The revised United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) includes a first-of-its-kind facility-specific enforcement mechanism with rapid timelines and meaningful penalties. The rapid response mechanism will allow complaints to be brought against facilities for violating the rights of freedom of association and collective bargaining, including on-site verifications that must be resolved in a timely manner where violations are found. The USMCA also improved 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 limited 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. It also eliminated the giveaway to Big Pharma in the administration’s initial proposal. This bill passed the Senate on Jan. 16, 2020, and was signed into law on Jan. 29, 2020.
Vote result: Passed
YEAs: 89
NAYs: 10
Legislator Sort descending | State | Party | Vote | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sen. Jeff Merkley | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Jerry Moran | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Lisa Murkowski | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Christopher S. Murphy | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Patty Murray | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Rand Paul | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. David Perdue | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Gary Peters | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Rob Portman | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Jack Reed | Democrat | No | ||
Sen. Jim Risch | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Pat Roberts | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Mitt Romney | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Jacky Rosen | Democrat | Yes | ||
Sen. Mike Rounds | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Marco Rubio | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Bernard Sanders | ID ID | No | ||
Sen. Ben Sasse | Republican | Yes | ||
Sen. Brian Schatz | Democrat | No | ||
Sen. Charles E. Schumer | Democrat | No |