US Lawmakers Move to Reevaluate US Policy Towards China
January 12, 2023
A congressional reassessment of American policy toward China is expected
to get under way in earnest early next month.
In a 365-65 vote, the U.S. House of Representatives passed a resolution
Tuesday creating a special Select Committee on China. House Speaker
Kevin McCarthy has tapped Republican Representative Mike Gallagher to
chair the committee’s work.
"A lot of people are interested. I spoke to the Republican caucus this
morning, and a lot of people have expressed interest. I'm optimistic
that we're going to have a pretty serious group of members with a broad
range of experience that's relevant to the issues we're facing right
now,” Gallagher said in an interview with VOA Mandarin.
Gallagher told VOA the committee expects to hold its first hearing in
early to mid-February and will comprise a bipartisan group of lawmakers.
“The Democrats who have expressed interest in joining me are people I
respect and have experience that would be a good fit for this
committee,” he said.
White House response
The White House said Wednesday it looked forward to working with
Democrats and Republicans on the committee regarding an issue that is a
top priority for the administration.
“Under President Biden we are more prepared to outcompete China, protect
our national security and advance a free and open Indo-Pacific than ever
before,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.
In a floor speech ahead of the vote, McCarthy said, "We spent decades
passing policies that welcomed China into the global system. In return,
China has exported oppression, aggression and anti-Americanism. Today,
the power of its military and economy are growing at the expense of
freedom and democracy worldwide.”
McCarthy said the committee will be scrutinizing policies that should be
changed.
“It didn’t start under this administration, but the current
administration has clearly made it worse. Their policies have weakened
our economy and made us more vulnerable to threats from the CCP,” he
said, referring to the Chinese Communist Party. “But here’s the good
news — there is bipartisan consensus that the era of trusting Communist
China is over.”
A spokesperson for China’s Foreign Ministry had a muted response
Wednesday to the creation of the committee. Wang Wenbin told reporters
at a routine news conference that he hopes U.S. politicians will view
relations with Beijing “in an objective and rational way” and will work
on policies benefiting both countries.
A commentary published Wednesday in the state-backed Global Times
newspaper took a more skeptical view, accusing the committee of having a
“strong ideological undertone” and worried it could stoke “anti-China
public opinion.”
Bipartisan support
The new speaker said the idea for a bipartisan committee to investigate
all aspects of the U.S. relationship with China — from economics to
COVID-19 — came to him while on a diplomatic trip commemorating the 75th
anniversary of the D-Day invasion, a key turning point in World War II.
The resolution creating the committee passed with significant support
from Democrats.
“House
Democrats will work in a serious, sober and strategic manner to evaluate
our relationship with the Chinese government and to address the rise of
authoritarianism globally,” said Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries in a
statement after the vote. “House Democrats will firmly speak out against
xenophobic rhetoric and conspiracy theories should this committee
devolve into extreme MAGA Republican talking points that further
anti-Asian hate crimes in this country.”
Jeffries succeeded former Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi as leader of
House Democrats at the start of the 118th Congress.
In a statement Tuesday, House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul
said the committee would build on the work undertaken by Republicans
during the 117th Congress on the House China Task Force.
“The Republican House is laser-focused on the CCP as an existential
threat to our nation,” he said. “The select committee is also an
opportunity for House Democrats to finally join bipartisan efforts to
counter the CCP, which they declined to do on the China Task Force.” |