Title 19 › Chapter CHAPTER 27— - BIPARTISAN CONGRESSIONAL TRADE PRIORITIES AND ACCOUNTABILITY › § 4204
The President must give Congress a written notice at least 90 days before starting trade talks with a country. The notice must say when talks will start, the U.S. goals, and whether the President wants a new deal or changes to an old one. The President must talk with the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee, other relevant committees, and the House and Senate advisory groups before and after the notice. If a majority of an advisory group asks, the President must meet with them. At least 30 days before talks begin, the President must post a clear, detailed list of negotiation goals on the U.S. Trade Representative’s public website and update it as needed. For farm products, the President must check tariff rules and consult with agriculture committees; the U.S. Trade Representative must identify certain products affected by tariff changes on Jan 1, 1995 (including those where the duty was reduced to not less than 97.5% of the Dec 31, 1994 rate), ask the International Trade Commission (ITC) for an economic study when needed, and tell Congress which products the U.S. will seek to lower tariffs on and why. The President must also consult committees about fish and shellfish talks and about textile and apparel tariff differences. The President should consider how well the other country has followed past trade commitments. Before actually entering a trade agreement, the President must consult the same committees and advisory groups about the agreement’s shape, how it meets U.S. goals, and how it would be put into law. At least 180 days before entering the agreement, the President must report to the House Ways and Means and Senate Finance Committees on negotiation proposals that might require changes to certain U.S. trade laws and how those proposals match U.S. goals. The President must give the ITC the deal details 90 days before entry and keep the ITC updated; the ITC must report to the President and Congress within 105 days after the agreement is entered, assessing effects on GDP, trade, jobs, industries, and consumers and comparing other studies. The President must do environmental and job-impact reviews, prepare a labor-rights report, and make these reports public when the final legal text goes to Congress. At that same time, the President must send a public plan for implementing and enforcing the deal, listing needed border and agency staff, equipment, state and local effects, and cost estimates, and include funding requests in the next budget. Within one year after using a penalty or remedy under a trade deal, the President must report on whether it worked. The ITC must also report on the economic impact of covered trade agreements one year after June 29, 2015, and every five years after that. Members of Congress may send their views about a proposed trade agreement to the relevant committees.
Full Legal Text
Customs Duties — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
19 U.S.C. § 4204
Title 19 — Customs Duties
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73