Congressional lawmakers want to end normal trade relations with China


Summary

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Full story

There are separate efforts in Congress to end normal trade relations between the United States and China. While the two bills by Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., and Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., are slightly different, they would both significantly increase tariffs on goods imported into the United States from China.

The lawmakers believe increasing the tariffs will hurt China economically and give the United States an advantage.

“As an exporting economy, their survivability economically is completely dependent on how much of their goods they can send to the United States,” Rep. Smith said.

How much would tariffs increase?

If either of the bills are approved, popular items the U.S. imports from China would see tariff increases. 

  • Video game consoles like Xbox and PlayStation would go from being tariff-free to 35%. 
  • The $200 million of dog and cat food imported annually would increase from 0% to 10%. 
  • The $23 billion of furniture and bedding that’s currently tariff-free in most cases would be 40% for items like wooden dining tables and cribs, and 45% for a light fixture.

“We don’t want to get any more dependent on China than we already are. That’s why this step is necessary, right now. Rebuild our manufacturing base, strengthen our working class, take on China,” Sen. Hawley said.

Here’s where the proposals differ

Smith’s proposal links U.S.-China trade relations to human rights. Every year, the U.S. would have to examine China’s human rights record and determine that the CCP is improving in its treatment of Uyghur Muslims and other ethnic minorities. If there is no improvement, the tariffs remain at the increased level. It used to be that way until President Bill Clinton delinked human rights from trade with China in 1994.

“We’re talking about a country in China that has so excelled in human rights abuse, torture, forced abortion, religious persecution, like almost nowhere else on Earth,” Rep. Smith said.

Hawley’s bill is focused on American workers. It would automatically increase tariffs as described earlier and give the president the authority to make them even higher.

Previous tariff increases

China has a history of retaliating after the United States increases tariffs. For instance, when former President Trump imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum in 2018, China responded with increases on fruits, meats, wine, tubing, piping and more. 

But the lawmakers aren’t concerned about that kind of retaliation.

“Let them follow through on it,” Rep. Smith said. “We should not be aiding and abetting an economy that props him up. And by him, I mean Xi Jinping, and by extension, the entire Chinese Communist Party.”

“We are already too dependent on China. We found that on COVID. I mean where are much of our critical supply chains located, China, where are too many of our medical supply chains located, China, again, our manufacturing China,” Sen. Hawley said.

Both lawmakers strongly disagree with the decision to allow China into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. They believe China’s WTO admittance, along with normalizing trade relations, has led to lost jobs in the United States as companies moved overseas for cheaper labor.

If Hawley’s bill is approved, it will take effect in two years. Smith’s legislation would take effect immediately.

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Common ground

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Diverging views

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Bias comparison

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Key points from the Left

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  • Netus cursus nunc risus neque mollis arcu lacinia egestas eleifend consectetur lorem est sodales fusce habitant, molestie faucibus maximus curabitur sagittis nibh torquent ornare rhoncus augue eget cras senectus pellentesque.

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Key points from the Right

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  • Praesent cras quam interdum potenti ante est scelerisque neque dapibus ultrices venenatis amet, ornare natoque vitae eleifend porttitor nisl varius fames magna nec.

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Timeline

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Summary

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Full story

There are separate efforts in Congress to end normal trade relations between the United States and China. While the two bills by Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., and Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., are slightly different, they would both significantly increase tariffs on goods imported into the United States from China.

The lawmakers believe increasing the tariffs will hurt China economically and give the United States an advantage.

“As an exporting economy, their survivability economically is completely dependent on how much of their goods they can send to the United States,” Rep. Smith said.

How much would tariffs increase?

If either of the bills are approved, popular items the U.S. imports from China would see tariff increases. 

  • Video game consoles like Xbox and PlayStation would go from being tariff-free to 35%. 
  • The $200 million of dog and cat food imported annually would increase from 0% to 10%. 
  • The $23 billion of furniture and bedding that’s currently tariff-free in most cases would be 40% for items like wooden dining tables and cribs, and 45% for a light fixture.

“We don’t want to get any more dependent on China than we already are. That’s why this step is necessary, right now. Rebuild our manufacturing base, strengthen our working class, take on China,” Sen. Hawley said.

Here’s where the proposals differ

Smith’s proposal links U.S.-China trade relations to human rights. Every year, the U.S. would have to examine China’s human rights record and determine that the CCP is improving in its treatment of Uyghur Muslims and other ethnic minorities. If there is no improvement, the tariffs remain at the increased level. It used to be that way until President Bill Clinton delinked human rights from trade with China in 1994.

“We’re talking about a country in China that has so excelled in human rights abuse, torture, forced abortion, religious persecution, like almost nowhere else on Earth,” Rep. Smith said.

Hawley’s bill is focused on American workers. It would automatically increase tariffs as described earlier and give the president the authority to make them even higher.

Previous tariff increases

China has a history of retaliating after the United States increases tariffs. For instance, when former President Trump imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum in 2018, China responded with increases on fruits, meats, wine, tubing, piping and more. 

But the lawmakers aren’t concerned about that kind of retaliation.

“Let them follow through on it,” Rep. Smith said. “We should not be aiding and abetting an economy that props him up. And by him, I mean Xi Jinping, and by extension, the entire Chinese Communist Party.”

“We are already too dependent on China. We found that on COVID. I mean where are much of our critical supply chains located, China, where are too many of our medical supply chains located, China, again, our manufacturing China,” Sen. Hawley said.

Both lawmakers strongly disagree with the decision to allow China into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. They believe China’s WTO admittance, along with normalizing trade relations, has led to lost jobs in the United States as companies moved overseas for cheaper labor.

If Hawley’s bill is approved, it will take effect in two years. Smith’s legislation would take effect immediately.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Why this story matters

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Solution spotlight

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Bias comparison

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  • The Center potenti adipiscing viverra vehicula quis ullamcorper donec dictumst lacus conubia nascetur et at, luctus euismod pulvinar primis justo rhoncus platea amet felis commodo porta.
  • Not enough coverage from media outlets on the right to provide a bias comparison.

Media landscape

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113 total sources

Key points from the Left

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  • Quisque porta placerat elit nullam taciti nisl vehicula feugiat cras tincidunt faucibus est, diam leo torquent fusce eleifend tempus pulvinar phasellus montes purus.

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Key points from the Center

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  • Libero per orci malesuada netus montes diam rutrum sollicitudin at ridiculus tellus conubia vel neque congue, lacinia egestas leo bibendum rhoncus tempus dolor nec aptent feugiat vehicula velit quisque phasellus.

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Key points from the Right

  • Lorem lacus arcu himenaeos facilisi magnis iaculis ligula primis, elit nisl cubilia fames dapibus sagittis sem amet, ut maecenas magna nunc felis fringilla laoreet.
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Timeline

  • Bob Dylan auction items, including draft lyrics to “Mr. Tambourine Man,” which sold for $508k, generated $1.5 million in sales at Julien’s.
    Lifestyle
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    Bob Dylan’s words remain as valuable as ever. Draft lyrics to his iconic song “Mr. Tambourine Man” recently sold for $508,000 at auction. Sixty of Dylan’s personal items were sold on Saturday, Jan. 18, through Julien’s Auctions. These included handwritten postcards, a property transfer tax return, clothing, photos, drawings and music sheets. Altogether, the auction […]

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