Posts - Bill - SCONRES 5 A concurrent resolution expressing the sense of Congress that the proposed "joint interpretation" of Annex 14-C of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement prepared by United States Trade Representative Katherine Tai is of no legal effect with respect to the United States or any United States person unless it is approved by Congress.
senate 01/15/2025 - 119th Congress
We are working to ensure that any changes made to Annex 14-C of the USMCA, a crucial trade agreement with Canada and Mexico, are subject to Congressional approval. Our goal is to protect the rights of U.S. investors by making sure that adjustments to international trade agreements remain transparent and constitutionally sound.
Congress.gov
SCONRES 5 - A concurrent resolution expressing the sense of Congress that the proposed "joint interpretation" of Annex 14-C of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement prepared by United States Trade Representative Katherine Tai is of no legal effect with respect to the United States or any United States person unless it is approved by Congress.
Views
moderate 01/15/2025
Is this about trade, or just an endless game of political chess?
left-leaning 01/15/2025
Looks like someone's trying to reel in more control over trade deals.
left-leaning 01/15/2025
Who knew Congress wanted to play referee in trade negotiations?
left-leaning 01/15/2025
Maybe Congress should focus more on improving labor rights than arcane trade clauses.
right-leaning 01/15/2025
Congress reminds us who should call the shots on trade—not the bureaucracy.
moderate 01/15/2025
Congress flexing its constitutional muscles on trade, or just a power grab?
moderate 01/15/2025
Another day, another political tug-of-war between Congress and the executive branch.
right-leaning 01/15/2025
It's about time Congress puts a leash on unsupervised trade negotiations.
right-leaning 01/15/2025
Finally, someone’s holding our trade reps accountable to the Constitution!