President-elect Joe Biden plans to nominate Alejandro Mayorkas for secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, the Biden transition team said in a news release. Mayorkas is currently a law partner at WilmerHale and previously was appointed deputy secretary of Homeland Security by President Barack Obama. While at DHS, Mayorkas was chair of the Border Interagency Executive Committee and worked on the International Trade Data System (see 1503230018).
The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs on Nov. 20 completed a review for a final Bureau of Industry and Security rule that will revise country groups for Ukraine, Mexico and Cyprus under the Export Administration Regulations. OIRA received the rule June 25.
The Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs began a review of a final Bureau of Industry and Security rule that would change the license review policy for exports of certain drones. The rule, received by OIRA Nov. 20, would change the review policy for exports of unmanned aerial systems to reflect the U.S. July decision to loosen restrictions over those exports (see 2007270035).
House Ways and Means Committee member Rep. Jimmy Panetta, D-Calif., has a district full of farms growing grapes, berries, lettuce, artichokes, garlic or other non-commodity crops. His constituents want export markets, so opening trade negotiations is popular in Central California. Panetta, who was interviewed online by the Washington International Trade Association on Nov. 23, said there needs to be a lot of education in the Democratic caucus on why a renewal of Trade Promotion Authority is important before it expires July 1.
House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass., said there should be “a reset of our trade agenda,” with less emphasis on tariffs “and more emphasis on international cooperation and multilateral relationships.” Neal, who was speaking to the New England Council on Nov. 23, said that “keeping the heat on China is important, but simultaneously, tariffs are not the only way to do it.”
The United Kingdom and Indonesia held the third round of a joint trade review (see 2007270013) and discussed increasing trade, including in agricultural products, food and beverages, technology and pharmaceuticals, as well as “the creative economy,” the U.K. said Nov. 19. The third round of discussions, completed Nov. 19, brings the two nations closer to issuing a joint report recommending trade measures to increase cooperation. Cathryn Law, the U.K.’s director of bilateral trade relations, said both sides hope to complete the review “soon“ with an “agreement to further enhance our bilateral trade and investment across a range of key sectors.”
The United Kingdom and Canada will roll over their existing trade deal into 2021 and will begin negotiating a new agreement after the U.K. officially leaves the European Union Jan. 1 (see 2011230001), the U.K. said Nov. 21. The U.K. said the two sides will negotiate a “more ambitious” deal next year. The agreement to continue the existing provisions “will support the British automotive manufacturing and food and drink industries which between them provide jobs for more than half a million people across the UK,” the announcement said. It is foundational to a new deal that “will be tailored for the British economy with the potential to go further in new areas like digital trade, women’s economic empowerment and the environment.”
Antony Blinken, President-elect Joe Biden's choice for secretary of state, has said that the Section 301 tariffs on China and Section 232 tariffs on Europe “harm our own people,” according to coverage of a U.S. Chamber of Commerce talk he gave in September. “We would use tariffs when they’re needed, but backed by a strategy and a plan,” he added. Blinken, who served as deputy secretary of state under President Barack Obama, said, “The EU is the largest market in the world. We need to improve our economic relations, and we need to bring to an end an artificial trade war that the Trump administration has started,” Reuters reported from the Chamber talk.
Russia announced sanctions on 25 United Kingdom officials in retaliation for U.K. sanctions against Russia earlier this year (see 2007060025). “We once again call on the British leadership to abandon an unfounded confrontational line with regard to our country,” Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said Nov. 21, according to an unofficial translation. “Any unfriendly steps will not be left without an inevitable proportionate response.”
The Commerce Department drafted a rule that would restrict U.S. exports to 89 Chinese and 28 Russian companies with military ties, Reuters reported Nov. 22. The rule, which includes several Chinese aerospace companies such as the Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China Ltd. (COMAC) and the Aviation Industry Corporation of China (AVIC), would build off an April rule that increased license requirements for exports to military end-users and for end-uses in China, Russia and Venezuela, (see 2004270027). The rule contains a list that identifies Chinese and Russian companies that the U.S. considers military end-users, the report said, which require licenses to buy a range of U.S. goods and technologies. If the rule is issued, those licenses will be “more likely to be denied than granted,” Reuters said.