FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: James Arnold or Caroline
Tabler (202) 224-2353
August 30, 2022
Cotton, Colleagues Urge Against Return to Biased WTO Dispute Settlement Body
Washington, D.C. — Senators Tom Cotton
(R-Arkansas), Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), and Marco Rubio (R-Florida) today sent a
letter to
USTR Representative Katherine Tai urging her to keep the resurrection of the World
Trade Organization (WTO) Appellate Body out of any dispute settlement reform
negotiations at the WTO.
In part, the senators wrote:
“We are writing to express our deep concern with your comments indicating American
cooperation in reassembling the WTO’s appellate body. As you may know, the United States has blocked
new members to the appellate body since 2011, when the Obama Administration blocked
an appointment, citing the WTO’s failure to protect American interests. The
Trump Administration followed in this tradition. This rare bipartisan agreement
was the result of a clear and consistent pattern of the WTO intentionally
undermining American sovereignty, while enriching the Chinese Communist Party
(CCP).
The trade laws of the United States have been subject to more challenges than
any other WTO Member and roughly a quarter of all disputes involve U.S. trade
policy. The variety of ways in which the Appellate Body has failed to live up
to its intended purpose was cataloged in a 2020 report by the Office of the
U.S. Trade Representative (USTR)…”
Full text of the letter may be found here and below.
August 29, 2022
The Honorable Katherine Tai
United States Trade Representative
600 17th Street NW
Washington, DC 20508
Dear Ambassador Tai:
We are writing to express our deep concern with your comments indicating
American cooperation in reassembling the WTO’s appellate body. As you may know,
the United States has blocked new members to the appellate body since 2011,
when the Obama Administration blocked an appointment, citing the WTO’s failure
to protect American interests. The Trump Administration followed in this
tradition. This rare bipartisan agreement was the result of a clear and
consistent pattern of the WTO intentionally undermining American sovereignty, while
enriching the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).
The trade laws of the United States have been subject to more challenges than
any other WTO Member and roughly a quarter of all disputes involve U.S. trade
policy. The variety of ways in which the Appellate Body has failed to live up
to its intended purpose was cataloged in a 2020 report by the Office of the
U.S. Trade Representative (USTR), which demonstrated that the Appellate Body
has:
· Repeatedly ignored the mandatory deadline for deciding appeals,
· Allowed Appellate Body members whose term has expired to continue deciding appeals,
· Made findings on issues of fact, including issues relating to the domestic law of WTO Members, although Members authorized it to only address legal issues,
· Insisted that dispute settlement panels treat prior Appellate Body interpretations effectively as binding precedent,
· Failed to apply WTO agreements in a manner that adheres to their text (as negotiated and agreed to by WTO Members), while filling in perceived "gaps" in agreements to impose new requirements on the United States to which we never agreed.
In so doing, the Appellate Body has infringed on our sovereign
laws and strayed far from the limited role that WTO members assigned to it.
The Appellate Body is not only harmful, it is also corrupted by CCP influence. WTO rules require Appellate Body members to be
“unaffiliated with any government,” yet Chinese nationals are allowed to become
members. The Chinese Communist Party’s complete control of power in the PRC
means it can coerce and intimidate any PRC national into following its will.
Moreover, a recent Appellate Body member from the PRC appears to have had – and
concealed – an improper continued role working for the PRC government. PRC
nationals will be forced to do the bidding of the CCP if they want to, or not. The
CCP shouldn’t get a vote on the WTO Appellate Body when it is the primary
threat to free and fair trade around the world.
Even without the Appellate Body, the WTO’s dispute settlement process can
remain a useful resource for U.S. policymakers.
WTO panel decisions can still be issued and may have persuasive effect
through their force of reasoning. To the extent such decisions can be effectively
blocked by appealing to an Appellate Body that no longer exists, this fact has
allowed WTO members to regain a measure of sovereignty. And, of course, to the
extent Members want to agree to truly binding dispute settlement, they have
numerous options to do so – including, for example, an agreement not to appeal
the results of a panel decision.
Restoring the Appellate Body would only do harm to the United States and give
international bureaucrats and members of the CCP more influence over U.S. trade
policy. We ask you to continue blocking the appointment of new Appellate Body
members.
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