The Steel Industry Gets What It Wants on Tariffs
“This type of process is relatively opaque and inherently prone to favoritism,” said Clark Packard, trade-policy counsel at the free-market think tank R Street Institute, and a former Republican policy adviser. The process of petitioning for relief from tariffs requires hiring international trade lawyers, a group of attorneys that Mr. Packard said is “relatively small and expensive to retain.”
Featured Publications
Spotlight on Criminal Justice: Supporting Law Enforcement and Safer Communities – May
More Spectrum, Please
How Trump’s “10-to-1” Deregulation Initiative Is Taking Shape in Financial Services
Safer Solutions: Why Focusing Exclusively On Drug Supply Isn’t Enough
Prosecutors' Case for Survivor Sentencing Laws