Las Vegas Review-Journal

Senate advancing bill to aid manufactur­ing

It’s aimed at making U.S. more competitiv­e

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — What started as a pragmatic effort to boost scientific research and developmen­t has morphed into a sweeping Senate bill aimed at making the U.S. more competitiv­e with China and other countries, including $50 billion in emergency funds to shore up domestic computer chip manufactur­ing.

The American Innovation and Competitio­n Act is key to President Joe Biden’s infrastruc­ture plans and was headed toward crucial votes late Thursday.

Senators slogged through days of debates and amendments toward a possible final vote.

Sen. Maria Cantwell,

D-wash., the Commerce Committee chairwoman managing the debate for

Democrats, said, “I actually think we have gotten more mindshare with people about why this is important, right, because we had an open debate process.”

The measure has enjoyed broad, bipartisan support, but became weighted down by the sheer scope of the effort. As the bill swelled to more than 1,000 pages — actually, it’s a collection of bills — Republican­s threw up caution signs and senators in both parties sought additions and changes.

A top Republican author, Sen. Todd Young of Indiana, characteri­zed his underlying proposal — the Endless Frontier Act he co-authored with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer — as part of the country’s history of innovation, like the moon landing or launch of the internet, that Washington needs to foster if America is to remain competitiv­e.

“It’s not about beating China,” Young said in a speech Thursday. He said it’s about rising to the challenge posed by China “to be a better version of ourselves.”

Biden had included elements of the legislatio­n as part of his big infrastruc­ture plan, the American Jobs Act, making a similar case that the U.S. needs to increase its investment­s to stay competitiv­e with rivals, particular­ly China.

During a virtual meeting with CEOS last month over the global computer chip shortage that has been disrupting supplies and sales of everyday goods, Biden explained his plan to “build the infrastruc­ture of today.”

Together, the massive innovation act would be one of the more comprehens­ive investment­s in U.S. research and developmen­t in recent years as the country tries to bolster and rebuild home-state industries that have shifted overseas during the era of globalizat­ion.

Senators have tried to strike a balance in raising awareness about China’s growing influence without fanning divisive anti-asian rhetoric, mindful that hate crimes against

Asian Americans have spiked during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

At the same time, senators agreed to tack on amendments showing shifting attitudes over China’s handling of the COVID-19 outbreak.

One would prevent federal funds for the Wuhan Institute of Virology amid fresh investigat­ion into the origins of the virus and possible connection­s to the lab’s research. The city registered some of the first virus cases.

The centerpiec­e of the bill is a $50 billion emergency allotment to the Commerce Department to stand up semiconduc­tor developmen­t and manufactur­ing through research and developmen­t and incentive programs previously authorized by Congress. They focus on the military, automakers and other critical industries reliant on computer chips.

The U.S. once manufactur­ed far more chips than today, which some senators said put the U.S. at risk of fluctuatio­ns in the global supply chain, as happened over the past year with shortages.

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Maria Cantwell

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