GAO to Begin Investigation of Section 232 Exclusion Process
The Government Accountability Office has agreed to look into the Commerce Department's steel and aluminum tariff exclusion process, though it cannot begin the study for about three months. Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., one of the requesters, announced the GAO decision…
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on Dec. 19. "I hope GAO's review produces recommendations for fixing this flawed process so more Americans are spared from these onerous taxes," Toomey said in a press release. The GAO said in its letter to Toomey that "staff with the required skills will be available to initiate an engagement in about three months." Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del., who joined with Toomey and Sen. Doug Jones, D-Ala., in requesting an investigation said that "as of this fall, the Department of Commerce had received nearly 50,000 exclusion petitions from American manufacturers seeking relief from these misguided tariffs." Carper said the "Commerce Department has not only created a broken and convoluted exclusion process, but the agency has only managed to issue decisions in a third of these 50,000 pending cases."