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House Republican leaders urge Trump to let Jones Act waivers expire as scheduled in August

By Thomson Reuters Jul 1, 2026 | 9:44 AM

By Jarrett Renshaw

July 1 (Reuters) – House Speaker Mike Johnson and several Republican leaders are asking President Donald Trump to allow waivers to a law on shipping between domestic ​ports to expire in mid-August as scheduled, rather ‌than extending them further, according to a letter seen by Reuters.

The waivers to the more than century-old Jones Act were issued by Trump during the Iran conflict to help ease supply disruptions and keep fuel ‌and ​other critical goods moving between U.S. ports ⁠in an attempt to ⁠moderate rising prices. Lawmakers now say those emergency conditions have passed and the waivers should end on schedule.

In their letter, Johnson and 51 other Republican lawmakers emphasize the importance ​of the Jones Act, which requires cargo moving between U.S. ports to be carried on American-built, owned, and crewed ⁠ships.

They argue that the law supports ⁠U.S. maritime jobs and national security, and warn ​that continued waivers could weaken domestic shipping by allowing foreign-flagged ​vessels to operate in coastal trade even when U.S. ‌ships are available.

A White House official noted that “the second waiver extension does not expire until August 16” and added that “if there are any further announcements, they will be made directly by ⁠the President or the Administration.”

A White House spokesperson defended the waivers, pointing to their impact on fuel movement and market stability.

“New data ⁠compiled since the ‌initial Jones Act waiver was issued revealed ⁠that significantly more supply was able to ​reach U.S. ‌ports faster,” Taylor Rogers, a White House ​spokeswoman, said ⁠in a statement to Reuters.

However, analysts have found the policy has had only a limited effect on gasoline prices, largely because the volumes moved are small relative to total U.S. demand and shipping costs remain elevated.

(Reporting By Jarrett Renshaw; Editing by Mark ​Porter, William Maclean)