Portions of USTR’s Tariff Rulemakings Were Legal Under APA, Trade Court Says
Though the Court of International Trade ruled April 1 that the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative violated the 1946 Administrative Procedure Act when it failed in its final tariff notices to publicly connect the lists 3 and 4A Section 301 comments it received with the tariff decisions it made (see 2204010061), the three-judge panel absolved the agency of APA wrongdoing amid plaintiffs’ allegations it ran sloppy rulemakings.
Sign up for a free preview to unlock the rest of this article
Timely, relevant coverage of court proceedings and agency rulings involving tariffs, classification, valuation, origin and antidumping and countervailing duties. Each day, Trade Law Daily subscribers receive a daily headline email, in-depth PDF edition and access to all relevant documents via our trade law source document library and website.
The court remanded the tariffs to USTR on the insufficiencies of its notices, giving the agency until June 30 for “reconsideration or further explanation” of its “rationale for imposing the tariffs and, as necessary, the USTR’s reasons for placing products on the lists or removing products therefrom.”
The Section 301 plaintiffs also accused USTR of violating the APA by failing to provide meaningful opportunity to comment on List 3 when it set a simultaneous deadline for written and post-hearing rebuttal comments. The agency also acted unlawfully when it limited testimony at the lists 3 and 4A public hearings to five minutes a person, the plaintiffs alleged.
Those arguments “lack merit,” the judges decided. “The APA did not require the USTR to provide interested parties with an opportunity to submit rebuttal comments,” their unanimous opinion said. USTR’s decision to limit oral testimony to five minutes per person “also did not violate the APA, which gives agencies discretion as to whether a rulemaking will involve an ‘opportunity for oral presentation,’” the opinion said.
“Absent a statutory directive, the amount of time allowed for each person to testify is the type of line-drawing exercise best left to the USTR,” the judges wrote. The public hearings for lists 3 and 4A ran for 13 days collectively, they said, “demonstrating ample opportunity for public participation.”