Robert Lighthizer | |
|---|---|
Official portrait, 2017 | |
| 18thUnited States Trade Representative | |
| In office May 15, 2017 – January 20, 2021 | |
| President | Donald Trump |
| Deputy | Jeffrey Gerrish C.J. Mahoney Dennis Shea |
| Preceded by | Michael Froman |
| Succeeded by | Katherine Tai |
| 1stUnited States Deputy Trade Representative | |
| In office April 15, 1983 – August 16, 1985 | |
| President | Ronald Reagan |
| Preceded by | Position established |
| Succeeded by | Alan Woods |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Robert Emmet Lighthizer (1947-10-11)October 11, 1947 (age 78) Ashtabula, Ohio, U.S. |
| Party | Republican |
| Children | 2 |
| Education | Georgetown University (BA,JD) |
Robert Emmet Lighthizer (/ˈlaɪthaɪzər/; born October 11, 1947) is an American attorney and government official who was theU.S. Trade Representative in theTrump administration from 2017 to 2021.
After he graduated fromGeorgetown University Law Center in 1973, Lighthizer joined the firm ofCovington and Burling in Washington, D.C. He left the firm in 1978 to work as chief minority counsel and later staff director and chief of staff of theU.S. Senate Committee on Finance under ChairmanBob Dole. In 1983, Robert Lighthizer was confirmed by theU.S. Senate to be Deputy U.S. Trade Representative for PresidentRonald Reagan. In 1985, Lighthizer joined the Washington office ofSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom as a partner and led the firm's international trade group. On January 3, 2017, President-electDonald Trump announced his intention to nominate Lighthizer as his U.S. Trade Representative. Lighthizer was confirmed by the Senate on May 11, 2017, by a vote of 82–14.
Lighthizer was an architect of American trade policy during Trump's first presidency. Aprotectionist and a trade skeptic, his policies are oriented toward protection of manufacturing in the United States. Lighthizer played a key role in the administration'srenegotiation of NAFTA and theUnited States' trade war with China. Many of these trade policies have been preserved, and in some cases extended, by theBiden administration.[1]
Lighthizer was born on 11 October 1947 to Orville James and Michaelene Lighthizer inAshtabula, Ohio, where his father practiced medicine.[2] He attendedGilmour Academy inGates Mills, Ohio, and later graduated fromGeorgetown University with aBachelor of Arts in 1969 and aJuris Doctor in 1973.[3]

After graduating from law school, Lighthizer joinedCovington & Burling in Washington, D.C. as anassociate attorney. In 1978, Lighthizer left Covington & Burling to work for SenatorBob Dole (R-Kan.), who at the time was theRanking Member of theSenate Finance Committee.[4][5] When Dole became Chairman of the Finance Committee in 1981, Lighthizer became the committee's staff director and chief of staff.[4][5][6] While working for the committee, he helped shepherd through PresidentRonald Reagan'stax cuts and Social Security reform.[7][8] In the 1980s, Lighthizer hired fellow Georgetown HoyaPatrick Ewing as an intern.[5]
In 1983, during the administration of President Ronald Reagan, Lighthizer was nominated and confirmed to serve as Deputy U.S. Trade Representative underWilliam Brock.[9] During his tenure, Lighthizer negotiated over two dozen bilateral international agreements, including agreements on steel, automobiles, and agricultural products.[10] As Deputy USTR, Lighthizer also served as vice chairman of the board of theOverseas Private Investment Corporation.[10]
In 1985, Lighthizer joined the law firmSkadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP (Skadden) as a partner.[5] He practiced international trade law at Skadden for over 30 years, representing American workers and businesses ranging from manufacturing to financial services, agriculture, and technology.[10] While at Skadden, Lighthizer worked to expand markets to U.S. exports and defended U.S. industries from unfair trading practices. He defended the steel industry in particular.[11]
Lighthizer served in a senior position in the 1988 presidential campaign of U.S. senator Bob Dole. In 1996, he served as the treasurer of the Dole campaign.[12]


On January 3, 2017,Donald Trump announced that he planned to nominate Lighthizer as U.S. Trade Representative, a cabinet-level position.[13][14] On January 23, press reports speculated that Lighthizer's nomination might require a waiver of section 141(b)(4) of theTrade Act of 1974, as amended, due to his brief representation of a foreign government in litigation 25 years prior.[15] In March, White House CounselDonald McGahn sent a letter to Senate leadership citing a Clinton-era opinion by theWhite House Counsel arguing that the statute was an unconstitutional limit on the president's ability to appoint his cabinet.[16][17]
At his confirmation hearing, Lighthizer was introduced by former senator Bob Dole and U.S. senators from OhioSherrod Brown andRob Portman. In introducing Lighthizer, Brown said, "Mr. Lighthizer is eminently qualified, as Senator Dole said, for this job. He has a long history of fighting on behalf of American manufacturers, and I would add, American workers."[8]
On April 25, the Senate Finance Committee unanimously approved Lighthizer's nomination to serve as the U.S. Trade Representative as well as a waiver of section 141(b)(4) of the Trade Act of 1974.[18] Lighthizer was confirmed as the 18th U.S. Trade Representative on May 11, 2017, by a margin of 82–14.[19][20] He was sworn in by Vice PresidentMike Pence on May 15, 2017.[21]
Three days later, on May 18, Lighthizer notified Congress that President Trump intended to renegotiate theNorth American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which would make him the first USTR to renegotiate a major U.S.free trade agreement.[22]
According to multiple reports, Lighthizer became one of the most influential Trump administration officials and the lead figure in formulating the administration's trade policy.[23][24][25] The reports noted his agreement with Trump on trade issues.[26] Lighthizer played a key role in the administration'srenegotiation of NAFTA and theUnited States' trade war with China.[27][28][29][30]
Lighthizer has stated that using tariffs to promote American industry was a Republicantenet dating back to the pro-business politicians who established the party.[31] He has called for a "newAmerican System" of trade policy that uses tariffs to offset the United States's trade deficit and restore the manufacturing sector in the United States.[32] In a 2008 op-ed, he also defendedprotectionism.[33]
Lighthizer believes that a good trade agreement must "strike a balance among economic security, economic efficiency, and the needs of working people", and he described theU.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement he negotiated the "model deal."[34] Speaking at a July 2020 event atChatham House, Lighthizer stated that bilateral trade agreements and a multilateral system conflict with each other, and that one of those two options should be chosen over the other.[35]

Politico describes Lighthizer as "a decades-long skeptic of Beijing".[26] Lighthizer has accused the country of China of unfair trade practices,[36] and he believes China needs to make substantive and structural changes to its trade policies, as opposed to only minor changes it has offered in the past.[37] He wrote, "The icon of modern conservatism, Ronald Reagan, imposed quotas on imported steel, protected Harley-Davidson from Japanese competition, restrained import of semiconductors and automobiles, and took myriad similar steps to keep American industry strong. How does allowing China to constantly rig trade in its favor advance the core conservative goal of making markets more efficient? Markets do not run better when manufacturing shifts to China largely because of the actions of its government."[36]
In a 1997 op-ed inThe New York Times, Lighthizer advocated against allowing China to join theWorld Trade Organization.[38] He suggested that the U.S. should bring more cases against China for failure to comply with the regulations of the World Trade Organization. In testimony before the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission in 2010, Lighthizer said that "USTR (U.S. Trade Representative) should pursue WTO litigation with respect to all such examples of non-compliance. If necessary, Congress should give USTR additional resources to increase its ability."[39] Lighthizer called for reforming the WTO during a testimony to Congress on June 17, 2020.[40]
In 2023, Lighthizer wrote in his bookNo Trade is Free that, "fifteen or so billionaires" shaped India's trading policy. Terming them as "oligarchs", Lighthizer added India is "the most protectionist country in the world".[41]
In March 2020, Lighthizer stated that theCOVID-19 pandemic has shown that the United States must promote domestic manufacturing of medical supplies and reduce its reliance on foreign countries.[42]
Lighthizer lives in Florida. His wife, Cathy, died in 2014.[43] He has two children, Robert and Claire, and three grandchildren.[44]
Lighthizer's brother,O. James Lighthizer, is anAmerican Civil War expert. James Lighthizer was the president of theAmerican Battlefield Trust, a battlefield preservation organization, and a former member of theMaryland House of Delegates.[45]
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| Preceded by | United States Trade Representative 2017–2021 | Succeeded by |