Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 17— - NEGOTIATION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF TRADE AGREEMENTS › § 2903
An international trade deal will only take effect for the United States if three things happen. First, the President must tell the House and Senate at least 90 calendar days before signing the deal and must quickly put that notice in the Federal Register. Second, after signing, the President must send both Houses the final legal text, a draft bill to put the deal into U.S. law, a statement of any government actions needed to carry out the deal, and supporting papers described below. Third, Congress must pass the implementing bill into law. The supporting papers must explain how the bill and government actions will change current law; say how the agreement advances the goals of U.S. trade policy and why it does or does not meet other goals; explain how it helps U.S. commerce and why the bill and actions are needed; describe efforts on international exchange rates and any impact on monetary stability; and say whether any foreign state trading enterprises could harm U.S. benefits and whether the deal covers their buying and selling. The President should recommend that the deal’s benefits and duties apply only to the parties to the deal if that fits the deal, and may recommend different treatment for different parties if allowed. Special congressional “fast track” procedures described in section 2191 apply to implementing bills for deals entered before June 1, 1991. Those fast-track rules can be extended to deals entered after May 31, 1991 and before June 1, 1993 only if the President asks Congress by March 1, 1991 and neither House adopts an extension disapproval resolution before June 1, 1991. The President and an advisory committee must each send reports by March 1, 1991. If both Houses separately adopt procedural disapproval resolutions within any 60-day period, or if certain negotiation requirements or committee approvals are not met, the fast-track rules do not apply. These timing rules ignore long adjournments and weekends when a House is not in session.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 2903
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73