Extension Disapproval Resolution”? ............................................... 22
What is the effect of a “Procedural Disapproval Resolution”? ............................................... 23
What is a “mock markup,” and how may Congress use it to assert control over a trade
agreement implementing bill? .............................................................................................. 24
What may Congress do if an implementing bill contains provisions inconsistent with
negotiating objectives on trade remedies, and with what effect? ......................................... 24
How would the BCPTA permit a single house to withdraw expedited consideration
from a specific implementation bill? .................................................................................... 25
Does Congress have means of overriding the TPA procedures in addition to those
provided by TPA statutes? .................................................................................................... 26
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Can Congress disapprove the President’s launching trade negotiations with a trading
partner? ................................................................................................................................. 26
Does TPA constrain Congress’s exercise of its constitutional authority on trade
policy? .................................................................................................................................. 27
National Sovereignty and Trade Agreements ................................................................................ 27
Can a trade agreement force the United States to change its laws? ......................................... 27
What happens if a U.S. law violates a U.S. trade agreement? ................................................. 28
National Sovereignty and Trade Agreements ................................................................................ 28
Can a trade agreement force the United States to change its laws? ......................................... 28
What happens if a U.S. law violates a U.S. trade agreement? ................................................. 28

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 28

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Background on Trade Promotion Authority (TPA)
What is Trade Promotion Authority?
Trade promotion authority (TPA), sometimes called “fast track,” is the authority Congress has
granted to the President for limited periods to enter into reciprocal trade agreements to reduce or
eliminate barriers to trade and have their implementing legislation considered under expedited
legislative procedures. The authority lays out U.S. trade negotiating objectives, procedures for
congressional-executive notification and consultation, and the expedited legislative procedures
under which a bill to implement a trade agreement (an “implementing bill”) is to be considered.
More generally, TPA defines how Congress has chosen to exercise its constitutional authority
over a particular aspect of trade policy, while affording the President added leverage to negotiate
trade agreements by giving trading partners assurance that final agreements can receive
consideration by Congress in a timely manner and without amendments.1
Why has the issue of TPA renewal been raised now?
The most recent TPA authorization was enacted on August 6, 2002, as the Bipartisan Trade
Promotion Authority Act (part of P.L. 107-210),2 and applied to trade agreements entered into
(signed) before July 1, 2007. Therefore, Congress would have to renew TPA in order for it to
apply to future trade agreements and those currently under negotiation. On July 30, 2013,
President Obama, in a speech, requested that Congress reauthorize TPA. He and other
Administration officials have reiterated the request since that time. Some Members of Congress
and members of the business community, among others, have also called for TPA reauthorization,
while critics of trade agreements and trade liberalization have raised concerns about TPA.
Has legislation been introduced to renew TPA in the 114th
Congress?

Yes, the Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities Act of 2015 (TPA-2015) (H.R. 1890, S. 995)
was introduced on April 16, 2015. Like previous TPA authorizations, the TPA-2015would grant
the authority for a limited time, and would permit a single extension if the President requests it
and Congress does not disapprove.3 The proposed TPA-2015 would have applied to trade
agreements entered into (signed) before July 1, 2018, or before July 1, 2021, if the President
requests the extension, subject to a congressional resolution of disapproval.4

1 For more detailed background and analysis of TPA, see CRS Report RL33743, Trade Promotion Authority (TPA) and
the Role of Congress in Trade Policy
, by Ian F. Fergusson, and CRS In Focus IF00002, Trade Promotion Authority
(TPA) (In Focus), by William H. Cooper.
2 The Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002 is Title XXI of the Trade Act of 2002 (P.L. 107-210), enacted
on August 6, 2002.
3 The last previous authorization, the Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002, also granted the authority for
three years with an option for a two-year extension.
4 For detail on the disapproval process, see later discussion of the “extension disapproval resolution” under “How may
Congress withdraw TPA procedures?”
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What is Congress’s responsibility for trade under the Constitution?
The U.S. Constitution assigns express authority over the regulation of foreign trade to Congress.
Article I, Section 8, gives Congress the power to “regulate Commerce with foreign Nations…”
and to “…lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts, and Excises…” In contrast, the Constitution
assigns no specific responsibility for trade to the President. Under Article II, however, the
President has exclusive authority to negotiate treaties and international agreements and exercises
broad authority over the conduct of the nation’s foreign affairs.
What authority does Congress grant to the President by enacting
TPA legislation?

In a sense, TPA grants no new authority to the President. The President possesses inherent
authority to negotiate with other countries to arrive at trade agreements. If any such agreement
requires changes in U.S. law, however, it could only be implemented through legislation enacted
by Congress. (In some cases, as well, Congress has enacted legislation authorizing the President
in advance to implement certain kinds of agreements on his own authority. An example is the
historical reciprocal tariff agreement authority described under the next question.) TPA legislation
provides expedited legislative procedures (also known as “fast track” procedures) to facilitate
congressional action on legislation to implement trade agreements of the kinds specified in the
TPA statute. TPA legislation also establishes trade negotiating objectives and notification and
consultation requirements described later.
Is TPA necessary?
The President has the authority to negotiate international agreements, including free trade
agreements (FTAs), but the Constitution gives the Congress sole authority over the regulation of
foreign commerce. For 150 years, Congress exercised this authority over foreign trade by setting
tariff rates directly. This policy changed with the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934, in
which Congress delegated temporary authority to the President to enter into (sign) reciprocal
trade agreements that reduced tariffs within pre-approved levels and implement them by
proclamation without further congressional action. This authority was renewed a number of times
until 1974.
In the 1960s, as international trade expanded, nontariff barriers, such as antidumping measures,
safety and certification requirements, and government procurement practices, became subjects of
trade negotiations and agreements. Congress altered the authority delegated to the President to
require enactment of an implementing bill to authorize changes in U.S. law required to meet
obligations of these new kinds. For trade agreements that contained such provisions, pre-approval
was no longer an option. Because an implementing bill faced potential amendment by Members
of Congress that could alter a long-negotiated agreement, Congress adopted fast track authority in
the Trade Act of 1974 to ensure that the implementing bill could receive floor consideration and
to provide a procedure under which it could not be amended. The act also established negotiating
objectives and attempted to ensure executive branch notification of and consultation with
Congress and the private sector. Fast track was renamed Trade Promotion Authority in the
Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002.
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Many observers point out that U.S. trade partners might be reluctant to negotiate with the United
States, especially on politically sensitive issues, unless they are confident that the U.S. executive
branch and Congress speaks with one voice, that a trade agreement negotiated by the executive
branch would receive timely legislative consideration, that it would not unravel by congressional
amendments, and that the United States would implement the terms of the agreement reached.
Others, however, have argued that because trade negotiations and agreements have become more
complex and more comprehensive, bills to implement the agreements should be subject to
amendment like other legislation. In practice, even though TPA is designed to ensure that
Congress will act on implementing bills without amending them, it also affords Congress several
procedural means to maintain its constitutional authority (for details, see section on “Expedited
Procedures and the Congressional Role”).
What requirements have been placed on the President under TPA?
In general, under TPA Congress has required the President to notify Congress and consult with
Congress and with private sector stakeholders before, during and upon completion of trade
agreement negotiations. Congress also has required the President to strive to adhere to general
and specific principal trade negotiating objectives in any trade agreement negotiated under TPA.
After signing the agreement, the President submits a draft implementing bill to Congress, along
with the text of the trade agreement and a statement of administrative action required to
implement it. (See detailed discussion of requirements below in the following sections: “Trade
Negotiating Objectives”, “Congressional Consultation and Advisory Requirements”, and
“Notification and Reporting Requirements”.)
Is there a deadline for the President to submit a draft implementing
bill to Congress?

No. If the United States enters into (signs) a trade agreement within a period for which TPA is
provided, the President may submit the implementing bill to Congress at his discretion.
Along with the draft implementing bill, what other documents
must the President submit to Congress for approval?

Along with a draft implementing bill, the President submits a Statement of Administrative Action
(SAA) to Congress for approval. An SAA contains an authoritative expression of Administration
views regarding the interpretation and application of the trade agreement for purposes of U.S.
international obligations and domestic law. It describes significant administrative actions to be
taken to implement the trade agreement. In addition, it contains an explanation of how the
implementing bill and administrative action will change or affect U.S. law and contains a
statement and that the administrative actions are necessary or appropriate to implement the trade
agreement.
Furthermore, the President sends Congress supporting information to include an explanation of
how the implementing bill and proposed administrative action will change existing U.S. law and a
statement of that the trade agreement makes progress in achieving the “purposes, policies,
priorities, and objectives under the TPA.
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When was TPA/fast track first used?
Trade promotion authority was first enacted on January 1, 1975, under the Trade Act of 1974. It
was used to enact the Tokyo Round Agreements Act of 1979, which implemented the 1974-1979
multilateral trade liberalization agreements reached under the Tokyo Round negotiations under
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the predecessor to the World Trade
Organization (WTO). Since that time it was renewed four times –1979, 1984, 1988, and 2002. In
1993, Congress provided a short-term extension to accommodate the completion of the GATT
Uruguay Round negotiations.
How many times has TPA/fast track been used?
Since 1979, the authority has been used for 14 bilateral/regional free trade agreements (FTAs) and
one additional set of multilateral trade liberalization agreements under the GATT (now the World
Trade Organization [WTO])—the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994. One FTA—the U.S.-
Jordan FTA—was negotiated and approved by Congress without TPA.5 That FTA was largely
considered non-controversial and applies to only a small portion of U.S. total trade.
How has the lack of TPA affected current trade agreement
negotiations?

The current effort to reauthorize TPA has been motivated, in part, by the engagement of the
United States in three sets of trade negotiations: the proposed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP)
agreement with 11 other countries; the proposed Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
(T-TIP) agreement with the 28-member European Union; and the proposed Trade in Services
Agreement (TISA) with 22 other trading partners, including the European Union (EU). Future
agreements may be reached under the WTO. The Obama Administration has fulfilled the
notification and consultation requirements under the most recent TPA for each of these sets of
negotiations in anticipation that it would be renewed. Some trade partners have suggested that the
lack of TPA has slowed progress in the negotiations on the TPP, and without the assurance of
TPA, they are reluctant to agree to commitments on more sensitive issues. However, it is unclear
whether the lack of TPA will preclude a final agreement or whether the most sensitive issues are
being left until the final stages of the negotiations.
Do other countries have a TPA-type legislative mechanism?
In some countries, the executive may possess authority to conclude trade agreements without
legislative approval. In others, especially in parliamentary systems, the head of government is
typically able to secure approval of any requisite legislation without amendment under regular
legislative procedures. In addition, some countries prohibit amendments to trade agreement
legislation and others treat trade agreements as treaties.

5 In the House, many of these agreements were actually considered not under TPA procedures themselves, but under
special rules from the Committee on Rules. This distinction is explained below under “May Congress override the
expedited procedures?”
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Will TPA legislation be considered like other bills or be subject to
expedited procedures?

Legislation to reauthorize TPA is considered under standard legislative procedures. Therefore,
regular rules on debate, amendments, and votes would apply.
Trade Negotiating Objectives
What are negotiating objectives?
Congress exercises its trade policy role, in part, by defining trade negotiating objectives in TPA
legislation. The negotiating objectives are definitive statements of U.S. trade policy that Congress
expects the Administration to honor, if the implementing legislation is to be considered under
expedited rules. Since the original fast track authorization in the Trade Act of 1974, Congress has
revised and expanded the negotiating objectives in succeeding TPA/fast track authorization
statutes to reflect changing priorities and the evolving international trade environment. Since the
last grant of TPA in 2002, new issues associated with state-owned enterprises, digital trade in
goods and services, and localization policies have come to the forefront of U.S. trade policy and
are included in the proposed TPA-2015 as principal negotiating objectives.
Under the 2002 Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act, the most recent authorization,
Congress established trade negotiating objectives in three categories: (1) overall objectives; (2)
principal objectives; and (3) other priorities. These begin with broad goals that encapsulate the
“overall” direction trade negotiations are expected to take, such as fostering U.S. and global
economic growth and obtaining more favorable market access for U.S. products and services.
Principal objectives are more specific and are considered the most politically critical set of
objectives. The proposed TPA-2015 uses a similar structure.
Goods, Services, and Agriculture
What are some of the negotiating objectives for market access for goods?
The market access negotiating objectives under TPA seek to reduce or to eliminate tariff and non-
tariff barriers and practices that decrease market access for U.S. products. One new provision in
the proposed TPA-2015 considers the “utilization of global chains” in the goal of trade
liberalization. It also calls for the use of sectoral tariff and non-tariff barrier elimination
agreements to achieve greater market access. Agriculture (see below) and textiles and apparel are
considered in separate negotiating objectives. For textiles and apparel, U.S. negotiators are to
seek competitive export opportunities “substantially equivalent to the opportunities afforded
foreign exports in the United States markets and to achieve fairer and more open conditions of
trade” in the sector. Both the general market access provisions and the textiles provisions in the
proposed TPA-2015 were the same as those in the 2002 Act.
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Have U.S. negotiating objectives evolved on services trade?
Services have become an increasingly important element of the U.S. economy, and the sector
plays a prominent role in U.S. trade policy.6 The rising importance of services has been reflected
in their treatment under TPA/fast track statutes as a negotiating objective beginning with the 1984
Trade Act.
Liberalization of trade in services was expressed in the 2002 Trade Act as a principal negotiating
objective. It required that U.S. negotiators strive to reduce or eliminate barriers to trade in
services, including regulations that deny nondiscriminatory treatment to U.S. services and inhibit
the right of establishment (through foreign investment) to U.S. service providers. The content of
the negotiating objective on services has not changed appreciably over the years. (Because
foreign direct investment is an important mode of delivery of services, negotiating objectives on
foreign investment (see below) pertain to services as well.)
The proposed TPA-2015 expands the principal negotiating objectives on services in the 2002 TPA
by highlighting the role of services in global value chains and calling for the pursuit of liberalized
trade in services through all means, including plurilateral trade agreements (presumably referring
to the proposed Trade in Services Agreement (TISA)).
How did the negotiating objectives for agriculture differ from those laid out in
the 2002 TPA Act?

The proposed TPA-2015 adds three new agriculture negotiating objectives to the 18 previously
listed in the 2002 Act. One lays out in greater detail what U.S. negotiators should achieve in
negotiating robust trade rules on sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) measures (i.e., those dealing
with a country’s food safety and animal and plant health laws and regulations). This increased
emphasis aims to address the concerns expressed by U.S. agricultural exporters that other
countries use SPS measures as disguised non-tariff barriers, which undercut the market access
openings that the United States negotiates in trade agreements. The second calls for trade
negotiators to ensure transparency in how tariff-rate quotas (TRQs)7 are administered that may
impede market access opportunities. The third seeks to eliminate and prevent the improper use of
a country’s system to protect or recognize geographical indications (GI). These are trademark-like
terms used to protect the quality and reputation of distinctive agricultural products, wines and
spirits produced in a particular region of a country. This new objective is intended to counter in
large part the European Union’s efforts to include GI protection in its bilateral trade agreements
for the names of its products that U.S. and other country exporters argue are generic in nature or
commonly used across borders, such as parma ham or parmesan cheese.

6 For more information, please see CRS Report R43291, U.S. Foreign Trade in Services: Trends and U.S. Policy
Challenges
, by William H. Cooper and Rebecca M. Nelson.
7 A TRQ is a trade policy tool used to protect a domestically-produced commodity or product from competitive
imports. It combines two policy instruments that nations historically have used to restrict such imports: quotas and
tariffs. In a TRQ, the quota component works together with a specified tariff level to provide the desired degree of
import protection. Imports entering during a specific time period under the quota portion of a TRQ are usually subject
to a lower, or sometimes a zero, tariff rate. Imports above the quota’s quantitative threshold face a much higher (usually
prohibitive) tariff.
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Foreign Investment
How does TPA-2015 seek to protect U.S. investor rights with U.S. trading
partners?

The United States is the largest source and destination of foreign direct investment in the world.
Both the 2002 Act and the proposed TPA-2015 includes identical principal negotiating objectives
on foreign investment.8 The overall negotiating objectives on foreign investment are designed “to
reduce or eliminate artificial or trade distorting barriers to foreign investment, while ensuring that
foreign investors in the United States are not accorded greater substantive rights with respect to
investment protections than domestic investors in the United States, and to secure for investors
important rights comparable to those that would be available under the United States legal
principles and practices.... ” Like the 2002 TPA, the proposed TPA-2015 seeks to accomplish
these goals by including provisions establishing protections for U.S. foreign investment, such as
non-discriminatory treatment, free transfer of investment related capital flows, reducing or
eliminating local performance requirements, and established standards for compensation for
expropriation consistent with U.S. legal principles and practices. These provisions are also part of
the bilateral investments treaties (BIT) that the United States negotiates with other countries. The
proposed TPA-2015 also seeks to improve investor-state dispute resolution mechanisms.
To what extent did TPA address investor-state dispute settlement?
Investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) allows for private foreign investors to seek international
arbitration against host governments to settle claims over alleged violations of foreign investment
provisions in FTAs. The 2002 TPA authority and the proposed TPA-2015 do not specifically
mention an ISDS mechanism. They do state that trade agreements should provide meaningful
procedures for resolving investment disputes; seek to improve mechanisms used to resolve
disputes between an investor and a government through mechanisms to eliminate frivolous claims
and to deter the filing of frivolous claims; provide procedures to ensure the efficient selection of
arbitrators and the expeditious disposition of claims; provide procedures to enhance opportunities
for public input into the formulation of government positions; and seek to provide for an appellate
body or similar mechanism to provide coherence to interpretations of investment provisions in
trade agreements.
How have these provisions evolved over time?
Two negotiating objectives relating to foreign investment were initially listed under the Omnibus
Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988 fast-track authority. The 2002 authority and the proposed
TPA-2015 list eight. In addition to TPA, U.S. investment negotiating objectives are shaped by the
U.S. Model BIT, the template used to negotiate U.S. BITs and FTA investment chapters. The
Model BIT has been revised periodically in an effort to balance investor protections and other
policy interests. The 2004 Model BIT, for instance, narrowed the definitions of covered
investment and minimum standard of treatment, and connected the definition of direct and
indirect expropriation to “property rights or property interests,” reflecting the U.S. Constitution’s

8 For more information, please see CRS Report R43052, U.S. International Investment Agreements: Issues for
Congress
, by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Martin A. Weiss.
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Takings Clause and with possible implications for expropriation protection depending on foreign
countries’ definitions of property. It also clarified that only in rare cases do non-discriminatory
regulatory actions by governments to protect legitimate public welfare objectives result in indirect
expropriation. In response to global economic changes, the 2012 Model BIT, among other things,
clarified that its obligations apply to state-owned enterprises, as well as to the types of financial
services that may fall under a prudential exception (such as to address balance of payments
problems). Other examples of revisions to the Model BIT over time include more detailed
provisions on ISDS, stronger aspirational language on environmental and labor standards, and
enhanced transparency obligations.
Will foreign investors be afforded “greater rights” than U.S. investors under
U.S. trade agreements?

The 2002 TPA authority and the proposed TPA-2015 state that no trade agreement is to lead to the
granting of foreign investors in the United States greater rights than are granted to U.S. investors
in the United States. Some have argued, however, that the use of ISDS itself implies greater
procedural rights.
Trade Remedies
How does TPA address trade remedies?
Trade remedy statutes, such as antidumping and countervailing duty laws, provide U.S. firms
with the means to redress the unfair trade practices of foreign actors, whether firms or
governments.9 Safeguard provisions, which allow for temporary restraints on import surges not
considered to be unfairly traded, are also included as trade remedies. The principal objective
concerning trade remedies in TPA/fast track has been to “preserve the ability of the United States
to rigorously enforce its trade laws” and to avoid concluding “agreements that weaken the
effectiveness of domestic and international disciplines on unfair trade.” Trade remedies have
usually been addressed in the context of multilateral WTO negotiations. This objective reflects
the perception by some Members of Congress that other WTO members have sought to weaken
U.S. trade remedy laws. The proposed TPA-2015 also maintains notification provisions that
require the President to notify Congress 180 days before signing (entering into) a trade agreement
that included provisions affecting trade remedy laws.
Currency Issues
Have currency practices ever been addressed in a TPA authorization?
The extent to which some countries may use the value of their currency to gain competitive
market advantage is a source of concern for certain industries and some Members of Congress. In
the 2002 TPA authorization statute, the President was to seek to establish consultative
mechanisms with trading partners to examine the trade consequences of significant and
unanticipated currency movements and to scrutinize whether a foreign government has

9 For more information, please see CRS Report RL32371, Trade Remedies: A Primer, by Vivian C. Jones.
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manipulated its currency to promote a competitive advantage in international trade. This
provision was contained in the “promotion of certain priorities section.”
How are currency issues addressed under current TPA renewal legislation?
The proposed TPA-2015 elevates the topic of currency manipulation to a principal U.S.
negotiating objective. The proposed authority states that U.S. trade agreement partners “avoid
manipulating exchange rates in order to prevent effective balance of payments adjustment or to
gain unfair competitive advantage.” It does not specifically define currency manipulation to
include or exclude central bank intervention in the domestic economy. (It does not differentiate
among the ways for a government to affect the value of its currency such as currency market
intervention, or central bank activities such as an increase in the money supply to stimulate the
domestic economy.) The language calls for multiple remedies, “as appropriate,” including
“cooperative mechanisms, enforceable rules, reporting, monitoring, transparency, or other
means.”
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
What are the key negotiating objectives concerning IPR?
The United States has long supported the strengthening of intellectual property rights through
trade agreements, and Congress has placed IPR protection as a principal negotiating objective
since the 1988 grant of fast-track authority.10 The overall objectives on IPR under the 2002 TPA
authority were: the promotion of adequate and effective protection of IPR; market access for U.S.
persons relying on IPR; and respect for the WTO Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS) Declaration on Public Health. These objectives are largely reflected in the five
objectives in the proposed TPA-2015. The promotion of adequate and effective protection of IPR
through the negotiation of trade agreements that reflect a standard of protection similar to that
found in U.S. law is a key provision, as are provisions for strong protection of new technologies,
standards of protection that keep pace with technological developments, non-discrimination in the
treatment of IPR, and strong enforcement of IPR. The proposed TPA-2015 also seeks to ensure
that agreements negotiated foster innovation and access to medicine.
Does the proposed TPA-2015 contain new IPR negotiating objectives?
A new objective in the proposed TPA-2015 seeks to negotiate the prevention and elimination of
government involvement in violations of IPR such as cybertheft or piracy. The enhanced
protection of trade secrets and proprietary information collected by governments in the
furtherance of regulations is contained in the negotiating objective on regulatory coherence.
What is the “May 10th Agreement”?
The May 10, 2007, agreement was a bipartisan statement of agreed principles between the
President and the House leadership on labor, environment, IPR, foreign investment, and

10 For additional information, please see CRS Report RL34292, Intellectual Property Rights and International Trade,
by Shayerah Ilias Akhtar and Ian F. Fergusson.
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government procurement to be applied to the four FTAs Congress would consider at that time:
Colombia, Panama, Peru, and South Korea. The extent to which these provisions would be
included in TPA negotiating objectives and future FTAs has been a source of debate among policy
makers. (See the “May 10th Agreement” box below for more details.)
Are the provisions of the May 10th Agreement incorporated into the
proposed TPA-2015?

The proposed TPA-2015 incorporates the labor and environmental principles of the May 10th
provision, including requirements that a negotiating party's labor and environmental statutes
adhere to internationally recognized core labor standards and to obligations under common
multilateral environmental agreements. While the May 10th patent language on pharmaceuticals is
not specifically included in the proposed TPA-2015 language, it does seek to “ensure that trade
agreements foster innovation and access to medicine.”11 The same investment language,
“ensuring that foreign investors in the United States are not granted greater substantive rights
with respect to investment protections than U.S. investors in the United States” is included.

11 The language does not specifically refer to the patent protection provisions found in the May 10th Agreement
provisions, which were designed to achieve greater access to medicine in developing country FTA partners. The
included language seemingly could be used to justify including or excluding those provisions in future FTAs.
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The “May 10th Agreement”
On May 10, 2007, a bipartisan group of congressional leaders and the Bush Administration released a statement on
agreed principles in five policy areas: worker rights, environment protection, IPR, government procurement, and
foreign investment. The principles were to be reflected in provisions in four U.S. FTAs—with Colombia, Panama,
Peru, and South Korea, then being considered for ratification. Regarding worker rights, the May 10th Agreement (the
Agreement) required the United States and FTA partners to commit to enforcing the five international labor
principles enshrined in International Labour Organization’s (ILO’s) 1998 Declaration on Fundamental Principles and
Rights At Work
and that the commitment be enforceable under the FTA. These rights are the freedom of association,
the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining, the elimination of all forms of compulsory or forced
labor, the effective abolition of child labor, including the worst forms of child labor, and the elimination of
discrimination in respect of employment and occupation.
The Agreement also required FTAs to adhere to seven major multilateral environmental agreements: The seven
agreements are the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species; the Montreal Protocol on Ozone
Depleting Substances; the Convention on Marine Pol ution; the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Convention; the
Ramsar Convention on the Wetlands; the International Convention for the Regulation of Whaling; and the
Convention on Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.
Furthermore, the parties are not to waive or otherwise derogate from their labor or environmental protection laws
in a manner that would affect trade or investment with the FTA partner(s). In addition, the labor and environment
provisions must be enforceable, if consultation and other avenues fail, through the same dispute settlement
procedures that apply to the other provisions in the FTA.
The Agreement also required the FTAs to include provisions related to patents and approval of pharmaceuticals for
marketing exclusivity with different requirements for developed and developing countries. Specifically, the Agreement
requires provisions dealing with the effective period of data exclusivity—the restrictions on the use of test data
produced for market approval by generic drug producers; patent extensions; linkage of marketing approval of generic
drugs to determination of possible patent infringement; and reaffirmation of adherence to Doha Declaration on
compulsory licensing of drugs to respond to public health crises.
Regarding foreign investment, the Agreement required each of the FTAs to state that none of its provisions would
accord foreign investors greater substantive rights in terms of foreign investment protection than are accorded U.S.
investors in the United States.

Labor and Environment
What were the negotiating objectives on labor under the 2002 TPA and how do
they compare with the objectives on labor proposed under the proposed TPA-
2015?

Both the 2002 Authority and the proposed TPA-2015 include several negotiating objectives on
labor issues and worker rights.12 While similar, they also differ in some fundamental ways. For
example, the 2002 authority states that trade agreements are to ensure that a trading partner does
not fail effectively to enforce its own labor statutes. The proposed TPA-2015 requires that the
United States ensure not only that a trading partner enforce its own labor statutes but also that
those statutes include internationally recognized core labor standards as defined in the bill to
mean the “core labor standards only as stated in the International Labor Organization’s (ILO)

12 For more information, please see CRS In Focus IF10046, Worker Rights Provisions in Free Trade Agreements
(FTAs)
, by Mary Jane Bolle and Ian F. Fergusson.
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Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights to Work and its Follow-Up (1998).”13 It also
states that parties shall not waive or derogate from internationally recognized core labor standards
in a manner affecting trade or investment between the United States and the parties to an
agreement.
In addition, the 2002 authority allowed some discretion on the part of a trading partner
government in enforcing its laws and stated that the government would be considered fulfilling its
obligations if it exercised discretion, either through action or inaction, reasonably. The proposed
TPA-2015, on the other hand, states that while the government retains discretion in implementing
its labor statutes, the exercise of that discretion is not a reason not to comply with its obligations
under the trade agreement. The labor—and environmental—provisions also contain language to
strengthen the capacity of trading partners to adhere to labor and environmental standards, as well
as a provision to reduce or eliminate policies that unduly threaten sustainable development.
What are the environmental negotiating objectives under the proposed TPA-
2015, and how do they compare with the objectives on environment under the
2002 authority?

Like the labor objective, the proposed TPA-2015 provides not only that a party enforce its own
environmental standards as in the 2002 Act, but also that those laws are consistent with seven
internationally recognized multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) and other provisions. It
also contains the abovementioned prohibition of waiver or derogation from environmental law in
matters of trade and investment. The environmental objective contains language allowing a
reasonable exercise of prosecutorial discretion in enforcement and allocation of resources:
language similar to, but seemingly more flexible than, that included in the labor provisions.
Would the labor and environmental provisions negotiated be subject to the
same dispute settlement provisions as other parts of the agreement?

The proposed TPA-2015 commits negotiators “to ensure that enforceable labor and environmental
standards are subject to the same dispute settlement and remedies as other enforceable provisions
under the agreement.” Under the most recent U.S. trade agreements, this could mean the
withdrawal of trade concessions as an end result until the dispute is resolved. By contrast, the
2002 TPA provided separate remedies under dispute settlement, including the use of monetary
penalties and technical assistance.
Regulatory Practices
How does the proposed TPA-2015 seek to address regulatory practices?
The regulatory practices objective seeks to reduce or eliminate the use of governmental
regulations (non-tariff barriers)—such as discriminatory certification requirements or non-

13 The ILO declaration lists these core labor principles as: the freedom of association and the effective recognition of
the right to collective bargaining; the elimination of all forms of forced or compulsory labor; the effective abolition of
child labor and the prohibition on the worst forms of child labor; and the elimination of discrimination in respect of
employment and occupation.
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transparent health and safety standards—from impeding market access for U.S. goods, services,
or investment. Like the 2002 TPA, it attempts to obtain commitments in trade agreements that
proposed regulations would be based on scientific principles, cost-benefit risk assessment, or
other objective, non-discriminatory standards. It also seeks more transparency and participation
by affected parties in the development of regulations, consultative mechanisms to increase
regulatory coherence, regulatory compatibility through harmonization or mutual recognition, and
convergence in the standards-development process. A new provision in the proposed TPA-2015
seeks to limit governmental collection of undisclosed proprietary data—“except to satisfy a
legitimate and justifiable regulatory interest”—and protects that data against public disclosure.
Does the proposed TPA-2015 address drug pricing and reimbursement issues?
Yes, the regulatory practices negotiating objective contains language applicable to a foreign
country’s drug pricing system. The proposed TPA-2015 seeks to eliminate government price
controls and reference prices “which deny full market access for United States products.” The
proposed TPA-2015 also seeks to ensure that regulatory regimes adhere to principles of
transparency, procedural fairness, and non-discrimination.
Dispute Settlement (DS)
What are the principal negotiating objectives on DS in FTAs?
TPA legislation has sought to establish DS mechanisms to resolve disputes, first through
consultation, then by the withdrawal of benefits to encourage compliance with the agreement.
TPA-2015 also seeks provisions to apply the principal negotiating objectives in TPA equally
through equivalent access, procedures, and remedies. This obligation would, in practice, allow for
full dispute settlement of labor and environmental disputes under the agreement.
How did TPA address DS at the WTO?
The proposed TPA-2015, like its predecessors, also seeks that WTO DS panels and the Appellate
Body “apply the WTO Agreement as written, without adding to, or diminishing rights and
obligations under the agreement,” and to use a standard of review applicable to the Uruguay
Round Agreement in question, “including greater deference, where appropriate, to the fact finding
and technical expertise of national investigating authorities.” These provisions address the
perception by some Members of Congress that the WTO dispute settlement bodies have
interpreted WTO agreements in ways not foreseen or reflected in the agreement.
New Issues Addressed in the proposed TPA-2015
What new negotiating objectives are contained in the proposed TPA-2015?
Digital Trade in Goods and Services and Cross-Border Data Flows
The Internet not only has become a facilitator of international trade in goods and services given
its borderless nature, but also is itself a source of trade in digitally originated services such as
search engines or data storage. At the same time, however, digital trade and cross-border data
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flows have increasingly become the target of trade restricting measures, especially in emerging
markets. The digital trade provisions update and expand upon the e-commerce provisions from
the 2002 TPA that call for trade in digital goods and services to be treated no less favorably than
like-physical goods or services in terms of applicability of trade agreements, the classification of
a good or service, or regulation. Aside from ensuring that governments refrain from enacting
measures impeding digital trade in goods and services, the proposed TPA-2015 extends that
commitment to cross-border data flows, data processing, and data storage. It also calls for
enhanced protection of trade secrets and proprietary information collected by governments in the
furtherance of regulations. The promotion of strong IPR for technologies to facilitate digital trade
is included in the IPR objectives, which would extend the existing WTO moratorium on duties on
electronic commerce transactions.
State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs)
U.S. firms often face competition from state-owned or state-controlled firms. The proposed TPA-
2015 negotiating objective for SOEs seeks to ensure that SOEs are not favored with
discriminatory purchases or subsidies and that competition is based on commercial considerations
in order that U.S. firms may compete on a “level playing field.” While current TPP negotiations
include countries, such as Malaysia, Singapore, and Vietnam, with a significant SOE presence,
such language may also pertain to future negotiations covered under the proposed TPA-2015,
including possibly with other countries with large SOE sectors such as China or India.
Localization
The proposed TPA-2015 adds a principal negotiating objective on “localization,” the practice by
which firms are required to locate facilities, intellectual property, services, or assets in a country
as a condition of doing business. While localization can be motivated by privacy and security
interests, there are concerns that such measures can be trade distorting and may be used for
protectionist purposes. U.S. negotiators are directed to prevent and eliminate such practices, as
well as the practice of indigenous innovation, where a country seeks to develop local technology
by the enforced use of domestic standards or local content. Localization provisions concerning
the free flow of data are included in the digital trade objectives above. Localization barriers are
also addressed in the foreign investment chapter with provisions to restrict or eliminate
performance requirements or forced technology transfers in the establishment or operation of U.S.
investments abroad.
Human Rights
The proposed TPA-2015 contains an overall negotiating objective to ensure the implementation of
trade commitments through promotion of good governance, transparency, and the rule of law with
U.S. trade partners, “which are important parts of the broader effort to create more open
democratic societies and to promote respect for internationally recognized human rights.” TPA-
2015 does not contain any affirmative commitments on human rights.
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Congressional Consultation and Advisory
Requirements

The consultative, notification, and reporting requirements of TPA/fast-track are designed to
achieve greater transparency in trade negotiations and to maintain the role of Congress in shaping
trade policy. Congress has required the executive branch to consult with Congress prior to and
during trade negotiations, as well upon their completion and the signing of (entering into) a trade
agreement. TPA/fast track statutes have required the USTR to meet and consult with the House
Ways and Means Committee, the Senate Finance Committee, and other committees that would
have jurisdiction over laws possibly affected by trade negotiations.
How do the provisions on consultations in proposed TPA renewal
legislation compare with previous statutes?

While many of the provisions on consultation have some precedent in past grants of TPA in terms
of advisory structure and transparency commitments, TPA-2015 contains some new provisions.
• The appointment of a Chief Transparency Officer at USTR. This official would
be required “to consult with Congress on transparency policy, coordinate
transparency in trade negotiations, engage and assist the public, and advise the
U.S. Trade Representative on transparency policy.”
• Prior to initiating FTA negotiations with a new country, USTR must make
available “a detailed and comprehensive summary of the specific objectives with
respect to the negotiations, and a description of how the agreement, if
successfully concluded, will further those objectives and benefit the United
States.”
• Requires the President to release the U.S. International Trade Commission
(USITC) assessment of the potential impact of the trade agreement, which was
not the case under the previous authority.
• Requires USTR to consult with committees of jurisdiction after accepting a
petition for review or taking enforcement actions in regard potential violation of
a trade agreement.
• Requires the release of the negotiating text to the public prior to the agreement’s
being signed by the Administration. In addition, the final text of the
implementing legislation and a draft Statement of Administrative Action must be
submitted to Congress 30 days prior to its introduction.
What are the Congressional Advisory Groups (CAGs) on
Negotiations?

The proposed TPA-2015 includes consultation requirements similar to those under the 2002 Act
and previous trade negotiating authorities. The proposed TPA-2015 provides for the establishment
of separate Congressional Advisory Groups on Negotiations (CAGs) for each house—a House
Advisory Group on Negotiations (HAG), chaired by the chairman of the Ways and Means
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Committee, and a Senate Advisory Group on Negotiations (SAG), chaired by the chairman of the
Finance Committee. In addition to the chairmen, each committee would consist of the ranking
Member and three additional Members from each of committees, no more than two of whom can
be from the same political party. The CAGs would also consist of the chair and ranking Member,
or their designees, of House and Senate Committees that would have jurisdiction over laws that
are possibly affected by the trade agreements. The CAGs likely would replace the Congressional
Oversight Group (COG), a bicameral group with similar membership created under the 2002 TPA
that reportedly met infrequently.
As the designated congressional advisory group for negotiations, the USTR would be required to
develop guidelines “to facilitate the useful and timely exchange of information between the Trade
Representative and the CAGs.” These guidelines would include fixed-timetable briefings and
access by members of the CAG and their cleared staffers to pertinent negotiating documents. The
President also would be required to meet with either group upon the request of the majority of
that group prior to launching negotiations or at any time during the negotiations. TPA-2015
mandates that the USTR draw up several sets of guidelines to enhance consultations with
Congress, private sector Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations, sectoral and
industry advisory groups, and the public at large. USTR would be required to produce the
guidelines, in consultation with the chairmen and ranking Members of the Senate Finance
Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee, no later than 120 days after the proposed
TPA-2015 enters into force. including timely briefings on the negotiating objectives for any
specific trade agreement, the status of the negotiations, and any changes in laws that might be
required to implement the trade agreement. In addition, the proposed TPA-2015 requires the
USTR to consult on trade negotiations with any Member of Congress who requests to do so.
Who are Designated Congressional Advisors?
Designated Congressional Advisors (DCAs) are Members of Congress who are accredited as
official advisers to U.S. delegations to trade negotiations. Under Section 161 the Trade Act of
1974, as amended, the Speaker of the House selects five Members from the Ways and Means
Committee (no more than three of whom are to be of the same political party), and the President
Pro Tempore of the Senate selects five Members from the Senate Finance Committee (no more
than three of whom can be of the same political party), as DCAs.14 In addition, the Speaker and
the Senate President Pro Tempore may each designate as DCAs Members of committees that
would have jurisdiction over matters that are the subject of trade policy considerations or trade
negotiations. Members of the CAG that are not already DCAs may also become DCA members.
Under the proposed TPA-2015, in addition to the above, any Member of the House may be
designated by the Speaker as a DCA upon consultation with the chairman and ranking Member of
the House Ways and Means Committee and the chairman and ranking Member of the committee
from which the Member would be selected. Similarly, any Member of the Senate may be
designated a DCA upon consultation with the President Pro Tempore and the chairman and
ranking Member of the committee from which the Senator would be selected. In addition,
Members of the HAG and SAG may be accredited as official trade advisers to U.S. trade

14 The appointment power of the President pro tempore of the Senate is subject to the conditions of 2 U.S.C. 199, which
requires involvement of the majority and minority leaders if a statute specifies that the appointment is to be made on
the basis of the appointee’s affiliation with a political party, or if not, upon the joint recommendation of the Senate
majority and minority leaders.
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negotiation delegations by the USTR. Which Members of Congress have access to draft trade
agreements and related trade negotiating documents?
According to USTR, any Member may examine draft trade agreements and related trade
negotiating documents, although this was not specifically spelled out under the 2002 TPA. The
USTR classifies draft texts of trade agreements and related documents under Executive Order
13526. The proposed TPA-2015 expressly requires that the USTR provide Members and their
appropriate staff with proper security clearances, as well as appropriate committee staff, access to
pertinent documents relating to trade negotiations, including classified materials.
What are the requirements to consult with the private sector and
the public on trade policy?

In order to ensure that private and public stakeholders have a voice in the formation of U.S. trade
policy, Congress established a three-tier advisory committee system under Section 135 of the
Trade Act of 1974, as amended. These committees advise the President on negotiations,
agreements and other matters of trade policy. At the top of the system is the 30-member Advisory
Committee for Trade Policy and Negotiations (ACTPN) consisting of presidentially-appointed
representatives from local and state governments and representatives from the broad range of
U.S. industries and labor. At the second tier are policy advisory committees—Trade and
Environment Policy, Intergovernmental Policy, Labor Policy, Agriculture Policy, and Africa. 15
The third tier consists of 17 sector-specific committees—one on agriculture and 16 on industry—
which provide technical advice. In addition to consultations with the advisory committees, the
USTR solicits the views of stakeholders through Federal Register notices and hearings.
The TPA/fast track authorities under the Trade Act of 1974 and thereafter have required the
President to submit reports from the various advisory committees on their views regarding the
potential impact of an agreement negotiated under the TPA before the agreement is submitted for
congressional approval. For example, the 2002 Trade Act requires the President to submit to
Congress the reports of the advisory committees on a trade agreement no later than 30 calendar
days after notifying Congress of his intent to enter into (sign) the trade agreement. Those reports
are also required under the proposed TPA-2015.
The proposed TPA-2015 expands the existing statutory requirements for consultation with the
public. For example, the legislation requires the USTR to develop guidelines for enhanced
consultation with the public and to provide these guidelines no later than 120 calendar days after
the legislation’s entry into effect. The legislation also requires the USTR to develop guidelines on
consultations with the private sector advisory committees no later than 120 days after the
legislation’s entry into effect. The President also would be required to make public other
mandated reports on the impact of future trade agreements on the environment, employment, and
labor rights in the United States. (See question, “What is the role of the U.S. International Trade
Commission?” below.)

15 On February 18, USTR Froman announced the formation of a Public Interest Advisory Committee (PIAC) that will
advise the Administration on issues of public health, consumer protection and transparency in trade negotiations.
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Do specific import sensitive industries have special negotiation
and consultation requirements?

Under the 2002 Trade Act and the proposed TPA-2015, import sensitive products in the
agriculture (i.e., products subject to a tariff rate quota [TRQ]), fishing and textile sectors have
special assessment and consultation requirements before initiating negotiations.
Notification and Reporting Requirements
Another tool Congress has employed under TPA to ensure transparency of the negotiating process
is to require the President to notify Congress prior to launching trade negotiations and prior to
entering into (signing) a trade agreement.
What have been the congressional notification requirements and
would they change under the pending legislation?

The Bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority Act of 2002 required the President to notify Congress
90 calendar days prior to initiating negotiations on a reciprocal trade agreement with a foreign
country. The President was also required to notify Congress 90 calendar days prior to entering
into (signing) a trade agreement and to notify Congress 60 days prior to entering into the
agreement of any expected changes in U.S. law that would be required in order to be in
compliance with the trade agreement. In addition, 180 calendar days prior to entering into a trade
agreement, the President had to notify the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate
Finance Committee of any changes in U.S. trade remedy laws (antidumping, countervailing duty,
and escape clause statutes) that would be required by the trade agreement. The 2002 Act also
stipulated special notification and reporting requirements for agriculture, fishing industry, and
textiles and apparel. The proposed TPA-2015 maintains these requirements.
What is the role of the U.S. International Trade Commission?
Under the 2002 Authority, the President had to submit the details of the proposed agreement to
the USITC 90 calendar days prior to entering into (signing) the agreement,. The USITC was
required to produce an assessment of the potential economic impact of the agreement no later
than 90 calendar days after the agreement was entered into. The proposed TPA-2015 incorporates
the same requirement, but extends the deadline for the USITC to produce the report by 15
calendar days to 105 days and requires that the reports be made public.
What are the various reporting requirements under the proposed
TPA-2015?

• Extension disapproval resolution. (See May Congress withdraw TPA Procedures,
below.) If the President seeks to extend the trade authorities procedures beyond
July 1, 2018,
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• The President must report to Congress on status and progress of current
negotiations, and why the extension is needed to complete the negotiations.
Must be submitted not later than April 1, 2018.
• The Advisory Committee on Trade Policy and Negotiations must report on
the progress made in the negotiations and a statement of its views on whether
the extension should be granted. Must be submitted not later than June 1,
2018.
• International Trade Commission (ITC) must report on the economic impact
of all trade agreements negotiated during the current period TPA is in force.
Must be submitted not later than June 1, 2018.
• Report on U.S. trade remedy laws. The President must report on any proposals
that could change U.S. trade remedy laws to the committees of jurisdiction
(House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee.) Must
be submitted 180 days before an agreement is signed.
• Entering into an agreement.
• Advisory Committee Reports. The Advisory Committee for Trade Policy and
Negotiations and appropriate policy, sectoral, and functional committees
shall report on whether and to what extent the agreement would promote the
economic interests of the United States, and the overall and principal
negotiating objectives of TPA. Must be submitted 30 days after an agreement
is signed.
• ITC Assessment. The ITC shall report on the likely impact of the agreement
on the economy as a whole and on specific economic sectors. The President
must provide information to the ITC on the agreement as it exists no later
than 90 days before an agreement is signed to inform the assessment. The
ITC must report to Congress within 105 days after the agreement is signed.
This report would be made public under TPA-2015.
• Reports submitted by the President to committees of jurisdiction.
• Environment review of the agreement and the content and operation of
consultative mechanisms established pursuant to TPA.
• Employment Impact Reviews and Report. Reviews the impact of future trade
agreement on U.S. employment and labor markets.
• Labor Rights. A “meaningful” labor rights report on the country or countries
in the negotiations and a description of any provisions that would require
changes to the labor laws and practices of the United States.
• Implementation and Enforcement. A plan for the implementation and
enforcement of the agreement including border personnel requirements,
agency staffing requirements, customs infrastructure requirement, impact on
state and local governments, and cost analyses.
• Reports submitted by the President to committees of jurisdiction after agreement
is implemented.
• Report on Penalties. A report one year after the imposition of a penalty or
remedy under the trade agreement on the effectiveness of the penalty or
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remedy applied in enforcing U.S. law, whether the penalty or remedy was
effective in changing the behavior of the party, and whether it had any
adverse impact other parties or interests.
• Report on TPA. USITC to submit a report on the economic impact of all
trade agreements implementing under TPA procedures since 1984 one year
after enactment and no later than 5 years thereafter.
Expedited Procedures and the Congressional Role
What have been the expedited legislative procedures? Would they
be changed under the proposed TPA-2015?

The proposed TPA-2015 makes use of the existing expedited procedures (“trade authorities
procedures”) prescribed in Section 151 of the Trade Act of 1974 for consideration of trade
agreement implementing bills (see the text box).
Trade Authorities Procedures
Under Section 151 of the Trade Act of 1974 (19 U.S.C. 2191), an implementing bill submitted by the President is
automatically introduced in both chambers and referred to the appropriate committees of jurisdiction (normally
Ways and Means in the House and Finance in the Senate, perhaps along with others). In each chamber, the
committees have 45 session days to report the bill back to the floor, and they may not amend it or recommend
amendments. If either committee does not report after 45 session days, it is discharged from considering the
implementing bill, which makes the bill available for floor action (days on which the respective chamber does not
meet are not counted toward the 45-day period.)
In each chamber, once the committee reports or is discharged, the implementing bill may be called up for
consideration by a non-debatable motion, offered from the floor by any Member. In the House, this provision means
that no special rule from the Committee on Rules is necessary in order to bring the bill to the floor; in the Senate, it
means that Senators need not defer to the majority leader to call up the bill, and no super-majority vote is needed to
limit debate on a motion to consider the legislation.
In each chamber, once the measure is under consideration, debate is limited to 20 hours, no amendments may be
considered, and various potentially dilatory motions are prohibited. In the Senate, this limit on debate means that no
super-majority vote will be needed to overcome a filibuster. Each chamber can pass the implementing bill by a
majority of the Members voting. If either chamber passes its bill, it sends the bill to the other; the receiving chamber
then considers its own implementing bill under the expedited procedure, but takes its final vote on the bill received
from the first. Because neither chamber can amend the implementing bill, the two bills must remain identical; as a
result, if the chamber acting second passes the bill received from the other, this action clears the bill for the
President’s signature.
Most trade agreements affect tariffs, in which case the implementing bill wil be a revenue bill, which, under the
Constitution, must be enacted as a House bill. In this case the House must act first, and send its bill to the Senate,
where it is referred to committee. The Senate committee is automatically discharged from considering the House bill
if it does not report it within 15 session days, or by the end of the 45 session days allowed for considering its own
bill, whichever is later. After the committee reports the House bill or is discharged, the Senate then may consider
that measure under the expedited procedure.
What is the purpose of the expedited procedures for considering
implementing bills?

The expedited procedure of the TPA includes three core elements: a mechanism to ensure timely
floor consideration, limits on debate, and a prohibition on amendment. The guarantee of floor
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consideration is intended to ensure that Congress will have an opportunity to consider and vote on
the implementing bill whether or not the committees of jurisdiction or the leadership favor the
legislation. Especially in the Senate, the limitation on debate helps ensure that opponents cannot
prevent a final vote on an implementation bill by filibustering. The prohibition on amendments is
intended to ensure that Congress will vote on the implementing bill in the form in which it is
presented to Congress.
In these ways, the expedited procedures help assure that Congress will act on an implementing
bill, and that if the bill is enacted, its terms will implement the trade agreement that was
negotiated. This arrangement helps to increase the confidence of U.S. negotiating partners that
law enacted by the United States will implement the terms of the agreement, so that they will not
be compelled to renegotiate it or give up on it.
Why do the expedited procedures for implementing bills
prohibit amendments?

As just noted, if Congress were to amend an implementing bill, the legislation ultimately enacted
might fail to implement the terms of the agreement that had actually been agreed. In addition, if
either house were to amend the implementing bill, it would probably become necessary to resolve
the differences between the House and Senate versions through a conference committee (or
through amendments between the houses). Since there is no way to force the two houses to reach
an agreement on a single version, this prospect would make it impossible to ensure that Congress
could complete action on the implementing bill expeditiously or, indeed, at all.
What provisions are to be included in a trade agreement
implementing bill to make it eligible for expedited consideration?

Because trade agreement implementing bills are eligible for expedited congressional
consideration under TPA, Congress has imposed restrictions on what may be included in these
bills. The 2002 TPA legislation required that the implementing bill consist only of provisions that
approve the trade agreement and a statement of administrative action proposed to implement it,
together with provisions “necessary or appropriate” to implement the agreement, “repealing or
amending existing laws or providing new statutory authority.”
What constitutes “necessary and appropriate” has been the subject of debate, with some Members
arguing that the terms should not be interpreted too loosely, while others may argue for a broader
interpretation. The proposed TPA-2015 includes the same basic language as the 2002 authority,
except it requires that, in addition to provisions approving the trade agreement and statement of
administrative action, an implementing bill may include “only such provisions as are strictly
necessary and appropriate” (italics added).
How does the proposed TPA-2015 treat agreements reached under
the sets of negotiations already launched?

For the TPP, the TTIP, and the TISA negotiations (see question, “How has the lack of TPA
affected current trade agreement negotiations?” above), the proposed TPA-2015 would waive the
requirement of notification 90-calendar days prior to launching the negotiations for these
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negotiations, provided that the President notifies Congress of the negotiating objectives of the
agreement and whether he is seeking a new agreement or changes in an existing agreement. (The
Obama Administration has already been adhering to similar notification and consultation
requirements of the expired 2002 authority.)
If Congress renews TPA, must it consider covered trade agreements
under the trade authorities procedures?

Each renewal of TPA has provided means by which Congress can determine not to extend
expedited consideration to certain implementing bills. In the 2002 statute, these mechanisms
included:
• The “Extension Disapproval Resolution,” through which Congress can deny a
Presidential request to extend TPA for additional years;
• The “Procedural Disapproval Resolution,” through which Congress can deny
expedited consideration for a specified trade agreement; and
• An additional procedure, under which Congress could find that an implementing
bill would change U.S. trade remedy laws in ways inconsistent with negotiating
objectives on that subject.
The proposed TPA-2015 retains all three of these mechanisms, and would also establish:
• A “Consultation and Compliance Resolution,” through which either house, by its
own action, can deny the use of the trade authorities procedures for consideration
of a specified implementing bill in that chamber.
Finally,
• Each house always retains its constitutional authority to override the statutory
requirements of the trade authorities procedures and consider an implementing
bill under its general rules or such other procedural conditions as it may
determine.
Following paragraphs discuss how each of these mechanisms functions to enable Congress to
limit the use of TPA, implications of each, and relations among them.
What is the effect of an “Extension Disapproval Resolution”?
As already noted, the proposed TPA-2015 would make the trade authorities procedures available
until July 1, 2018, and would authorize the President to request that this period be extended
through June 30, 2021. The President could make such a request at any time through June 30,
2018, but the extension would be denied if, before that date, either house adopts an “extension
disapproval resolution” (EDR).16 This provision would enable either house to deny TPA
altogether for any trade agreement entered into (signed) after June 30, 2018. The 2002 renewal
and other earlier TPA statutes contained similar provisions for an extension and EDR.

16 S. 995 and H.R. 1890, sec. 3(c).
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Like previous grants of TPA, the proposed TPA-2015 effectively places the use of the EDR in the
control of the Committee on Ways and Means and the Committee on Finance. Although any
Member of the respective house may introduce an EDR, such a resolution may be considered on
the floor in each chamber only if the respective revenue committee (and, in the House, the
Committee on Rules) reports it. If reported, however, the measure can be considered under an
expedited procedure of its own, known as the “Section 152 procedure,” which makes privileged a
motion for consideration, limits debate, and prohibits amendment at any stage of the process.17
What is the effect of a “Procedural Disapproval Resolution”?
Under both the 2002 authority and the proposed TPA-2015, Congress may withdraw expedited
legislative consideration from a particular implementing bill if it determines either (1) that the
President has not adequately notified or consulted Congress on that agreement in the ways
required by the act, or (2) that the agreement “fails to make progress in achieving the purposes,
policies, priorities, and objectives” of the act. If both houses, within 60 days of each other, adopt
a “procedural disapproval resolution” (PDR) on the same implementing bill, neither can use the
expedited procedure to consider that implementing bill. In each chamber, the PDR is a simple
resolution (H.Res. or S.Res.), requiring action only in the chamber of origin, so that no
conference committee or other mechanism to resolve differences between the two chambers’
measures is needed. Like an EDR, a PDR can be considered in each chamber under the expedited
procedure of Section 152 (see previous paragraph), with a privileged motion for consideration,
limited debate, and a prohibition on amendment.18
This mechanism affords Congress a means to enforce the requirements that a trade agreement
advance the objectives established in statute and that the specified consultations, which enable
Congress to engage with the process of negotiation, will occur. If, in the judgment of both houses,
these conditions are not met, then Congress can decide not to accord expedited consideration to
the implementing bill.19 As with the EDR, however, the proposed TPA-2015 (like the 2002
statute) effectively places the use of the PDR in the control of the Committee on Ways and Means
and the Committee on Finance. Any Member of the respective house may introduce the
resolution, but it may be considered on the floor only if the respective revenue committee (and, in
the House, the Committee on Rules) reports it. In this way the revenue committees serve, in
effect, as the agent of Congress in maintaining its legislative prerogatives.
With respect to a given trade agreement, moreover, the expedited procedure for considering a
PDR may be used only for the first such resolution reported in each chamber. The effect of this
limitation is that each chamber may attempt to withdraw expedited consideration from an
implementing bill on a given trade agreement under this procedure only once. (Further
implications of this limitation are noted in the following discussion, on changes in trade remedy
laws.)

17 Section 152(d) and (e) of the Trade Act of 1974, 19 U.S.C. 2192(d) and (e).
18 S. 995 and H.R. 1890, sec. 6(b)(1) and 6(b)(2).
19 If a PDR becomes effective, the two houses could still consider the implementing bill under their general rules; see
“May Congress override the expedited procedures?” later.
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What is a “mock markup,” and how may Congress use it to assert
control over a trade agreement implementing bill?

Although not embedded in statute, a “mock markup” has been an informal, traditional method for
the House Ways and Means Committee and Senate Finance Committee to provide advice on the
contents of the implementing bill before the President formally sends the draft bill to both houses,
thus triggering the expedited procedure for the bill. Under the statute, the President notifies
Congress of his intention to enter into (sign) a trade agreement 90 calendar days prior to doing
so.20 This notification typically enables the committees to conduct hearings on a draft
implementing bill sent by the White House, followed by the advisory “markup.” If the House and
Senate Committees have significant differences, they could hold a “mock conference.”
This process is purely advisory, and it is at presidential discretion whether to accept the advice.
The process is called a “mock” markup because the bill under consideration is only a draft. The
action of the committees operates only as a signal of their preferences to the executive. Often,
nevertheless, the implementing bill that the President later submits to Congress tracks the results
of the mock markup. If the revenue committees are dissatisfied with the implementing bill as
submitted, they may respond by asking Congress to deny expedited consideration through the use
of a PDR or one of the other methods described next, including bringing the bill to the floor under
the general rules rather than the statutory expedited procedures.
What may Congress do if an implementing bill contains provisions
inconsistent with negotiating objectives on trade remedies, and
with what effect?

The proposed TPA-2015 retains a procedural mechanism that appeared in the 2002 authority,
under which either house can adopt a simple resolution (H.Res. or S.Res.) finding that changes to
U.S. trade remedy laws provided for in a trade agreement implementing bill submitted by the
President are inconsistent with statutory negotiating objectives on that subject. Such action would
respond to the report by the President to the revenue committees on this subject mentioned under
“Trade Remedies,” above. Like a PDR, such a resolution could be introduced by any Member,
but could receive floor consideration only if reported by the respective revenue committee (and,
in the House, by the Committee on Rules). If the respective committees had not previously
reported any other such resolution with respect to the same agreement, the resolution would be
subject to consideration under the expedited procedure of Section 152 (see section on the
Extension Disapproval Resolution).21
Unlike a PDR, however, the proposed TPA-2015 (like the 2002 authority) does not specify what
effect the adoption of a such resolution, finding an implementing bill inconsistent with trade
remedy objectives, would have on consideration of the implementing bill. As a result, it is not
clear that adoption of a resolution of this kind would prevent either chamber from considering the
implementing bill under its expedited procedure. Yet the proposed TPA-2015 (again like the 2002
authority) prescribes that if such a resolution has been reported in either chamber, then that

20 See “Notification and Reporting Requirements,” earlier.
21 S. 995 and H.R. 1890, sec. 5(b)(3).
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chamber may not use the Section 152 expedited procedure to consider a PDR to deny expedited
consideration to the same implementing bill.22
How would the BCPTA permit a single house to withdraw
expedited consideration from a specific implementation bill?

The proposed TPA-2015 incorporates a mechanism, not present in previous iterations of TPA, that
would permit either house, by its own action, to make a given implementing bill ineligible for
expedited consideration in that chamber. As with the PDR, the emphasis of this proposal is on its
potential use to counter what the chamber may consider inadequate consultation by the executive
branch with respect to a trade agreement. This mechanism provides for use of a “Consultation and
Compliance Resolution” (CCR), which is a simple resolution of either chamber (S.Res. or
H.Res.) asserting that the President had “failed or refused to notify or consult” as required by the
Act, and therefore that “the trade authorities procedures ... shall not apply” in that chamber to the
implementing bill in question.23
This form of action, however, contrasts with the use of the PDR, which has the effect of
withdrawing expedited consideration in both chambers, but only if both agree to similar
resolutions. Withdrawal of expedited consideration in only one chamber, nevertheless, would
presumably suffice to prevent the effective operation of the expedited procedure as a whole, for
the acting chamber might then either decline to consider the implementing bill at all, or might
never bring consideration to a close and proceed to a vote, or might amend the bill, in which case
a conference committee or other process of resolving differences between the two houses might
become necessary, and might never be concluded.
The proposed TPA-2015 provides separate procedures for a CCR in each chamber, and does not
provide for expedited consideration in either. In the Senate, if the Committee on Finance “meets
on whether to report an implementing bill,” but does not report it favorably, it must then, instead,
report a CCR. The Senate is not required to consider this resolution, but if a motion is offered to
proceed to its consideration is offered, it would normally be debatable, and could be filibustered,
in which case a motion for cloture could be offered in order to limit consideration. The proposed
TPA-2015 provides that if this motion does not receive the 60 votes necessary for adoption, the
resolution is returned to committee,24 thereby preserving the eligibility of the implementing bill
for expedited consideration. In order for the Senate to withdraw expedited consideration from an
implementing bill under this procedure, accordingly, the resolution would have to secure the
support of 60 Senators for cloture. In addition, a cloture vote does not occur until two days after
the cloture motion is offered, a matter under cloture may be considered for 30 additional hours
after the cloture vote, and if the Senate agrees to the motion to proceed, the same conditions apply
to consideration of the measure itself. As a result, adoption of a CCR in the Senate might require
Senators to be willing to spend as much as two days getting to a cloture vote, plus 30 hours
consideration, plus another two days until a cloture vote on the resolution itself, plus 30 hours
before a final vote on the resolution.

22 S. 995 and H.R. 1890, sec. 6(b)(2)(B).
23 S. 995 and H.R. 1890, sec. 6(b)(3)(C) and 6(b)(4)(C).
24 S. 995 and H.R. 1890, sec. 6(b)(3).
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In the House, the CCR process is triggered if the Committee on Ways and Means reports an
implementing bill “with other than a favorable recommendation.” If, on the day after the
Committee files such a report, a Member of the House submits a CCR, the Committee must
consider one such resolution within four days of session and report it within six days of session or
be discharged from its consideration.25 The act does not specify how such a resolution would then
reach the floor or under what terms it would be considered. Normally, a resolution affecting the
order of business (often called a “special rule”) would be considered by the Committee on Rules
and reported as privileged, which means the Committee could call it up by motion. In the past,
when the House wished to withdraw expedited consideration from an implementing bill, it has
used such resolutions reported by the Committee on Rules, as described below under “May
Congress override the TPA procedures?”
Does Congress have means of overriding the TPA procedures in
addition to those provided by TPA statutes?

As the TPA statutes acknowledge, the expedited procedures for which they provide operate as
procedural rules of each house, and therefore each house retains full authority, under the
Constitution, to change or override them at any point. Under this authority, either house could
choose not to consider an implementing bill under the expedited procedure, but instead under its
general rules, under which amendment might be permitted.26
In practice, the House has usually considered implementing bills not under the statutory expedited
procedure, but pursuant to special rules, reported from the Committee on Rules. These special
rules have normally retained the statutory prohibition against amendment (thereby duplicating the
conditions under which the House usually considers any revenue bill). However, the House could
adopt a special rule permitting amendments to an implementation bill, and it has also adopted a
resolution prohibiting consideration of an implementing bill for a specified trade agreement.
The Senate normally considers implementing bills under the expedited procedure, because
supporters thereby avoid the possible need to obtain a super-majority vote for cloture in order to
limit debate. By unanimous consent, nevertheless, the Senate could agree to override any or all of
the TPA procedures, including those that prohibit amendments to an implementing bill.
Can Congress disapprove the President’s launching trade
negotiations with a trading partner?

Congress does not have the constitutional authority to prevent the President from entering into
negotiations with a foreign government. Under the Trade and Tariff Act of 1984 and the Omnibus
Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988, however, a bill to implement a trade agreement could
have been denied expedited consideration if, within a 60-day period after the President notified
the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee of his intention to

25 The bill specifies these periods in legislative days, but in the House these are normally equivalent to days of session.
26 As noted earlier, under “Why do the expedited procedures for implementing bills prohibit amendments,” if either
house adopted amendments, a conference committee might be necessary to reach agreement on a version to send to the
President.
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begin negotiations, either committee voted to disapprove the negotiation. This provision was not
included in the 2002 statute and is not found in the proposed TPA-2015.
Does TPA constrain Congress’s exercise of its constitutional
authority on trade policy?

Even though the TPA procedures are designed to ensure that Congress will act on implementing
bills, and will do so without amending them, TPA legislation affords Congress several procedural
means to maintain arguably tight reins on the executive branch’s exercise of the delegated trade
authority. In the provisions of successive TPA statutes, Congress has developed several
mechanisms for preserving its authority in relation to the content of implementing bills even
when they are eligible for consideration under the expedited procedure. In practice, these
mechanisms enable the House Committee on Ways and Means and the Senate Committee on
Finance (the “revenue committees”) to operate as agents of Congress as a whole in protecting
congressional prerogatives.
TPA statutes include extensive, specific negotiating objectives to be pursued in covered trade
agreements (see “Trade Negotiating Objectives,” above). They also include extensive
requirements for Congress to be notified of any trade agreement negotiations and consulted
during their course. These requirements enable the revenue committees to monitor the
negotiations actively and work to ensure that any trade agreements reached will be acceptable
(see “Congressional Consultation and Advisory Requirements,” and “Notification and Reporting
Requirements,” above).
The procedural mechanisms discussed in the preceding paragraphs, including the extension
disapproval resolution, the procedural disapproval resolution, and the mock markup, enable
Congress, and the two revenue committees in particular, to exercise a degree of control over the
content and consideration of covered trade agreements that is comparable, in many respects, to
that which these panels generally exercise over other legislation within their jurisdiction.
In addition to these TPA-specific procedures, finally, each house retains the ability to consider
implementing bills under its general rules rather than under the expedited procedure.
National Sovereignty and Trade Agreements
Can a trade agreement force the United States to change its laws?
Neither the 2002 TPA authority nor previous TPA/fast track authorities contained provisions
addressing the issue of national sovereignty. The 2014 BCTPA proposal stated that no provision
of any trade agreement entered into under the TPA inconsistent with any law of the United States,
of any State, or any locality of the United States shall have any effect. Nor shall any provision of
a trade agreement prevent the government of the United States, of any State, or any U.S. locality
from amending its laws. This provision from the proposed BCTPA essentially provided that, for
domestic purposes, any trade agreement adopted under the TPA authority is not self-executing.
Therefore, any potential agreement adopted through the TPA procedures would not displace any
federal, state, or local law without further action being taken by the appropriate legislature.
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What happens if a U.S. law violates a U.S. trade agreement?
In general, if the United States does adopt an agreement with foreign countries, it would be bound
by international law under the agreement. If a federal, state, or local law is found to be in
violation of the free trade agreement, then the United States could be subject to removal of some
benefits under the agreement, such as an increase in tariffs on its products, through a potential
dispute resolution with a challenging country. The federal, state, or local government potentially
would have to amend the law that is inconsistent with the trade agreement in order for the United
States to avoid removal of benefits under the international agreement.
National Sovereignty and Trade Agreements
Can a trade agreement force the United States to change its laws?
Neither the 2002 TPA authority nor previous TPA/fast track authorities contained provisions
addressing the issue of national sovereignty. The 2014 TPA-2015 proposal states that no provision
of any trade agreement entered into under the TPA inconsistent with any law of the United States,
of any State, or any locality of the United States shall have any effect. Nor shall any provision of
a trade agreement prevent the government of the United States, of any State, or any U.S. locality
from amending its laws. This provision from the proposed TPA-2015 essentially provides that, for
domestic purposes, any trade agreement adopted under the TPA authority is not self-executing.
Therefore, any potential agreement adopted through the TPA procedures would not displace any
federal, state, or local law without further action being taken by the appropriate legislature.
What happens if a U.S. law violates a U.S. trade agreement?
In general, if the United States does adopt an agreement with foreign countries, it is bound by
international law under the agreement. If a federal, state, or local law is found to be in violation of
the free trade agreement, then the United States could be subject to removal of some benefits
under the agreement, such as an increase in tariffs on its products, through a potential dispute
resolution with a challenging country. The federal, state, or local government potentially would
have to amend its laws that are inconsistent with the trade agreement in order for the United
States to avoid removal of benefits under the international agreement.


Author Contact Information

Ian F. Fergusson
Richard S. Beth
Specialist in International Trade and Finance
Specialist on Congress and the Legislative Process
ifergusson@crs.loc.gov, 7-4997
rbeth@crs.loc.gov, 7-8667


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