logo
Exclusive: US Democrats, Republicans plan bills to pressure China as Trump pushes trade

Exclusive: US Democrats, Republicans plan bills to pressure China as Trump pushes trade

Reuters28-07-2025
WASHINGTON, July 28 (Reuters) - U.S. senators from both major parties plan to introduce bills this week targeting China over its treatment of minority groups, dissidents and Taiwan, emphasizing security and human rights as President Donald Trump focuses on trade with Beijing.
The three bills, seen by Reuters ahead of their introduction, have Democratic and Republican sponsors, a departure from the fierce partisanship dividing Washington.
Trump's push to reach economic agreements between the world's two biggest economies has strong support in Congress, especially from his fellow Republicans, but has prompted some China hawks to worry that the U.S. government is de-emphasizing security issues.
"It does appear that President Trump is keen to negotiate some kind of deal with China, and gaps are opening between his approach to China and the approaches of some members of his team, as well as with Congress, which overall has been quite hawkish on China," said Bonnie Glaser, an Asia expert at the German Marshall Fund of the United States.
The desire for a hard line on China is one of the few truly bipartisan sentiments in the perennially divided Congress, even as many lawmakers support Trump's efforts to rebalance the bilateral trade relationship.
"The United States cannot afford to be weak in the face of the People's Republic of China and its aggression around the world," said Democrat Jeff Merkley of Oregon, a lead sponsor of all three bills.
"No matter who is in the White House, America's values of freedom and human rights must remain at the heart of a clear and principled vision that guides our leadership on the global stage," Merkley said in a statement.
White House officials have said that Trump remains fully committed to Asia-Pacific security issues as he pursues his trade agenda and a good personal relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
One bill, co-sponsored by Republican John Cornyn of Texas, would deny entry into the United States of current or former Chinese government officials who were deemed to have engaged in the forced repatriation of members of China's Uyghur minority.
Human rights groups accuse China of widespread abuses of Uyghurs, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority numbering about 10 million in its northwestern region of Xinjiang. Beijing denies any abuses.
Another, co-sponsored by Republican John Curtis of Utah, aims to help Taiwan as the island faces increasing pressure from China. It would support countries in Latin America and the Caribbean that maintain official diplomatic relations with Taiwan and would take other steps to deepen coordination with Taipei.
China claims the democratically governed island as its own and has never renounced the use of force to bring Taiwan under its control. Beijing has stepped up military and political pressure against the island in recent years.
A third bill, co-sponsored by Republican Dan Sullivan of Alaska, seeks to combat "transnational repression" - efforts by any foreign government to reach beyond its own borders to intimidate, harass or harm dissidents, journalists or activists.
Facing Trump's August 12 deadline, top U.S. and Chinese economic officials will meet in Stockholm on Monday to try to tackle their longstanding disputes, hoping to extend a truce by three months and keep sharply higher tariffs at bay.
Trump "cares about opening foreign markets to American trade, and that's what he's always cared about. And that is going to run counter to a lot of national security imperatives," said Michael Sobolik, who specializes in U.S.-China relations at the Hudson Institute.
Democrats and some of Trump's fellow Republicans raised concerns about the announcement this month that Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab will resume sales of its H20 artificial intelligence chips to China, days after its CEO met with Trump. This reversed an AI restriction imposed in April that was designed to keep the most advanced AI chips out of Chinese hands.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump says Republicans are ‘entitled' to five more congressional seats in Texas
Trump says Republicans are ‘entitled' to five more congressional seats in Texas

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Trump says Republicans are ‘entitled' to five more congressional seats in Texas

Donald Trump said on Tuesday that Republicans are entitled to the five more seats they could pick up if congressional maps proposed by Texas Republicans are passed. Trump called in for an interview with CNBC Tuesday morning, less than a day after Texas Democrats denied a legislative quorum by fleeing the state, with many decamping to Chicago, Illinois where the Democratic governor, JB Pritzker, has vowed to protect them. 'We have an opportunity in Texas to pick up five seats,' Trump said. 'We have a really good governor, and we have good people in Texas. And I won Texas. I got the highest vote in the history of Texas, as you probably know, and we are entitled to five more seats.' 'In Illinois, what's happened is terrible what they're doing,' the president added. 'And you notice, they go to Illinois for safety, but that's all gerrymandered. California is gerrymandered. We should have many more seats in Congress in California. It's all gerrymandered.' Trump did not provide any evidence of gerrymandering in the Democratic-controlled states. California voters approved an independent redistricting commission to draw the state's congressional maps for the first time in 2010, but the Democratic governor Gavin Newsom has indicated he will play hardball and call a special election to undo that commission so that California Democrats can gerrymander the state maps ahead of the 2026 midterms as well. Pritzker in Illinois has also said that the state may respond to Texas's efforts by redrawing its own map in Democrats' favor, given that 'everything has to be on the table'. 'Trump came up with a new scheme to rig the system by ramming through a corrupt, mid-decade redistricting plan that would steal five congressional seats, silencing millions of voters, especially Black and Latino voters,' Pritzker said. The Texas house is scheduled to reconvene at 1pm local time on Tuesday, but enough Democrats remain outside the state to deny quorum for a second day. Democratic Representative Lulu Flores told CNN that she and several other Democratic members who traveled to Illinois 'plan to stay as long as it takes' to stall the Republicans' redistricting plans. The current special legislative session, called by Texas's Republican governor Greg Abbott, lasts until 19 August. 'That's the very least time that we expect to be out here,' Flores added. Abbott could continue to call additional special sessions, and it's not clear how long Democrats could stay outside the state. Each lawmaker that has absconded faces a $500 for day fine, and Abbott has ordered the Texas department of public safety to 'locate, arrest and return to the House chamber any member who has abandoned their duty to Texans'. Flores told CNN that the legal threats were 'upsetting', but she added: 'I don't know that he has anything to back that up.'

New Texas Republican maps dilute Latino voting power in Austin
New Texas Republican maps dilute Latino voting power in Austin

The Guardian

time15 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

New Texas Republican maps dilute Latino voting power in Austin

When Representative Greg Casar won his election last year, he became the first Latino to represent the Texas capitol city of Austin in Congress. A panel of federal judges had drawn his district's lines after a prolonged legal battle over racial gerrymandering. But under the map Texas Republicans unveiled last week, Casar would instead live in the modified version of his neighboring district to the west, which would swallow east Austin – a gentrifying but historically working-class area home to Mexican American and Black residents once forced by segregation laws to live on the east side of town. 'Even a conservative supreme court said central Texas Latinos deserve a district, and that's why my district exists,' Casar said. 'If Donald Trump is able to suppress Latino voters here in Austin, he'll try to spread that plan across America.' Texas Republicans took the unusual step of redistricting several years early in an attempt to deliver more congressional seats to Donald Trump ahead of next year's midterm elections. Democratic state lawmakers fled the state Sunday to try to thwart the GOP redistricting plan by denying state lawmakers a quorum needed to pass it into law. The Texas governor, Greg Abbott, said Monday he would seek to arrest and possibly unseat and replace Democratic lawmakers who do not return. In majority-minority Texas, where Black and brown voters have traditionally leaned left, the overtly political ploy is teeing up another in a series of legal battles over racial gerrymandering that have erupted repeatedly for more than a decade. The dramatic reshaping of Casar's district 35 is one of the most egregious examples cited by civic groups concerned that the new map will dilute Latino voter strength and make it harder for candidates of color to win congressional elections. 'The map as proposed clearly violates the Voting Rights Act and is unconstitutional,' said Lydia Camarillo, the president of the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project. 'It's canceling out districts that are part of the Voting Rights Act … and it's not giving Latinos the right to represent their voice based on their population growth.' Hispanics are the largest population segment in Texas, at about 40%. Only one-fifth of the state's 38-member congressional delegation is Hispanic, however. Since the last census, civic groups like Camarillo's have contended that the state's booming Hispanic population growth merits two more Latino-majority congressional districts under the Voting Rights Act – one in Houston and the other in the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area. A dozen organizations and several individuals are pressing Texas to create the two Latino-majority districts in an ongoing federal lawsuit in El Paso. The new GOP-drawn map not only fails to provide those two Latino-majority districts, but it significantly dilutes the voting strength of the ones that exist, critics say. 'This is a calculated move that exploits Texas' historically low voter turnout for those in charge to maintain power,' Jackie Bastard, the executive director of the voter turnout group Jolt Action, wrote in an email. 'By deliberately diluting Latino voting strength across districts, these maps would severely diminish the impact of our ongoing voter mobilization efforts and silence the voices of Texas' fastest-growing demographic.' Those intricacies are often difficult to tease out. congressional district nine, represented by Democratic representative Al Green, for example, is a so-called 'coalition district' under the current map, with no one ethnic or racial group holding a solid majority. In practice, however, it functions more like a Black-opportunity district in a state where African American voters are becoming a smaller share of the electorate. Under the new map, district nine's Black population plummets to 11%, while the Hispanic voting age population now holds a majority. But the historically low voter turnout rate there raises doubts that the district will actually function as a Latino-majority district, said Gloria Leal, the general counsel for the League of United Latin American Citizens, one of the plaintiffs in the El Paso case. Representative Sylvia Garcia's district 29 also dropped enough to raise concerns, while retaining a majority on paper. Representative Henry Cuellar's district 28, on the other hand, saw the opposite approach under the new map – Hispanics voters shot up to roughly 90% of the voting age population. Sign up to Headlines US Get the most important US headlines and highlights emailed direct to you every morning after newsletter promotion 'They added like 20 percentage points to that district to pack us all in,' Leal said. 'We oppose the current map that exists and we adamantly oppose the proposed map,' she added. Any redrawing of Texas districts is likely to draw the scrutiny of the federal courts, given the state's long history of voter suppression. The Voting Rights Act, which will celebrate its 60th anniversary on Wednesday, prohibits both diluting a protected groups' votes across multiple districts and packing voters into a single one. Carrying out such sweeping changes so quickly at the request of the White House may also raise legal questions that go beyond the Voting Rights Act, according Tom Saenz, the director the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which is representing the plaintiffs in the El Paso case. 'This is clearly improper,' Saenz said. 'Trying to circumvent judicial review by acting so close to an election is straight-up unlawful.' Political analysts had widely viewed Republicans' goal of finding five congressional seats for Trump as an overly ambitious one that may backfire. The map that Republicans came up with in 2021 to fortify their current lopsided majority in the congressional delegation appeared hard to alter without making the party more vulnerable to Democratic challenges. Texas conservatives appear to have exceeded those expectations, according to Rice University political scientist Mark Jones – partly by 'riding roughshod' over the Voting Rights Act. 'I underestimated the level of disregard of the Voting Rights Act,' Jones said. 'It's not clear how the Voting Rights Act constrained this map in any significant way, with the exception that Republicans focused on hitting absolute majorities of Hispanics in a few districts.' Still, Jones said, Republicans drew the map with an exceptionally favorable year in mind. If Republicans fail to consolidate the inroads they made in last year's election, which is normal during a midterm, the new map could easily fail to produce a single new GOP congressional seat in Texas. It might even lead Republicans to lose a seat, according to Jones. 'One thing that is very clear about this whole process is these maps are being drawn under a very rosy scenario,' Jones said. 'And with Trump not on the ballot, with the natural referendum on his presidency, an economy that may be problematic – it's tough to imagine Republicans hitting 2024 numbers in 2026.'

Heat pushes US electricity demand to record peak in July, says EIA
Heat pushes US electricity demand to record peak in July, says EIA

Reuters

time16 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Heat pushes US electricity demand to record peak in July, says EIA

Aug 5 (Reuters) - Electricity demand in the Lower 48 states hit fresh all-time highs on two days in the last week of July due to surging temperatures, the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) said on Tuesday. Electricity demand in the U.S. climbed to a record 759,180 megawatts (MW) on July 29, following a peak of 758,053 MW the previous day, both surpassing the prior high set in July 2024, according to preliminary EIA data. "We forecast U.S. electricity demand fulfilled by the electric power sector will grow at an annual rate of just over 2% in 2025 and 2026," the agency said. EIA also noted that demand is expected to grow faster in regions planning to establish large data centers and manufacturing facilities such as Texas and Northern Virginia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store