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15 months and counting, massive China bill tests ability of a divided US Congress to compromise

In late February 2021, as US President Joe Biden's administration was just getting started, a Congress hungry to confront Beijing dived into a new project - sweeping legislation meant to jolt American industry and alliances in the competition with China.

Fifteen months later, after scores of hearings, speeches, votes, and even name changes, the bill now faces a final, towering hurdle: actually becoming law.

In a potential coup for Beijing, observers inside and outside Congress say they do not know if it will pass because of toxic partisanship, particularly in the House of Representatives - even though Republicans and Democrats alike say that the US must do more to take on China.

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"Pass the damn bill and send it to me," Biden said on May 6.

Congress is trying. But in interviews, aides in both the House and Senate who are closely involved in the bill negotiations described deep uncertainty about what is to come.

US President Joe Biden is ready to sign a China bill, but Congress is stuck in negotiations. Photo: Bloomberg alt=US President Joe Biden is ready to sign a China bill, but Congress is stuck in negotiations. Photo: Bloomberg>

They warned that the clock is ticking before the midterm elections in November. Every day that the bill does not become law is another day closer to a potential flip in congressional leadership, from Democrats to Republicans.

"What we're already starting to hear is: why would we vote for this bill?" one Senate Republican aide said, referring to colleagues in the House. "We're going to win the majority in a significant way in November. Why don't we just pass our own China bill at that point?"

Perhaps even more significantly, aides said that the legislative process for this bill, now called the Bipartisan Innovation Act, was not like any other in recent memory.

After the Senate passed a blimp-sized 2,376-page version of the bill last June, and then the House passed its own 3,610-page edition in February, the two chambers now have to combine them into a final text that can attract enough votes to become law.

For the first time in years, the only way forward appears to be a true bipartisan, bicameral compromise.

Lawmakers in this bitterly partisan era are not used to doing that. In a will-they-or-won't they moment, they have just begun to meet in a formal "conference" process - a once-standard procedure for negotiating bills that has become exceedingly rare in today's Congress.