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House to Vote on Several Export Control Bills

The House of Representatives plans to vote on several export control-related bills next week, including the Remote Access Security Act, which is designed to close a loophole that has allowed China to use cloud service providers to access advanced U.S. computing chips remotely.

Sponsors of the cloud measure, which the House Foreign Affairs Committee approved in May, said Chinese companies have exploited the loophole to develop artificial intelligence technology for China’s military (see 2405160062).

The full House also intends to take up the Economic Espionage Prevention Act, which would authorize sanctions on foreign adversaries that support Russia’s defense industrial base, violate U.S. export controls or steal U.S. intellectual property (see 2405160062). Sponsors said the bill, which the Foreign Affairs Committee endorsed in May, would help counter weapons proliferation that often involves American technology, including computing chips, and would allow greater flexibility to pursue actions against China and other foreign adversaries.

The House next week also is scheduled to consider:

The list of bills could be updated in the coming days. The expected floor action could help House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., meet a goal he outlined in July, in which he said he hopes to have a "significant package of China-related legislation" signed into law this year (see 2407080046). Currently missing from the list are restrictions on outbound investment to China, which Johnson had said were a possibility.