HR-7670-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR)
What it does
This bill would expand the existing annual report that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) submits to Congress on specialty crop trade issues. It would require USDA to specifically identify foreign government acts, policies, and practices that create significant barriers to or distortions of U.S. specialty crop exports. Before preparing the report, USDA would be required to consult with the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) and seek public comments, including from the Agricultural Technical Advisory Committee for Trade in Fruits and Vegetables. The report would be submitted in unclassified form — and made publicly available — though it may include a classified annex.
Who benefits
U.S. specialty crop producers (fruits, vegetables, tree nuts, dried fruits, horticulture, and nursery crops) who may gain better government advocacy for removing foreign trade barriers. Agricultural exporters and trade associations who would have a clearer, publicly available record of foreign market obstacles. Members of Congress who would receive more detailed information to inform trade policy decisions. The Agricultural Technical Advisory Committee for Trade in Fruits and Vegetables, whose input would be formally solicited. Researchers, journalists, and the public who would gain access to previously unavailable trade barrier data.
Who is hurt
Foreign governments identified in the report as maintaining trade barriers may face diplomatic friction or retaliatory trade pressure. USDA and USTR staff would bear additional administrative workload to compile, coordinate, and publish the expanded report. Domestic industries that compete with imported specialty crops could face indirect pressure if the report leads to reciprocal trade negotiations that open U.S. markets further. Businesses with commercial interests in countries named in the report may face uncertainty or disruption.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that specialty crops — including fruits, vegetables, and tree nuts — represent a significant and growing segment of U.S. agricultural exports, yet producers lack a systematic, public accounting of the foreign policies blocking their market access. They contend that requiring USDA and USTR to jointly identify specific foreign trade barriers gives Congress and trade negotiators the documented evidence needed to push for fairer market conditions, and that public availability of the report creates accountability and transparency that benefits the entire agricultural sector.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding reporting mandates rarely translates into meaningful trade policy action, and that the bill may create diplomatic friction by publicly naming foreign governments as bad actors without providing any enforcement mechanism or negotiating leverage. They contend that USDA and USTR already have existing channels — including the USTR's annual National Trade Estimate Report — to document foreign trade barriers, making this an overlapping and potentially redundant requirement that adds bureaucratic burden without clear additional benefit.