Camp, Nunes Statements on Administration’s Formal Notification to Congress about Its Intent to Launch Trade Negotiations with the EU

Camp, Nunes Statements on Administration’s Formal Notification to Congress about Its Intent to Launch Trade Negotiations with the EU

The following press release was published by the U.S. Congress Committee on Ways and Means on April 12, 2013. It is reproduced in full below.

Washington, DC - Today, Ways and Means Chairman Dave Camp (R-MI) and Trade Subcommittee Chairman Devin Nunes (R-CA) issued the following statements after the President sent the formal notification letter to Congress of his intent to launch negotiations for a comprehensive trade and investment agreement with the European Union.

Chairman Camp: “A robust trade agenda means better paying jobs for American workers. I am a strong supporter of a comprehensive and ambitious trade and investment agreement with the EU and welcome the President’s formal notification. I look forward to consulting closely with the Administration about how to address tariff, non-tariff, and regulatory barriers to U.S. exports and investment.

“To fully realize the potential benefits of a transatlantic agreement, we will have to tackle many difficult behind-the-border barriers. Tackling these barriers requires the Administration to engage with Congress to establish clear and effective negotiating objectives, and therefore I welcome the Administration’s announcement that it intends to begin discussions with Congress to develop bipartisan Trade Promotion Authority."

Trade Subcommittee Chairman Nunes: “An ambitious transatlantic trade agreement with the European Union would solidify a dominant economic alliance focused on free trade and open markets, serving as an influential model for other nations. I look forward to consulting with the Administration over the coming months. I will particularly focus on how the Administration plans to resolve long-standing barriers to our agriculture exports, including Europe’s opaque and inefficient agriculture regulatory system and its failure to use sound science-based standards."

Source: U.S. Congress Committee on Ways and Means

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