Jamieson Greer, the United States Trade Representative, defended President Donald Trump's tariff policies during a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing this month. According to Forbes Breaking News on December 20, 2025, Greer highlighted successes in reciprocal trade negotiations, noting a large return on investment for the office as they secured market access for United States exporters and workers sought for decades. He explained that in April, President Trump imposed reciprocal tariffs responding to a national emergency from a 1.2 trillion dollar trade deficit at the end of 2024, which grew 40 percent under the prior administration. Greer detailed how the president paused those tariffs at 10 percent over summer to enable talks, leading to deals with the United Kingdom and European Union opening markets for beef, ethanol, industrial products, and agricultural goods. Further agreements followed with Korea, Vietnam, Thailand, formal pacts with Malaysia and Cambodia, and frameworks with El Salvador, Argentina, Guatemala, and Ecuador. Just last week, Greer signed a permanent trade and agricultural products agreement with Israel, ensuring duty-free access for United States farmers and strengthening ties with that ally.
Greer emphasized achievements like eight countries committing to market access for United States automakers, nine accepting Food and Drug Administration approvals for medicines, enhanced intellectual property protection, and better labor and environmental standards. On China, he noted ongoing talks amid rare earth controls, with resumed purchases of soybeans and other products under tariff leverage. He requested a budget increase to 72 million dollars for salaries and 23 million for the Trade Enforcement Trust Fund to hire more experts.
Meanwhile, Representative Jimmy Gomez criticized a closed-door meeting between Republicans and Greer on tariffs, stating on his website December 20, 2025, that Republicans hid from defending policies driving up grocery and household good prices for working families.
Washington Trade and Tariff Letter reports Greer outlined a three-point priorities list in Detroit on Wednesday, prioritizing a Production Economy to revitalize manufacturing and national security, as detailed in President Trump's 2025 Trade Policy Agenda.
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