US Republican Lawmakers Urge Trump to Block Chinese EV Manufacturing in America

More than 50 Republican lawmakers have urged the Trump administration to block Chinese automotive and battery companies from manufacturing in the US, arguing it threatens American jobs, supply chains, and national security. The letter, led by Representatives Mike Kelly and Gus Bilirakis, warns that heavily subsidized Chinese firms could use "non-market tactics" to dominate global automotive supply chains. Lawmakers raised concerns over data security, noting Chinese-made vehicles could collect sensitive information and allow remote access by Chinese actors. The group urged maintaining existing restrictions, including tariffs and the connected vehicle rule, and linked the issue to the upcoming USMCA review.

Key Points: US GOP Lawmakers Warn Trump on Chinese EV Push

  • 50+ GOP lawmakers urge block on Chinese EV manufacturing
  • Citing threats to US jobs, supply chains, and national security
  • Letter warns of cybersecurity and surveillance risks from Chinese-made vehicles
  • Lawmakers link issue to USMCA review and urge maintaining tariffs and restrictions
3 min read

US lawmakers warn Trump on Chinese EV push

Over 50 US Republican lawmakers urge Trump to block Chinese EV and battery manufacturing in the US, citing threats to jobs, supply chains, and national security.

"We must be clear-eyed about China's goals in expanding its automotive footprint across the globe. - Republican lawmakers"

Washington, May 7

More than 50 Republican lawmakers have urged the Trump administration to block Chinese automotive and battery companies from manufacturing in the United States, arguing that such a move would threaten American jobs, supply chains and national security.

In a letter led by Representatives Mike Kelly and Gus Bilirakis, the lawmakers asked Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer to reject any effort by Chinese firms to establish vehicle and battery manufacturing facilities in the US or wider North American market.

The letter comes ahead of an expected meeting between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on trade issues.

"We must be clear-eyed about China's goals in expanding its automotive footprint across the globe. China's intent is not fair competition, as evident by their actions in other critical sectors," the lawmakers wrote.

The lawmakers said the US automotive industry contributes more than 5 per cent of the country's GDP and supports millions of manufacturing jobs. They warned that heavily subsidised Chinese companies could use "non-market tactics" to gain control over global automotive supply chains.

"If Chinese automotive companies were granted access to manufacture and sell vehicles and batteries in the US, we risk decimating US manufacturing, eroding global market share for US auto companies, and leaving consumers and businesses exposed to serious cybersecurity and surveillance threats," the letter said.

The lawmakers accused China of artificially inflating production through government subsidies and pushing companies to export vehicles at below-market prices.

"China's goal is not to compete in the U.S. automotive market, but instead to hollow it out and ultimately limit consumer choice to Chinese brands," they wrote.

The letter also raised concerns over data security and connected vehicle technology. According to the lawmakers, Chinese-made vehicles could collect and transmit sensitive information from US citizens and infrastructure.

"Furthermore, the technology in today's vehicles could allow for remote access and potentially give Chinese actors control of these vehicles operating on American roads," the lawmakers said.

The group urged the administration to maintain existing restrictions, including the Commerce Department's connected vehicle rule and Section 301 tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles.

The lawmakers also linked the issue to the upcoming review of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). They said Chinese state-owned enterprises were attempting to exploit North American trade frameworks to bypass US economic security measures.

"Establishing a formal foreign investment screening mechanism would help close this backdoor, protect the agreement's integrity, and prevent further erosion of the US manufacturing base," the letter said.

The letter was signed by more than 50 House Republicans, including lawmakers from Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas and Florida -- states with strong automotive or manufacturing interests.

Chinese electric vehicle makers have rapidly expanded exports in recent years, supported by large-scale state subsidies and aggressive overseas investment. The rise of Chinese EV companies has triggered trade and security debates in the US and Europe, with governments increasingly scrutinising supply chains tied to batteries, semiconductors and connected vehicle technologies.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
As an Indian, I see this as a warning for us too. China's strategy is clear - they don't want fair competition, they want dominance. We should be careful about any Chinese EV investments in India. The cybersecurity and data concerns are real. But at the same time, we need to build our own EV ecosystem without knee-jerk bans. Make in India with better technology, not just protectionism! 🇮🇳
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James A
I understand the security concerns, but blocking all Chinese investment in manufacturing is shortsighted. The US needs Chinese batteries and technology to meet its EV targets. This feels like political grandstanding by Republicans who want to look tough on China without offering real solutions. Let's be smart, not just loud.
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Rohit P
The US lawmakers are right to be worried. Look what happened with TikTok - they gave China a backdoor into American homes. Now imagine that with vehicles that can be remotely controlled. But banning everything isn't the answer either. India has managed this well with geo-tagging and data localization requirements for foreign apps. The US should learn from our approach. 🤷‍♂️
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Michael C
The irony is rich - these same lawmakers probably supported free trade agreements that shipped millions of American jobs to China. Now they want protectionism when it's about EVs? Let's be honest, American automakers slept at the wheel and now they want government help to keep Chinese competition out. Innovate or die, that's how capitalism works.
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Tanya I
As someone living in India, I see the Chinese EV threat differently. They're already dumping cheap phones and electronics here. Now they want to

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