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White House, Democrats Revive Effort to Boost High-Tech Research

WASHINGTON—A $250 billion spending initiative to boost U.S. investment in high-tech research and manufacturing has stalled in the House, despite lawmakers’ increasing concerns over global competitiveness.

The Senate passed its version—dubbed the U.S. Innovation and Competition Act—last year with bipartisan supporters, saying the U.S. needs to make big investments in science and technology to meet the challenge posed by China and other global rivals.

But in the House—which has completed only part of its package—many Democrats want the legislation to address broader societal goals, including economic inequality and climate change, potentially risking the loss of some Republican support.

Democratic leaders, frustrated that their bigger spending initiatives have bogged down in Congress, are aiming to smooth out differences over the technology spending measure quickly and turn it into a potential bipartisan accomplishment.

“This is a very, very important piece of legislation. We want to see this legislation passed,” House Majority Leader

Steny Hoyer

(D., Md.) said this week. “We’re going to be working very hard to get this.”

The U.S. wants to counter China’s influence around the world by providing everything from infrastructure to vaccines and green energy. WSJ’s Stu Woo explains how the plan, dubbed Build Back Better World, aims to compete with China’s Belt and Road Initiative. Photo composite: Daniel Orton

Biden administration officials, including Commerce Secretary

Gina Raimondo,

are adding to the push, saying the legislation is needed to keep the U.S. competitive and could also help tame domestic inflation.

But some of the same partisan divides that have plagued other Democratic spending initiatives in a contentious midterm year are emerging in the China competitiveness package as well.

Democrats, led by several influential committee chairs, want the bill to include funding for other priorities, such as social and economic inequality, vaccine diplomacy and climate change. They contend that the U.S. can’t be competitive globally without also addressing problems at home.

Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson

(D., Texas), chairwoman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, wrote the core of the House package. She said her panel had “two goals in mind—advancing U.S. competitiveness and technological leadership, and leveraging our scientific investments and the diversity of our STEM talent to better address societal challenges.”

She said the Senate’s version “falls short of meeting the needs of the scientific community and our nation.”

Some Republicans counter that view, saying the bill should be squarely focused on advancing U.S. technology, including promoting domestic semiconductor manufacturing, and not muddled by what

Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers

(R., Wash.) calls “duplicative government spending.”

Another critic in the House, Rep. Jim Banks (R., Ind.), the Republican Study Committee chairman, said the Senate bill spearheaded by Senate Majority Leader

Chuck Schumer

(D., N.Y.) falls short in response to Chinese theft of intellectual property and other misdeeds.

“House conservatives have long been concerned that Schumer’s China bill lacks teeth and focus,” he said. “We need to make confronting China’s malign activity here in the United States our top priority. This bill misses the whole point.”

In an interview, Commerce Secretary Raimondo said she is “cranking up the urgency” in her efforts to get lawmakers to focus on passing the legislation.

“I have calls pretty much every day with members of Congress, primarily in the House but also the Senate, reiterating how vital this is, how it relates to inflation,” Ms. Raimondo said.

Mr. Schumer, who has long been concerned about U.S. competitiveness with China, led the campaign for the Senate version of the legislation.



Photo:

Stefan Jeremiah/Zuma Press

The Senate package would authorize about $190 billion in spending to strengthen U.S. advanced technologies to better compete globally, according to a Congressional Budget Office analysis, and allocate about $52 billion for encouraging more semiconductor production in the U.S.

Ms. Raimondo said that spending would help alleviate computer chip shortages that have contributed to tight supplies—and higher prices—for cars, appliances, electronic devices and other consumer items.

“If Congress wants to do something about inflation, pass this act,” said Ms. Raimondo, the former Rhode Island governor and venture capitalist.

To further spur congressional action, the Commerce Department also will soon be releasing results of an in-depth survey it conducted of semiconductor suppliers and major businesses, underscoring the seriousness of shortages, she said.

The stalled legislation underscores the political challenge that leaders face in crafting legislation that will satisfy House Democrats—including progressives—while holding on to Senate Republicans.

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“What everyone is trying to figure out is how to make sure there’s enough [House] committee input while keeping the Republican support in the Senate,” said

Rep. Ro Khanna

(D., Calif.).

House Speaker

Nancy Pelosi

(D., Calif.), who supports the legislation, has been working behind the scenes to accelerate its passage.

A Democratic leadership aide said the House is currently assembling its package in preparation for final negotiations with the Senate. The House package is likely to have a more significant focus on fixing supply-chain problems than the Senate package, the aide said.

The Senate passed its version of the package on a 68-32 vote last June, with significant Republican support. Sen. Roger Wicker (R., Miss.) said it was needed to put the U.S. “a step ahead of China.”

Mr. Schumer, who has long been concerned about U.S. competitiveness with China, led the campaign in the Senate. He has pushed recently for federal support for proposed semiconductor labs in the Albany region of New York, which could be aided by part of the package focused on encouraging U.S. semiconductor manufacturing.

Write to John D. McKinnon at [email protected] and Natalie Andrews at [email protected]

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