Stopping a Rogue President on Trade Act
Summary
Stopping a Rogue President on Trade Act
This bill terminates specified executive orders imposing duties (i.e., tariffs) on certain imports into the United States. It also requires the President to receive congressional approval in order to take certain trade actions.
Specifically, the bill terminates duties imposed under the following executive orders (or any executive orders that are substantially similar to these executive orders):
- Executive Order 14257, which imposed a 10% tariff on most imports to the United States and additional duties on specified trading partners;
- Executive Order 14193, which imposed a 25% tariff on most imports from Canada (except for Canadian energy or energy resources, which have an additional 10% tariff); and
- Executive Order 14194, which imposed a 25% tariff on most imports from Mexico.
Additionally, the bill prohibits the President from imposing or increasing a duty, quota, or tariff-rate quota on imports entering the United States, or preventing the application of trade agreement concessions on imports, unless a joint resolution of approval is enacted into law.
The bill provides exclusions from this congressional approval requirement, such as imposing antidumping and countervailing duties under the Tariff Act of 1930. (Antidumping laws provide relief to U.S industries and workers that are materially injured or threatened with injury due to imports of like products sold in the U.S. market at less than fair value, while countervailing duty laws provide such relief from imports of products subsidized by a foreign government or public entity.)
Timeline
- Apr 10, 2025Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committee on Rules, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
- Apr 10, 2025Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committee on Rules, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
- Apr 10, 2025Introduced in House
- Apr 10, 2025Introduced in House
Cosponsors (showing first 30 of 40)
- Rep. Neal, Richard E. [D-MA-1] D-MA
- Rep. Doggett, Lloyd [D-TX-37] D-TX
- Rep. Thompson, Mike [D-CA-4] D-CA
- Rep. Larson, John B. [D-CT-1] D-CT
- Rep. Davis, Danny K. [D-IL-7] D-IL
- Rep. Sewell, Terri A. [D-AL-7] D-AL
- Rep. DelBene, Suzan K. [D-WA-1] D-WA
- Rep. Chu, Judy [D-CA-28] D-CA
- Rep. Moore, Gwen [D-WI-4] D-WI
- Rep. Boyle, Brendan F. [D-PA-2] D-PA
- Rep. Beyer, Donald S. [D-VA-8] D-VA
- Rep. Evans, Dwight [D-PA-3] D-PA
- Rep. Schneider, Bradley Scott [D-IL-10] D-IL
- Rep. Panetta, Jimmy [D-CA-19] D-CA
- Rep. Gomez, Jimmy [D-CA-34] D-CA
- Rep. Horsford, Steven [D-NV-4] D-NV
- Del. Plaskett, Stacey E. [D-VI-At Large] D-VI
- Rep. Suozzi, Thomas R. [D-NY-3] D-NY
- Rep. Gray, Adam [D-CA-13] D-CA
- Rep. Veasey, Marc A. [D-TX-33] D-TX
- Rep. Fletcher, Lizzie [D-TX-7] D-TX
- Rep. Quigley, Mike [D-IL-5] D-IL
- Rep. Gottheimer, Josh [D-NJ-5] D-NJ
- Rep. Strickland, Marilyn [D-WA-10] D-WA
- Rep. McGovern, James P. [D-MA-2] D-MA
- Rep. Salinas, Andrea [D-OR-6] D-OR
- Rep. Pingree, Chellie [D-ME-1] D-ME
- Rep. Jackson, Jonathan L. [D-IL-1] D-IL
- Rep. Morrison, Kelly [D-MN-3] D-MN
- Rep. Scholten, Hillary J. [D-MI-3] D-MI
In the News
- Press Release: Sánchez Critiques Trump's Airstrikes on Iran, Urges Congressional Action - Quiver Quantitative
- Press Release: Sánchez Critiques Trump's Trade Policies Following Record-High Trade Deficit - Quiver Quantitative
- Press Release: Sánchez Criticizes Trump's Role in Recent Shooting Incident Involving Federal Agents in Minnesota - Quiver Quantitative
- The U.S. has no claim to Greenland - Progressive Policy Institute
- 30% of all U.S. goods trade is with Canada and Mexico - Progressive Policy Institute
- New PPI Memo Urges Congress to Deemphasize 2026 USMCA Review, Address Economic and Constitutional Trade Challenges First - Progressive Policy Institute
- USMCA is Not Broken, Doesn’t Need Major Changes - Progressive Policy Institute
- Press Release: Sánchez Responds to Senate Vote Ending Trump’s Tariffs on Brazilian Imports - Quiver Quantitative
- Section 232 National Security Tariffs on Copper Imports - Every CRS Report
- Letter Urging Congress to Chart A Path On Trade Policy That Puts American Workers, Families and Communities First - AFL-CIO
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