Heritage Action Key Votes Against Reckless and Ineffective Chips Package

Press Releases · Jul 21, 2022

WASHINGTON – Today, Heritage Action, a conservative grassroots organization with two million grassroots activists nationwide, key voted against the CHIPS Act.

Heritage Action Executive Director Jessica Anderson released the following statement:

By blending corporate welfare with industrial policy, this package does not address the growing and urgent threat posed to our country by China. Not only does this bill further fuel Biden’s inflation fire by giving $52 billion in handouts to the profitable semiconductor industry, but it also fails to properly address Chinese espionage. Most egregiously, the legislation does not bar companies that do business in China from receiving subsidies.

All Americans should welcome a productive industrial policy discussion to counter China, but supporting legislation without safeguards for American business and with a price tag of $250 billion in new spending is counterproductive to both our economy and our national security. Our solutions cannot weaken our domestic economy by recklessly spending taxpayer dollars without proper transparency and oversight. The Heritage Foundation has offered several meaningful policy initiatives that would hold the CCP accountable both by strengthening our country domestically and by ending policies that indirectly benefit Beijing.

Conservatives look forward to leading this effort in the new Congress, under new leadership and with a new vision for how to defeat China.

BACKGROUND:

  • Members’ votes to oppose this legislation will improve their scores on Heritage Action’s Scorecard.

  • Relying on research from the Heritage Foundation, Heritage Action released a policy memo outlining conservative policy solutions to address China’s global threat. Some of the solutions include banning Chinese nationals from American national-security-related research, resurrecting the DOJ’s China Initiative, holding American CEOs personally liable for knowingly aiding in Beijing’s human rights abuses, renegotiating unfair climate treaties, and strengthening our strategic partnership with Taiwan.

  • Dr. Kevin Roberts op-ed in Fox News: Biden's weakness in Ukraine-Russia conflict has only further emboldened China in a new kind of war

  • The full text of the key vote can be found here or below.

Heritage Action opposes the CHIPS Act (H.R. 4346) and will include it as a key vote on our legislative scorecard.

The Senate will soon vote on the CHIPS Act (H.R. 4346), a $250 billion package that blends corporate welfare with industrial policy. The bill includes $52 billion in financial incentives to the highly profitable semiconductor industry, $80 billion in increased funding to universities through the National Science Foundation (NSF), $10 billion for centrally planned “regional technology hubs,” and nearly $50 billion in funding for research at the Department of Energy. While proponents claim that passing the legislation is necessary to counter the threat posed by China, in reality this package will make the United States less, not more competitive with China.

This bill picks a specific industry to win—the semiconductor industry—over all other businesses, big and small. Generally, all businesses are struggling with higher costs, a shortage of labor, and decreasing demand from consumers, making them less competitive with their Chinese rivals. But they receive no relief because Washington’s solution is to cut a check to one highly profitable industry, which will simply pour gasoline on the inflation fire that is crippling the economy.

To put this bill’s handouts in perspective, for the same amount of money as the semiconductor subsidies, Congress could double the research and development tax credit for all companies, allow for 100 percent immediate expensing, and allow for immediate research and development deductions through 2025, which would encourage private businesses to innovate and grow. This would have put all industries and businesses on an equal playing field, but that’s not what Congress is doing.

Congress’s addiction to “emergency spending” has been a key driver of inflation, and further emergency spending will only increase the cost of living for millions of Americans. If the American people are going to be asked to pay a price, then at the very least, Congress should take measures to guarantee the spending benefits America. And so it is unconscionable that Congress is using the guise of “national security” to increase the burden carried by the American people while the legislation does not bar companies that do business in China from receiving subsidies.

As the Heritage Foundation lays out, because money is fungible, a semiconductor manufacturer can take a subsidy to build a plant in the United States and use that money to bolster their manufacturing operations in China. There should be unanimous opposition to helping China build its industry and infrastructure, yet this legislation may help companies do just that.

While the subsidies to semiconductor manufacturers are the worst portion of the bill, the rest of the package spreads nearly $200 billion in research funding across a variety of government agencies, with insufficient guardrails included to protect that research from Chinese espionage. Nearly $80 billion of this is earmarked for the NSF to create a state-run “technology directorate” that is instructed to focus its research on 10 key technology areas. The federal government should not be picking winners and losers and cannot adequately predict which emerging technologies are most promising. And without strong counter-espionage provisions to combat China’s theft of intellectual property, this bill will fund research the CCP will steal and use against us.

An additional $10 billion is set aside to create “regional technology hubs'' in an attempt to more evenly distribute where technology companies are located, despite the fact that private companies make decisions to locate their business operations based on specific factors, such as the availability of qualified workers, state tax regimes, and proximity to inputs and consumers. Instead of trying to use the clumsy arm of government to centrally plan innovation and economic growth, Congress should pursue aggressive action to build a China-resistant economy by cutting China out of U.S. supply chains in key industries and restricting state-sponsored Chinese media from injecting CCP propaganda into American domestic political debates.

Instead of rushing to send money out the door to satisfy the demands of the semiconductor industry, conservatives in Congress should wait until after the midterms—when Republicans will likely control at least one chamber of Congress—to pass an aggressive legislative package that actually addresses the threats posed by China. The China threat is the most critical and consequential international threat that the U.S. faces, and it involves a competition that spans the full range of national power—economic, military, diplomatic, and informational.

This hodgepodge spending package misses the mark and will only weaken the United States by adding to our crushing national debt and spiraling inflation crisis. And for a bill that is marketed as a way to boost America’s competitiveness with China, it does almost nothing to ensure that China is not a prime beneficiary of this spending.