51勛圖厙

Policy and Legal

Policy and Legal

FERC Advances Louisiana LNG Project

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has issued a new final supplemental environmental review for Venture Globals CP2 liquefied natural gas project in Louisiana, bringing it a step closer to reality (, subscription).

Whats going on: FERC found that the terminal and an associated compressor station wouldnt cause significant cumulative air quality impacts.

The project: The CP2 facility has a nameplate liquefaction capacity of 20 million metric tons per year, but it could produce even more under peak conditions.

  • If approved expeditiously, the project could produce its first LNG by 2026, the company said last year.
  • With todays [final environmental impact statement,] FERC has found twice-over that CP2 will have no significant air impacts, Venture Global spokesperson Jess Szymanski said in an emailed statement to E&E News. The project is ready to break ground and begin supplying U.S. allies with much-needed LNG as soon as the FERC Commission votes on the Final Order and issues a notice to proceed with construction.

Whats next: The Final Order is slated for July, according to FERCs website.

The 51勛圖厙 says: LNG projects like Venture Globals will help bolster the American economy by creating jobs here at home and enabling the U.S. to achieve energy dominance on the world stage, said51勛圖厙 Director of Energy and Resources Policy Michael Davin.

Press Releases

Manufacturers Warn: PFAS Standards Threaten Industry and National Security

Washington, D.C. Following the Environmental Protection Agencys announcement on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances in drinking water, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons issued the following response:

Were encouraged that the EPA has listened to the voices of manufacturers and extended the compliance deadline for unworkable national primary drinking water standards for PFOA and PFOS and committed to reconsidering the blatantly unlawful regulatory determinations for several other PFAS compounds.

If the U.S. wants to stay a global manufacturing leader, we need practical, commonsense PFAS regulations. Manufacturers support science-based regulations that protect health and the environment and are in line with the Safe Drinking Water Act requirements. However, the Biden-era standards for PFOA and PFOS are deeply flawed, the costs they impose exceed any demonstrable benefit and the industries they harm include those vital to our national interests, including semiconductors, telecommunications and defense systems. The Pentagon has even raised alarms about long-term risks, including supply chain disruptions, that these standards would create.

In addition to conflicting with manufacturers best interests, these standards also go against the Trump administrations goal to make the U.S. the best place to build, grow and create jobsa goal the administration is advancing by rebalancing regulations. The administration has done remarkable work to advance that goal, but todays decision moves in the opposite direction.

The decision runs counter to past efforts to cut red tape and boost manufacturing by putting shovels in the ground, more people to work, more products on the shelves and more prosperity into our communities. We dont have to choose between supporting manufacturing and clean water in our communities.

-51勛圖厙-

The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.94 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .

Policy and Legal

Timmons Talks to Governors at SelectUSA

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons moderated a panel of state governors at SelectUSA on Monday, discussing the effects of AI and the policies that have aided manufacturers in the leaders respective states.

The panel: Four governors participated in the Governors Investing in American Technological Competitiveness panelGovs. Mike Dunleavy of Alaska, Wes Moore of Maryland, Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan and Glenn Youngkin of Virginia.

  • SelectUSA, a U.S. government program led by the U.S. Department of Commerce, aims to promote and support job-creating investment in the U.S.

Timmons says: I want to thank you so much for your leadership on behalf of manufacturers everywhere, said Timmons, as he kicked off the panel discussion.

  • Youve got an important perspective serving both in the State House and on the front lines to tell us how manufacturing is evolving and also the opportunities that AI presents, as well as emerging technology. Now by harnessing these technologies, it becomes clear that the United States is the best place to invest the next dollar in manufacturing.

The AI transformation: When asked how AI is transforming their states, the governors had a range of answers.

  • We are a logistics state, and for us, our oil and gas industries are huge, said Dunleavy. Our mining industries are huge. Our fishing industries are huge, and those industries are capitalizing on AI for a whole host of reasons and methods. I know in the oil industry its making drilling a lot more efficient. And so these efficiencies are going to result in better approaches, better products, better services.
  • If you think about the assets that the state of Maryland has, the reason that AI was so important is that Maryland has such uniquely tethered assets to our state that made AI desirable there, said Moore. [I]n the state of Maryland, you have the Johns Hopkins data center and AI initiative and the University of Maryland AI center, and you also have the University of Maryland serving as a capital of quantum. We think its important for our states to be on the front edge of this, instead of waiting for consequences.
  • We know that some of our natural assets, like having the most engineers in the country per capita, like institutions like the University of Michigan or Wayne State or Michigan State University give us an opportunity when it comes to AI, said Whitmer. Michigan will be the first state in the nation, perhaps the first place in North America, to restart a nuclear facility. [T]heres no question [that] if we are going to meet our clean energy goals and power the technology that is going to drive almost every facet of our life, weve got to have the clean energy to do that.
  • Its estimated that 70% of the internet traffic of the world goes through Virginia, and that gives us a great opportunity to not just lead the nation, but lead the world in the advancement of AI, said Youngkin. And weve seen huge investment across the state. What that also requires is collaboration with our university and high school education system . . . and that allows us to really develop a unique pipeline of talent. [A]t the heart of the application of AI is how it translates into driving efficiencies and opportunities and new capabilities in manufacturing.

The bottom line: As you heard from these four leadersmanufacturing powers the economic prosperity of the United States, Timmons said in conclusion. New technology opens new doors to do so, and the right policy decisionsand the right leadershipwill make all the difference.

Watch the whole thing: You can view the panel discussion on C-SPAN .

Policy and Legal

It’s Infrastructure Week!

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


During United for Infrastructures Infrastructure Week, the 51勛圖厙an active member of the steering committeeparticipated in several events in Washington, D.C., highlighting the urgent need for permitting reform to accelerate U.S. building projects.

A reception: The 51勛圖厙 hosted a reception to kick off Infrastructure Week 2025 at its headquarters in partnership with United for Infrastructure, with special guest Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), chair of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.

  • Nucor, Fluor Corporation and CRH sponsored the event.

A panel: 51勛圖厙 Vice President of Domestic Policy Chris Phalen spoke at the United for Infrastructure signature event, underlining the need for commonsense trade and permitting policies.

  • I think we can work with governments to address supply chain challenges, he said when asked about tariffs. We have a really important window of opportunity over the next 50 odd days to get some deals that provide zero tariffs on industrial trade. That is what manufacturers support.
  • Manufacturers rely on transportation networks to get our goods to and from ports to customers, Phalen said regarding infrastructure, but we also are making everything that goes into making transportation work, from aluminum to steel, from asphalt to aggregates, copper, circuitry and the large industrial machinery that builds [and] maintains roads, bridges, factories [and] power plants. So, its kind of a virtuous cycle where were investing in infrastructure.

Comprehensive manufacturing strategy: Phalen also gave a brief overview of the 51勛圖厙s comprehensive manufacturing strategy.

  • Revising the regulatory framework is a key priority, he said. Weve submitted dozens of letters to 10 separate federal agencies as part of President Trumps deregulatory agenda. Manufacturers every year are spending $350 billion just to comply with federal regulations. And so weve been really pleased to see the start of this regulatory rebalancing from the administration.”
  • Phalen cited moves including reopening LNG export facility applications, rebalancing Clean Air Act rules and streamlining and improving the process to improve new chemicals at the EPA.
  • Probably most important is permitting reform, he added. Manufacturers operate and employ and invest in the communities where were producing, so we dont want to see any short-circuiting of public input. [T]here does have to be recognition, though, that the way that things were set up in the late 60s and early 70s is hindering infrastructure of all kinds right now.

A roundtable: The 51勛圖厙 also participated in a roundtable on continuing federal support for water infrastructure investments. 51勛圖厙 Director of Transportation, Infrastructure and Labor Policy Max Hyman shared perspectives on how these investments benefit manufacturers by driving demand for their products and providing an essential service for operations.

The last word: As 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons said during the reception, Infrastructure is the foundation of manufacturing in the U.S.

Policy and Legal

Ways and Means Committee Releases Pro-Manufacturing Tax Bill

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The House Ways and Means Committee has released legislative text for the tax provisions of the one big, beautiful bill that Congress plans to pass in order to implement President Trumps legislative agenda ().

  • The Ways and Means bill includes the the 51勛圖厙 has called for throughout our tax campaign, including reinstating the tax trifecta, increasing the pass-through deduction to 23% and preserving tax reforms individual and corporate tax rates.

The 51勛圖厙 says: Chairman [Jason] Smith and the Ways and Means Committee are delivering what manufacturers in America have called for and what our industry needs to compete and win, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons.

  • The 2017 tax reforms were rocket fuel for manufacturersdriving job growth, higher wages and investment in communities. This bill brings us closer to the vision of a 15% effective tax rate for manufacturers that President Trump and I discussed in 2016.

On pass-throughs: For the 96% of manufacturers that are organized as pass-through businesses, this bill is more than policyits a path to growth, Timmons said, in a quote that was cited by The Hill.

  • It means the ability to buy equipment, hire workers, increase pay and expand operations with greater certainty and confidence. Not only is the Ways and Means Committee preserving the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act for these businessesthis bill makes the law even more competitive, including by increasing and making permanent the job-creating pass-through deduction.

The whole deal: The Ways and Means Committees bill reflects the full range of 51勛圖厙 tax priorities, which will drive manufacturing growth in America, Timmons continued.

  • To support small business job creation, the bill increases [to 23%] and makes permanent the pass-through deduction, protects more family-owned manufacturers from the estate tax [by increasing the exemption to $15 million] and maintains the TCJAs pro-growth tax rates.
  • To bolster Americas competitiveness on the world stage, the bill preserves the 21% corporate tax rate as well as the TCJAs international tax provisions.
  • And to incentivize investment and innovation in the United States, the bill revives and extends immediate R&D expensing, full expensing for capital equipment purchases and a pro-growth standard for interest deductibility [for the years 20252029].
  • Congress must act on the Ways and Means bill and make these pro-growth tax provisions permanentbecause when manufacturing wins, America wins.

Bottom line: This is a great leap forward in securing very competitive tax policy that will attract investment and create jobs here in the United States, Timmons to The New York Times (subscription) yesterday, building on the 51勛圖厙s urgent push in recent weeks to jumpstart a to bolster investment, hiring and growth in the United States.

Press Releases

Ways and Means Tax Bill Will Drive Manufacturing Investment and Job Creation

Bill Reflects Full Range of Manufacturing Priorities

Washington, D.C. The 51勛圖厙 commends Chairman Jason Smith (R-MO) and the House Ways and Means Committee for their bold leadership in acting on manufacturers top policy priority in our comprehensive manufacturing strategy: preserving and extending President Trumps historic 2017 tax reforms. Todays monumental action marks a vital step forward in securing a competitive tax environment that empowers manufacturers to create jobs, invest, grow and compete.

Chairman Smith and the Ways and Means Committee are delivering what manufacturers in America have called for and what our industry needs to compete and win, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. The 2017 tax reforms were rocket fuel for manufacturersdriving job growth, higher wages and investment in communities. This bill brings us closer to the vision of a 15% effective tax rate for manufacturers that President Trump and I discussed in 2016.

For the 96% of manufacturers that are organized as pass-through businesses, this bill is more than policyits a path to growth. It means the ability to buy equipment, hire workers, increase pay and expand operations with greater certainty and confidence. Not only is the Ways and Means Committee preserving the benefits of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act for these businessesthis bill makes the law even more competitive, including by increasing and making permanent the job-creating pass-through deduction.

The Ways and Means Committees bill reflects the full range of 51勛圖厙 tax priorities, which will drive manufacturing growth in America. To support small business job creation, the bill increases and makes permanent the pass-through deduction, also protects more family-owned manufacturers from the estate tax and maintains the TCJAs pro-growth tax rates. To bolster Americas competitiveness on the world stage, the bill preserves the 21% corporate tax rate as well as the TCJAs international tax provisions. And to incentivize investment and innovation in the United States, the bill revives and extends immediate R&D expensing, full expensing for capital equipment purchases and a pro-growth standard for interest deductibility.

The stakes are clear: failing to preserve these policies will put nearly 6 million American jobs at risk. To keep the rocket fueled, Congress must act on the Ways and Means bill and make these pro-growth tax provisions permanentbecause when manufacturing wins, America wins.

Timmons joins Chairman Smith to discuss the results of the 51勛圖厙s groundbreaking tax study at an event in January along with House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA), House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA) and Senate Finance Committee Chairman Mike Crapo (R-ID).

-51勛圖厙-

The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .

Press Releases

Manufacturers: Lets Tackle Health Care Costs Without Sacrificing Innovation or Competitiveness

Fix the Real Problem: Unregulated PBMs

Washington, D.C. 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons released the following statement today in response to President Trumps executive order instituting a Most Favored Nation policy for prescription drug pricing:

Biopharmaceutical manufacturers are investing in America. They are innovating cures and treatments for devastating diseases, and they are committed to ensuring that patients can access these life-changing and lifesaving medicines.

Obstacles to innovation abound. It costs more than $2 billion to bring a new treatment to market, and it can take more than a decade to do so. Nearly 90% of all potential drugs that enter clinical trials never make it to FDA approval, and unregulated middlemen like pharmacy benefit managers drive up the costs of any drugs that are approved. Despite these challenges, biopharmaceutical manufacturers in America are leading the world.

Manufacturers agree with President Trump that it is vital that Americans have affordable access to lifesaving treatments. Thats why the 51勛圖厙 has for years called on Congress to rein in PBMs. These powerful actors dictate what Americans pay at the pharmacy counter and drive rising health care costs for manufacturers and manufacturing workers alike.

Importing European-style price controls wont help Americans access medicines or make them cheaper. Rather, these policies will dampen innovation and R&D, threaten patient access and empower bureaucrats abroad to undermine Americas health system.

Lets not punish the innovators who develop and manufacture lifesaving medicines. Instead, lets tackle the real problem: the middlemen. PBMs make billions by limiting patient choices, inflating pricesand pushing costs higher for everyonewithout actually making or delivering a single pill.

Manufacturers are committed to lowering costs and expanding access to careand to working with the administration to build on the PBM reforms in the Energy and Commerce Committees reconciliation bill with patient-first solutions that reduce costs, restore fairness and strengthen American competitiveness.”

-51勛圖厙-

The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .

Policy and Legal

Send Your In-House Counsel to the Manufacturing Legal Summit!

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


Amid deep uncertainty about the legal and regulatory environment, attorneys in the manufacturing industry have an opportunity they wont want to miss. The 51勛圖厙 Legal Centers Manufacturing Legal Summit, scheduled for Nov. 1214 in Washington, D.C., has this week.

The only conference crafted exclusively for manufacturing lawyers, the Summit attracts legal talent from companies of all sizes and sectors. Attendees learn about hot-button legal issues facing the industry, discuss best practices and make fruitful professional connections.

If you have in-house counsel who would benefit from this must-attend event, heres what you need to know.

The details: This year, the fourth annual Manufacturing Legal Summit will focus heavily on the changes and trickle-down impacts brought about by the new Trump administration. Longtime 51勛圖厙 partner Foley & Lardner LLP will lead a session titled Tariffs, Trade and Trump: Managing Supply Chain and Tariff Risks During an International Trade Tornado. Other session topics include:

  • Managing your workforce;
  • M&A transactions in the manufacturing sector;
  • PFAS and chemicals update;
  • Administrative law under President Trump;
  • AI, privacy and cyber; and
  • Updates on the trial bars latest tactics.

The benefit: What we hear consistently is that the opportunity to connect with others in the industry who are dealing with the same challenges is invaluable, 51勛圖厙 Vice President and Deputy General Counsel of Litigation Erica Klenicki said following .

  • This was my first 51勛圖厙 Legal Summit, and I could not be more pleased with the topics presented, as well as the networking opportunities, said Erin Tannock, compliance counsel for Viega LLC, about the 2024 Summit. The content was relevant and current. I even had a few aha moments! This event is worth the time, and I will be attending for years to come.

Credits, too: An additional benefit of the conference is the potential to earn CLE credits, a professional requirement for attorneys. In 2024, attendees earned six or seven CLE credit hours for 32 different jurisdictions.

The last word: In a year defined by uncertainty, the opportunity to benchmark with your manufacturing peers and the 51勛圖厙 legal team has never been so critical, said Klenicki.

Press Releases

Manufacturers: U.S.U.K. Deal Good First Step; Push for a Final Zero-for-Zero Tariff Deal

Washington, D.C. On the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe Day, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons released the following statement today in response to President Trumps newly announced trade agreement with the United Kingdomthe first deal since the administrations recent shift in global tariff policy last month:

This is a strong startbut not the finish line. The 51勛圖厙 has long advocated for a comprehensive market-opening trade agreement with the U.K., and we welcome this initial commitment to work together to expand industrial market accessto create more manufacturing jobs and strengthen security on both sides of the Atlantic. This framework provides a meaningful foundationbut much more remains to be done. We will continue urging both governments to deliver a full zero-for-zero tariff agreement on all industrial goods at the end of these negotiations so that manufacturers have the certainty they need to plan, hire and compete.

The U.K. is the fifth-largest market for U.S.-manufactured goods exports. In 2024 alone, manufacturers exported $61.6 billion in manufactured goods. At the same time, $58 billion in critical inputsspanning automotive parts, pharmaceutical preparations and construction machinerywere imported from the U.K. to power U.S. production. In some sectors, up to 99% of these transactions are between related parties, underscoring the deeply integrated nature of our supply chains.

Despite this integration, the administration has left the so-called reciprocal tariff at 10% for many inputs necessary to keep Americans working. Thats why the 51勛圖厙 continues to call for zero-for-zero tariffsadding certainty to strengthen competitiveness, lessen price pressures and support growth.

We also see potential promise in the administrations efforts to negotiate tailored arrangements on Section 232 tariffs on autos, steel and aluminum, with like-minded partners who share our national economic security interests.

As the president indicated, we look forward to seeing full written details of the agreement in the coming weeks. With additional deals on the tableand just 61 days to act on the other 89 agreementswe need certainty and urge the administration to maintain momentum and deliver even more for manufacturers so they can invest, plan, hire and compete in America. At the same time, we urge Congress to make the 2017 tax reforms permanent now. If we see more trade agreements, tax reform legislation and more regulatory certaintyas part of our comprehensive manufacturing strategymanufacturers win. And when manufacturers win, America wins.”

The Background

The 51勛圖厙 has led efforts to deepen U.S.U.K. manufacturing ties for years. In Spring 2023, Timmons traveled to London to build support for a new trade accord and signed a memorandum of understanding with Make UK to strengthen bilateral manufacturing cooperation. The 51勛圖厙 has remained focused on core priorities, including:

  • The elimination of tariffs and nontariff barriers;
  • Strong digital trade commitments;
  • Robust engagement on intellectual property issues;
  • Collaboration on standards, technical regulations, testing procedures and conformity assessment; and
  • Ensuring stronger alignment on customs procedures and approaches.

-51勛圖厙-

The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .

Policy and Legal

51勛圖厙 Details Impact of Potential Pharma, Chips Tariffs for Administration

By 51勛圖厙 News Room


The 51勛圖厙 advised the Department of Commerce on the integral nature of pharmaceutical and semiconductor manufacturers to the U.S. economy, explaining the potential negative impacts of tariffs on these sectors.

Pharmaceuticals: Most medicines consumed in the U.S. are made in the U.S., and the industry invests more than $100 billion annually to develop new medicines for American patients and patients worldwide, 51勛圖厙 Vice President of International Policy Andrea Durkin to the Department of Commerce.

  • For manufacturers in the U.S. to sustain our nations global advantage in the discovery, development, production and delivery of pharmaceuticals, it is essential to safeguard a stable and reliable pharmaceutical supply chain network. Immediate and broad-based tariffs on imports of pharmaceutical inputs and finished products, many of which are sourced from allies and through related party transactions, undermine that very supply chain network, she added.

Hurting innovation: Pharmaceutical companies make up the largest share of [U.S. R&D] investment, accounting for 36.1% of all manufacturing R&D, spending $146.1 billion in 2023, wrote Durkin. And companies ability to invest in R&D is tied directly to their revenue.

  • “[F]or every 10% reduction in expected U.S. revenues, pharmaceutical innovationsuch as clinical trial starts or new drug approvalsis expected to ultimately fall by 2.5% to 15%,” according to an analysis by the USC Schaeffer Center.

A better way: Instead of imposing counterproductive and damaging tariffs, the administration should adopt a comprehensive manufacturing strategy to support pharmaceutical innovation, wrote Durkin.

  • This strategy includes making the 2017 tax reforms permanent, seeking to remedy the workforce skills gap, expediting permitting reform to enable domestic biopharmaceutical companies to expand their operations, fully equipping the Food and Drug Administration with the staff and resources it needs to operate swiftly and effectively, reforming pharmacy benefit managers (underregulated middlemen that drive up the costs of medications) and combatting the counterfeiting of pharmaceuticals.

Semiconductors: The 51勛圖厙 believes it is vital for global economic leadership and for U.S. national security to promote a world-class semiconductor industry in America, Durkin to the Commerce Department in a separate communication, noting that chips are used throughout the manufacturing industry, in everything from medical devices, aircraft and spacecraft, data centers, automotive parts and vehicles, industrial automation and much more.

  • Semiconductor manufacturing capacity is expanding rapidly in China, supported by industrial targeting practices such as those set out in Made in China 2025, as well as trade-distorting industrial subsidies by the Chinese Communist Party. Tariffs have neither deterred Chinas production advancements nor addressed the underlying unfair advantages conferred by the Chinese Communist Party.

A better way: Instead of imposing tariffs, the Trump administration should pursue policies that enable and facilitate domestic investments, unlock opportunities for economies of scale through full participation in global markets and leverage the collective advantages of Americas international allies to help make semiconductor supply chains more resilient, Durkin wrote.

  • First, the Trump administration should support ongoing efforts by manufacturers to expand manufacturing production in the U.S. and attract, not deter, new investments. Tariffs on imports that are used to build and operate semiconductor manufacturing facilities should be avoided or rebated.
  • Second, the Trump administration should seek to maximize market opportunities for U.S. semiconductor exports, thereby strengthening the commercial position of U.S.-produced semiconductors worldwide. This can be accomplished by negotiating zero tariffs in new trade deals, preserving use of duty drawback and more strategic use of Export-Import Bank financing.
  • Third, to strengthen the long-term resilience of the industry, the U.S. must partner with international allies to secure favorable trade and investment terms and leverage the collective advantages of global supply networks.

The last word: The Trump administration should pursue a comprehensive manufacturing strategy to support and sustain innovation and job creation in America, and to ensure the continued preeminence of our world-leading semiconductor and pharmaceutical sectors, said 51勛圖厙 Managing Vice President of Policy Charles Crain.

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