
TRUMP REAFFIRMS WORLD TRADE WEEK PROCLAMATION AS NYC HOLDS SUMMIT IN TIMES SQUARE WITH U.S. EXPORTS AT RECORD $3.43 TRILLION
NEW YORK, May 21, 2026 — Consul generals, ambassadors, U.S. trade officials and senior business executives gathered in Times Square on May 20 for the closing summit of World Trade Week NYC, days after President Donald J. Trump issued the 2026 Presidential Message reaffirming the federal observance he proclaimed last year through Proclamation 10944. The summit convened as the United States moves through the most active tariff and trade-deal cycle in a generation.
The summit was hosted by the Greater New York Chamber of Commerce and co-hosted by the Orthodox Jewish Chamber of Commerce, both appointed to the World Trade Week NYC Committee Leadership by the U.S. Department of Commerce. It is the only federally appointed convening of its kind in the country, and the chambers’ work in that role has drawn a Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition from the U.S. Congress and proclamations from New York Governor Kathy Hochul. Prior summits have produced on-site memorandums of understanding between the chambers and the governments of India and South Korea, signed in the presence of foreign trade ministers and U.S. officials.

The economic backdrop is unprecedented. U.S. exports of goods and services reached a record $3.43 trillion in 2025, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis — the largest export economy in U.S. history. The International Trade Administration estimates exports support nearly 9.8 million American jobs, and the U.S. trade-to-GDP ratio is running near 27 percent. The 2026 observance comes against tariff actions under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, more than 20 new bilateral trade agreements reached over the past year, and the USMCA review scheduled for July.
In the 2026 Presidential Message issued from the White House this week, Trump said “America has built the world’s most powerful economy through the strength of our industries, the genius of our innovators, and the promise of fair and reciprocal trade,” citing “over 20 new trade deals with major world partners, opening new markets for American goods.” In Proclamation 10944 last year, he committed to “redoubling our efforts to combat unfair trade practices for every American.” The argument is one his predecessors have made under the same federal observance. President George W. Bush, in 2006, called free and fair trade “a powerful engine for growth and job creation.” President Bill Clinton, in 1997, noted that “95 percent of the world’s consumers live outside the United States.”
Featured diplomatic speakers represented trillions of dollars in annual goods trade with the United States. Marcos Bucio, Consul General of Mexico, represented the largest U.S. trading partner at $976.1 billion in total goods and services trade in 2025. Tom Clark, Consul General of Canada, represented the second-largest at $719.5 billion in U.S. goods trade. Binaya Srikanta Pradhan, Consul General of India, anchored $149.4 billion in U.S. goods trade . Adalnio Senna Ganem, Consul General of Brazil, represented the source of a $14.4 billion U.S. goods surplus. Karel Smekal of the Czech Republic represented roughly $12 billion in annual U.S. bilateral goods trade; Jarmo Sareva of Finland a key transatlantic partner in machinery and clean energy; Dr. Vladimir Božović of Serbia, who also serves as Vice President of the Society of Foreign Consuls in New York, the world’s largest diplomatic organization ; Aamer Ahmed Atozai of Pakistan, anchoring the U.S.-Pakistan Trade and Investment Framework Agreement; and Dadhiram Bhandari of Nepal.
Past summits convened by the chambers have drawn senior federal trade leadership across the full U.S. trade-enforcement and trade-facilitation chain. James McCament, then-acting chief operating officer of U.S. Customs and Border Protection , has keynoted. Troy A. Miller, who served as Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, has been honored. Susan S. Thomas, the Acting Executive Assistant Commissioner for U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Trade, responsible for designing and implementing U.S. tariff policies for the Trump Administration , addressed the 2025 summit on tariff enforcement. Danielle Outlaw, Deputy Chief Security Officer of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey; Tenavel Thomas, Customs and Border Protection Port Director for Newark/NY; and Edward Mermelstein, New York City Commissioner of International Affairs, have all participated. Foreign delegations across years have included Israel, India, South Korea, China, Turkey, Pakistan, Germany, Morocco, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Poland, Guatemala, Peru, Thailand, Canada, Bangladesh, Malaysia and the Philippines .
The chambers’ South Korea MOU, signed at a prior summit, has since produced the Orthodox Jewish Chamber’s South Korea chapter, opened at Seoul City Hall under the host of the Deputy Mayor of Economy. At last year’s summit, Korean Air received the Global Investment Impact Award for its $32 billion investment commitment in the United States . The Korean government separately recognized Duvi Honig, the Orthodox Jewish Chamber’s founder and CEO, as Trade Ambassador for the World Korean Business Convention 2025.
The summit’s headline panel, “Growing Global Trade & Investment Through Diplomacy,” was moderated by Howard Teich, Chair of the Greater New York Chamber, and Mark Jaffe, the Chamber’s President and CEO. It was joined by the Global New York Team of Empire State Development, the New York State governor’s international trade and investment office, represented by senior member Brian Teubner.
“Our members export billions of dollars of products and services to dozens of countries around the world,” Jaffe said . “World Trade Week NYC demonstrates how partnerships between governments, business leaders and economic organizations continue driving investment and economic opportunity throughout the United States.”
“Hosting this on behalf of the world’s biggest economy is a true honor,” Honig said. “It stimulates economic growth and builds bridges that unite the world through commerce. When business leaders, diplomats and government officials come together in one room, relationships are built that lead directly to investment, partnerships, job creation and long-term economic expansion.”
World Trade Week was launched in 1926 by Stanley T. Olafson of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce during what the Chamber describes as “a time of isolationism and under the conditions prevailing during the heyday of the restrictive Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act.” President Franklin D. Roosevelt formally proclaimed it a national observance in 1935 , embedding it in the federal calendar as he dismantled the Smoot-Hawley tariff structure through the Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act of 1934. Every president since has reaffirmed it.
The summit’s International Trading Partners Awards recognized Brian Teubner of Empire State Development’s Global New York Team; Dr. Dana York, scientist and international AI leader; Ruben Luna of Key Food / Luna Group; and Frank Garcia of the Multicultural Business Coalition. Additional honorees were recognized at the Asian American Pacific Islanders Awardees ceremony. The 2026 Dr. Lucio Caputo Statesman Award was presented to Angelo Vivolo, President of the Columbus Citizens Foundation, by Marion Pardo, the Foundation’s former President and Chair.
As governments and corporations continue repositioning supply chains and competing for investment, business leaders at the summit said direct diplomatic engagement and international economic cooperation remain essential to sustaining American competitiveness, expanding exports and driving long-term economic growth.
JBizNews Desk
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