International Policy

The International Division has 80 policy experts and advocates based in our Washington, D.C. headquarters, as well as in Brazil, China, India, and Turkey.
Latest Content
- With Trump’s return to the White House ushering in an unprecedented shift in U.S. foreign policy, the Western Hemisphere has taken center stage. One thing has become clear: This administration will not ignore its own neighbors.U.S. Chamber statement regarding the Biden Administration’s decision to block Nippon Steel’s acquisition of U.S. Steel.The Chamber has filed FOIAs in effort to expose USTR's attempts to secretly renegotiate trade agreements related to the investment chapters in the U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement and the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA).The EU AI Code of Practice represents regulatory overreach that could disrupt the global AI landscape, disproportionately burden U.S. companies, and raise serious concerns about information security and intellectual property (IP).International Trade and Investment Supports Jobs in Every StateThe U.S. Chamber of Commerce is active at the 79th UN General Assembly in September 2024 in New York City.Democratic and Republican lawmakers joined business and civil society leaders to push for policies that restore U.S. leadership, promote innovation, and protect American jobs.Opening the door to international investment supports U.S. economic growth, resilience, and jobs.The U.S. Chamber of Commerce offered the following testimony for the record for the House Committee on Ways and Means June 12 hearing on “Looking Beyond 2025 for Trade with Sub-Saharan Africa, Haiti, and Others.”The U.S. Chamber provided testimony to the Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on International Trade Hearing: 'Study of 2026 CUSMA Review,' in Ottawa, Canada.






