The House voted 365 to 65 in favor of a resolution establishing
the Select Committee on the Strategic Competition Between the
United States and the Chinese Communist Party, which will
investigate the issue and make policy recommendations.
All 65 of the "no" votes came from Democrats, some of whom said
they were concerned the Republican-led panel would be too
partisan. But 146 other Democrats voted in favor.
Democratic Representative Jim McGovern, a co-chair of the
Congressional-Executive Commission on China, a grouping of House
members and senators which studies China policy, said he would
vote to create the select committee despite concerns it might be
overly partisan.
"We certainly don't want it to turn into a place that
perpetuates anti-Asian hate," McGovern said, citing past
rhetoric such as Republican former President Donald Trump's
labeling of COVID-19 as "the China virus."
House Speaker Kevin McCarthy insisted the panel would not be
partisan.
"You have my word and my commitment. This is not a partisan
committee. This will be a bipartisan committee," McCarthy said
in remarks urging the House to back the bill.
He said the committee would address issues such as bringing jobs
back from China to the United States, securing intellectual
property and bringing supply chains back to the country.
In addition to those issues, there has been friction in
U.S.-China relations over the huge trade deficit with China,
Chinese pressure on Taiwan, and Beijing's transparency over its
handling of COVID-19, which first surfaced in that country.
The new committee will be chaired by Republican Representative
Mike Gallagher.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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