U.S. Senate to vote as soon as Tuesday on slimmed-down China chip bill
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[July 15, 2022]
By Patricia Zengerle and David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Voting in the Senate
on a bill to boost the U.S. semiconductor industry and improve
competitiveness with China could begin as early as Tuesday, Senate
Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has been telling lawmakers, a source
familiar with the issue said on Thursday.
The source said the bill would include, at a minimum, billions of
dollars in subsidies for the semiconductor industry and an investment
tax credit to boost U.S. manufacturing.
Lawmakers hope to pass the legislation and send it to the White House
for President Joe Biden to sign into law before they leave Washington
for their annual August recess.
"We want as robust of a bill as possible," U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina
Raimondo told reporters following a closed briefing with some members of
the House of Representatives. But when asked if a scaled-back measure
would be acceptable, Raimondo replied: "If that's what the members of
both the House and the Senate feel is possible, then let's get it done."
Citing national security concerns if legislation were to continue to
languish, Raimondo said, "We are out of time."
The planned legislation would be a condensed version of a bill the
Senate passed in June 2021 that included $52 billion for chip subsidies
and authorized another $200 billion to boost U.S. scientific and
technological innovation to compete with China.
But that bill never became law. The House of
Representatives never took it up, instead passing its own version in
February similar to the Senate's measure but also included a number of
trade proposals.
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Semiconductor chips are seen on a circuit board of a computer in
this illustration picture taken February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/Illustration
The overall plan - a priority for the Biden administration - more
recently faced a new hurdle in the Senate, where it will need
Republican support to move ahead.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell said on Monday that if
Democrats pursue a separate partisan social spending, tax and
climate bill, it "will certainly crowd out our ability" to move
ahead the bipartisan chips and China competition measure.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin issued a statement urging Congress
to act. "Weapon systems employed on the battlefields of today and
emerging technologies of tomorrow depend on our access to a steady,
secure supply of microelectronics," he said.
The comments about Schumer's plans were consistent with what
Raimondo told Reuters on Wednesday. She said lawmakers appeared to
be moving to carve off the $52 billion in semiconductor chips
manufacturing subsidies from the larger bill.
A shortage of chips has disrupted the automotive and electronics
industries, forcing some companies to scale back production. Many
companies think the shortage will last at least until late 2023.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle, Richard Cowan and David Shepardson;
additional reporting by Eric Beech and Mike Stone; writing by
Patricia Zengerle; editing by Leslie Adler and Diane Craft)
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