CPA Letter to U.S. House Committee on Armed Services
CPA sent the following coalition letter to Members of the U.S. House Committee on Armed Services regarding protecting against Chinese Military Companies (CMC’s) and Chinese
CPA sent the following coalition letter to Members of the U.S. House Committee on Armed Services regarding protecting against Chinese Military Companies (CMC’s) and Chinese
The former Deputy National Security Advisior says in a long Foreign Affairs magazine essay that our relationship with China has to move beyond price tags and the bottom line salivations of a few big corporations, investment firms and venture capitalists.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is telling Chinese companies listed on the NYSE and Nasdaq to reveal more of their ownership structure. Meanwhile, SEC Commissioner is giving them three additional years to allow for third-party audits. That’s too long.
A labor auditor in Shenzhen called Verite was raided and shut down in April. It’s another mark against those companies like Nike that believe auditing their factory floors in China won’t be that difficult. In many cases, it might not be allowed.
Thanks to currencies worth peanuts, and weak environmental rules, China has turned three SE Asian nations into their solar-making vassal states. The 20% tariff against them is not enough. Here’s what Washington needs to do if it wants a domestic solar industry.
Customs makes good on its promise to root out imported solar cells and panels believed to have been made from polysilicon produced by Hoshine Silicon Industry, banned from the U.S. solar supply chain this summer.
WASHINGTON — The Coalition for a Prosperous America (CPA) today urged President Joe Biden to take preemptive action to prevent China and Russia from exploiting
CPA sent the following letter to President Joe Biden urging the Administration to take preemptive action to prevent China and Russia from exploiting Taliban-controlled Afghanistan
School bus manufacturers are domestic. The Senate infrastructure bill gives them $5 billion to build non-diesel buses, but it falls far short of what the industry wanted in order to crank up the volume and reduce subsidy dependence.
The Chinese Communist Party is now one of three members of the board of directors at ByteDance, owners of the TikTok app. Why do we keep allowing this company to operate here, when Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter cannot operate there.