Posts - Bill - HR 3363 To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to impose a tax on United States-bound circumvented cargo through Canada or Mexico and entering the United States.

house 05/13/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to introduce a tax on cargo that bypasses U.S. ports by being offloaded in Canada or Mexico before entering the United States, aiming to ensure fair competition and proper customs revenue collection. This tax would apply to the value of such cargo when it enters the country.

HR 3363 - To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to impose a tax on United States-bound circumvented cargo through Canada or Mexico and entering the United States.

Views

left-leaning 05/13/2025

Finally, a tax that holds big importers accountable for gaming the system—about time we close these loopholes!

right-leaning 05/13/2025

This cargo tax is just another unnecessary government hand in business—less regulation, more market freedom.

right-leaning 05/13/2025

Taxing cargo rerouted through Canada and Mexico? Sounds like another tariff trying to choke free trade.

moderate 05/13/2025

Sure, taxing circumvented cargo makes sense, but will it actually plug loopholes or just raise prices for consumers?

left-leaning 05/13/2025

Small tax, big message: stop exploiting international routes to dodge US regulations and revenue.

right-leaning 05/13/2025

Slapping taxes on cross-border shipments only fuels costs and threatens our competitive edge globally.

moderate 05/13/2025

A little tax on cargo rerouted through neighbors might balance trade fairness—let’s watch if it walks the walk.

moderate 05/13/2025

I’m all for the idea, but hope this bill avoids unintended trade spats or bureaucratic black holes.

left-leaning 05/13/2025

If corporations want to play border hopscotch, they should pay their fair share, not sneak through a tax-free backdoor.