The U.S. launched an investigation into the forced-labor prohibition policies of 60 countries in March, citing a law that authorizes tariffs on countries deemed to unfairly burden U.S. commerce. That basis is viewed as more legally sound than the emergency power President Donald Trump used last year to impose tariffs that were ruled illegal by the Supreme Court in February.
The USTR
As part of the process, dozens of stakeholders will make their case — for or against the duties — to U.S. trade officials. White House officials have already
In the meantime, the administration has a temporary 10% global tariff in place that expires later this month.
"The proposed tariffs would reward the very offenders they are meant to punish," Bolsonaro wrote in a filing to USTR, arguing that the measures would benefit President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, whose popularity rose after casting earlier US pressure as an attack on Brazil's sovereignty.
Tuesday
Up first in the forced-labor lineup, USTR will hear from a panel of government officials, including Mexico's Ernesto Acevedo Fernández, on "how Mexico's
Diplomats and trade officials from Chile, Ecuador, Guatemala, Guyana, Honduras and Peru are also set to speak.
The second panel on Tuesday will feature the
The American Petroleum Institute will ask USTR to drop duties on industrial inputs that are critical to the
Later on, a former USTR official will argue that these investigations betray the intended uses of Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, according to prepared testimony shared with Bloomberg News.
"Senior administration officials have described their purpose as not to address unreasonable 'acts, policies, and practices' burdening US commerce, but to recreate the tariff rates set under last year's illegal 'IEEPA' decrees," said Ed Gresser, who is now vice president and director for trade and global markets at the Progressive Policy Institute.
Gresser is set to argue that the
Wednesday
On Wednesday, the Coalition for Fair Trade in Seafood will call for
Representatives from India, Jordan and Pakistan are also scheduled to speak.
Pakistan's representative is expected to argue the USTR's recommendations are "disproportionate given the absence of evidence of forced labor in Pakistani export goods and Pakistan's enactment of an import prohibition."
Human rights groups including China Labor Watch are supposed to testify. China Labor Watch will argue that "any preferential tariff treatment, including the proposed textile mechanism or similar sector-specific mechanisms, should apply only to products that can be credibly and independently verified to be free from forced labor."
Thursday
The hearings will wrap up with comments from the Footwear Distributors & Retailers of America and the National Council of Textile Organizations, joined on the panel by the American Cotton Producers.
Government representatives from South Korea, Sri Lanka and South Africa will also speak on the panel, including a
Finally, trade officials will hear testimony from a cross-section of the U.S. economy including the American Trailer Manufacturers Coalition, cookware brand Le Creuset, the Cigar Association of America and medical device companies.
Le Creuset pointed out in a








