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Why Trade Promotion Authority is Constitutional
Heritage Foundation | November, 2001 | Ed Meese II, Todd Gaziano

Posted on 06/17/2015 8:39:34 AM PDT by TNMOUTH

Legal Memorandum #4 on Trade and Economic Freedom

Why Trade Promotion Authority is Constitutional By Edwin Meese III and Todd F. Gaziano - November 2001

Congress is expected to vote soon on whether to grant trade promotion authority (TPA) to President George W. Bush. Some critics of TPA have suggested that it might compromise national sovereignty and may actually be unconstitutional. But an important aspect of national sovereignty is the right to enter into international agreements and to participate in their enforcement. Being bound by agreements, such as mutual defense treaties, does not weaken sovereign power even though it obligates nations to abide by these pacts while they are a party to them.

Another aspect of sovereignty is the right of nations to withdraw from treaties that no longer suit them, although nations do not abandon most treaties over minor disagreements or unforeseen circumstances. America's NATO allies are now in a situation they never imagined: helping patrol our skies with NATO surveillance planes. Even as they shoulder this obligation, their assistance does not diminish their sovereignty or America's in any way. In fact, the NATO Treaty still makes each nation stronger than it would be by itself.

The concern some lawmakers have expressed, that TPA would somehow diminish American sovereignty, is misplaced. If anything, the opposite is true.

Why the President Needs TPA. By granting TPA to the President, Congress agrees to take a straight up-or-down vote on trade and investment agreements the President negotiates before June 1, 2005. Congress has extended TPA to the previous five U.S. Presidents, and such authority is granted by most other nations to their heads of state. Without TPA, the President is denied an equal footing when he attempts to negotiate trade agreements on behalf of America.

It is extremely difficult for any U.S. President to negotiate significant trade deals if he cannot assure other nations that Congress will refrain from adding numerous amendments and conditions that must then be taken back to the negotiating table. Congress has not granted TPA for seven years--which is one reason why the United States is a party to only three of 131 trade and investment agreements currently in force worldwide.

The TPA legislation currently being debated (H.R. 3005) is clearly constitutional because Congress retains its authority to approve or reject all future trade agreements. It might be unconstitutional if Congress tried to delegate its authority to approve the final deal--but that is not at issue. Congress may always kill any future international agreement by withholding its final approval. The only difference under TPA is that Congress consents not to kill the agreement by amendment (i.e., the "death by a thousand cuts"). The Constitution grants each house of Congress the authority to establish its own rules of procedure, and it makes perfect sense for Congress to limit itself to straight up-or-down votes on certain resolutions, such as base closures and its own adjournment motions.

Why Sovereignty Is Not Eroded. Some critics of TPA point out that a subsequent trade deal might submit certain disputes, including labor and environmental matters, to an international body such as the World Trade Organization. This, they argue, would undermine U.S. sovereignty. It should be noted that this is not an argument against TPA legislation itself but against a future, hypothetical trade deal that might be negotiated with the aid of TPA.

Although unrelated labor and environmental conditions do not belong in trade agreements, TPA legislation should not attempt to mandate or prohibit them outright. Under well-established constitutional rulings, it would raise serious constitutional concerns for Congress to try to mandate the President's negotiating positions. Moreover, some Members of Congress want to require labor and environmental protections in all future trade agreements, and others want to prohibit them in any future agreement. The President must be sensitive to these conflicting sentiments when he negotiates future trade deals if he wants congressional approval. TPA would assist him in trying to reconcile these conflicting desires. If he cannot negotiate agreements that satisfy both houses of Congress (as the TPA legislation requires), nothing will have been lost in granting him enhanced negotiating authority. But no one benefits if potentially satisfactory trade negotiations are strangled in the crib.

Future trade deals would not be unconstitutional, nor would they undermine U.S. sovereignty, if they contained an agreement to submit some disputes to an international tribunal for an initial determination. The United States will always have the ultimate say over what its domestic laws provide. No future agreement could grant an international organization the power to change U.S. laws.

A ruling by an international tribunal that calls a U.S. law into question would have no domestic effect unless Congress changes the law to comply with the ruling. If Congress rejects a ruling or fails to act, other countries might impose a trade sanction or tariff, but they are more likely to impose high tariffs now without any agreement. The fact remains that no international body or foreign government may change any American law. Moreover, Congress may override an entire agreement at any time by a simple statute. Nations also may withdraw from international agreements by executive action alone. That is one reason why such agreements do not interfere with the underlying sovereignty of each nation to chart its own course in the world. In short, the U.S. Constitution and any laws and treaties we enact in accordance thereto are the only supreme law of our land.

Finally, while labor and environmental conditions generally should not be a part of trade and investment agreements, submitting these issues to an international tribunal for an initial ruling is no different (constitutionally) from submitting any other type of dispute to such a body. Many important multinational agreements provide for disputes to be submitted to an international tribunal for its determination. Congress and past Presidents have concluded that these tribunals are effective overall in eliminating unfair trade practices that hurt American producers and consumers.

Conclusion. Whether a given trade agreement should include labor or environmental provisions or should provide for disputes to be heard by an international organization are questions of policy. Agreements that include such provisions are not unconstitutional and do not diminish national sovereignty. The only action that will weaken overall U.S. sovereignty is for Congress to hobble the President's ability to negotiate trade deals with other nations by denying him enhanced trade promotion authority.

--Edwin Meese III is the Chairman and Todd Gaziano is the Director of the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: 2016election; cruz; election2016; heritage; mysterymeat; obamatrade; tedcruz; texas; tisa; tpa; tpp; ttip; wikileaks
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To: semimojo
We can say everyone is misinterpreting the constitution but us, but when it's you vs. Reagan's attorney general it's probably more productive to deal with the reality - everyone that matters in our system say's congressional-executive agreements constitutional.

OK. Let's proceed under the assumption that this is constitutional.

You cannot deny that they are writing the rules to stack the deck in favor of passing trade bills.

Do you think that is, in any way, in keeping without our form of government?

Our Founders warned of foreign entanglements.

81 posted on 06/18/2015 6:42:02 AM PDT by Erik Latranyi (Scott Walker - a more conservative governor than Ronald Reagan)
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To: Erik Latranyi
You cannot deny that they are writing the rules to stack the deck in favor of passing trade bills.

Do you think that is, in any way, in keeping without our form of government?

Our Founders warned of foreign entanglements.

I'd say TPA certainly makes passage of trade agreements easier. I'd go further and say it makes trade agreements possible.

The reason we have these congressional-executive agreements in the first place is the nearly universal acknowledgment that you won't get an agreement without them.

If you want to be isolationist and think it's best for us not to have any regulation of international trade, fine, but in the real world trade happens and it's best for us to have some role in setting the rules.

82 posted on 06/18/2015 6:57:22 AM PDT by semimojo
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To: semimojo
The reason we have these congressional-executive agreements in the first place is the nearly universal acknowledgment that you won't get an agreement without them.

Yeah, amending the Constitution is too difficult as well. Let's just write a work-around so we can pass laws that are blatantly unconstitutional.

Oh, we've done that with the commerce clause already.

83 posted on 06/18/2015 9:15:38 AM PDT by Erik Latranyi (Scott Walker - a more conservative governor than Ronald Reagan)
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To: Erik Latranyi

Congress - Executive agreements go back to 1790, when the authors of the Constitution were very much alive.


84 posted on 06/18/2015 9:20:50 AM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: Erik Latranyi
Yeah, amending the Constitution is too difficult as well. Let's just write a work-around so we can pass laws that are blatantly unconstitutional.

I've posted a lot of support for the fact that these agreements have consistently been held to be constitutional. What is your argument which says that they aren't? That the federal government can't legislate anything to do with foreign relations? It can only be by treaty?

Maybe I just don't understand your position.

85 posted on 06/18/2015 9:33:03 AM PDT by semimojo
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86 posted on 06/21/2015 2:51:57 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (What do we want? REGIME CHANGE! When do we want it? NOW)
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