United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement Implementation Act

Dec. 19, 2019 | H.R. 5430

The revised USMCA remedied numerous shortcomings contained in the original text. The end result is a vast improvement over both the original NAFTA and the agreement negotiated by President Trump last year. The agreement includes a first-of-its-kind facility-specific enforcement mechanism with rapid timelines and meaningful penalties against facilities for violating the rights of freedom of association and collective bargaining. The new USMCA also improves enforcement by eliminating the provision that would allow any party to block the formation of a dispute resolution panel when state-to-state conflicts arise; it severely limits Investor State Dispute Settlement (ISDS); it removes unreasonable barriers to trade complaints by making clear there is a presumption that labor violations are trade-related; it removes troubling language on violence against workers; and it bans trade in goods made with forced labor. Importantly, the revised USMCA also eliminates the giveaway to Big Pharma in the administration's initial proposal. The updated USMCA means trade in America will now be fairer because of our hard work and perseverance. The bill passed the House on Dec. 17, 2019, and was signed into law on Jan. 29, 2020.

Legislative Alert

This is Good for working people.

Vote result: Passed

YEAs: 385
NAYs: 41

Legislator State District Party Sort descending Vote
Rep. Adrian Smith
NE
3 Republican Yes
Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick
PA
1 Republican Yes
Rep. Paul Cook
CA
8 Republican Yes
Rep. David Rouzer
NC
7 Republican Yes
Rep. Michael C. Burgess
TX
26 Republican Yes
Rep. Mark Green
TN
7 Republican Yes
Rep. Don Bacon
NE
2 Republican Yes
Rep. Jason Smith
MO
8 Republican Yes
Sen. Markwayne Mullin
OK
Republican Yes
Rep. Roger Williams
TX
25 Republican Yes
Rep. Will Hurd
TX
23 Republican Yes