Politics

Democrats Reject Amendment Requiring Companies To Disclose Ties To Uyghur Forced Labor

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Ailan Evans Deputy Editor
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House Democrats voted against an amendment Wednesday that would have required companies to inform their shareholders if they engaged in activities with a Chinese official or company using forced labor.

The amendment, introduced by Kentucky Republican Rep. Andy Barr, would require companies to disclose to shareholders annually their activities with any “foreign entity” that “engages in, is responsible for, or facilitates the forced labor of Uyghurs, Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, and members of other Muslim minority groups in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China.”

“We must cut off offenders from the global economy until China changes course. We must rely on appeals to their bottom line, not their conscience,” Barr said on the House Floor.

The amendment included sanctions for foreign entities that used forced labor, built detention camps, or provided technology for mass surveillance in the Uyghur Autonomous Region. It also included sanctions for foreign entities that undermined democratic institutions in Hong Kong.

“If we are truly concerned by public companies who may be working with bad actors, particularly bad actors responsible for China’s worst human rights abuses, then burying their name on the SEC’s website will achieve absolutely nothing,” Barr said. “We need to ensure that they are referred to the Treasury Department so that we can impose sanctions.”

The amendment was rejected with 217 Democrats voting against it. (RELATED: Bill Aiming To Defund UN Program Over Apathy To Uyghur Genocide Reaches 50 Co-Sponsors)

“The ‘Woke’ party would rather keep turning a blind eye than stand against human rights abuses,” House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy tweeted Wednesday in response.

The amendment was added to H.R. 1187, or the ESG Disclosure Simplification Act, which requires companies to disclose to shareholders their performance in certain environmental, social and governance metrics.

Barr introduced the amendment as a motion to recommit, which allows the House a final opportunity to debate and alter the bill before the vote on final passage. If the amendment had been approved, the bill would have gone back to committee for revision.

If passed, the amendment would have strengthened existing sanctions against China for its ongoing genocide of the Uyghur minority.

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