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Trade Act
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The Trade Act of 1974 was passed on January 3, 1975, to grant the President more power in trade agreements and tariffs. The act created fast track authority for the President to negotiate trade agreements with Congress approving or disapproving but not amending or filibustering. The authority was set to expire in 1980, extended until 1993 for the Uruguay Round, and further extended until 1994, and renewed in 2002 and again in 2012.learn more on wikipedia
perspectives
- 1.US under Donald Trump
- 2.Chinese Foreign Policy
- 3.US-China Relations
- 4.Trade Agreement
- 5.China Claims in South China Sea
- 6.China under Xi Jinping
- 7.US Foreign Policy
- 8.Political status of Taiwan
- 9.Chinese Economy
- 10.US-India relations
- 11.Immigration to the US
- 12.Inflation
countries
- 1.Australia
- 2.Canada
- 3.China
- 4.Japan
- 5.Korea, Republic of
- 6.Mexico
- 7.Singapore
- 8.United States
- 9.Brazil
- 10.Chile
- 11.Guam
- 12.Korea, Democratic People's Republic of
organizations
- 1.Republican Party
- 2.TikTok
- 3.White House
- 4.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 5.Pentagon
- 6.Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
- 7.Federal Bureau of Investigation
- 8.G20
- 9.German Marshall Fund
- 10.Toyota
- 11.Truth Social
- 12.United Auto Workers
persons
- 1.Shigeru Ishiba
- 2.Donald Trump
- 3.Joe Biden
- 4.Nancy Pelosi
- 5.William Lai Ching-Te
- 6.Xi Jinping
- 7.Yoon Suk-Yeol
- 8.Zolan Kanno-Youngs
- 9.Anthony Albanese
- 10.Bonnie S Glaser
- 11.Dina Boluarte
- 12.Jake Sullivan