HR-6058-119
Ordered to be Reported (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 44 - 0.
Sponsored by Bill Huizenga (R-MI)
What it does
The STRIDE Act would direct the Secretary of State to coordinate with allied and partner nations to align export control policies covering semiconductor manufacturing equipment, design tools, materials, and intellectual property. It would establish a process for assessing whether partner countries are adequately restricting semiconductor technology transfers to adversarial nations, and would trigger a formal review — including potential application of the Foreign Direct Product Rule and Entity List designations — when a partner country is found to be insufficiently cooperative. The Secretary of State would be required to submit reports to Congress every 90 days on the status of diplomatic engagement and coordination progress.
Who benefits
U.S. semiconductor companies that compete with Chinese firms and would benefit from a more level playing field if allied controls are tightened. U.S. national security and defense agencies that rely on semiconductor supply chain integrity. Allied nations' semiconductor industries (e.g., in the Netherlands, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan) that already restrict exports and would benefit from reduced competitive disadvantage if laggard partners are brought into alignment. U.S. workers in the semiconductor and defense manufacturing sectors. Smaller allied nations that lack leverage to enforce controls unilaterally but could benefit from a coordinated multilateral framework.
Who is hurt
Foreign companies in partner countries that currently sell semiconductor equipment or materials to China and would face new restrictions. U.S. companies with supply chains or customers in non-cooperating countries that could be subject to Foreign Direct Product Rule restrictions. Chinese semiconductor firms and research institutions that would face expanded Entity List designations. Third-country intermediaries that currently facilitate technology transfers and would face tighter enforcement. Consumers and industries globally that rely on semiconductor supply chains, who could face higher costs or supply disruptions if coordination reduces the flow of goods. Partner-country governments that may resist U.S.-directed export control alignment as an infringement on their trade sovereignty.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that unilateral U.S. export controls are undermined when allied nations — particularly those with advanced semiconductor equipment capabilities like the Netherlands and Japan — do not maintain equivalent restrictions, allowing adversaries to obtain restricted technology through third countries. They contend that the Foreign Direct Product Rule has already proven effective at limiting China's access to advanced chips, as demonstrated by its application against Huawei, and that multilateral coordination would close the remaining gaps. They further argue that the bill's reporting requirements and consequence mechanisms give Congress meaningful oversight while preserving executive flexibility in diplomacy.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that directing the Secretary of State to pressure allied governments into aligning their export control regimes risks straining diplomatic relationships with key partners who have their own sovereign trade interests and domestic industries to protect. They contend that the bill's consequence mechanism — triggering Foreign Direct Product Rule restrictions against non-cooperating allies — could function as economic coercion against friendly nations, potentially fracturing the very alliances the bill seeks to strengthen. They further argue that the bill's broad definition of "semiconductor technology" and open-ended coordination objectives could create regulatory uncertainty for U.S. companies operating in global supply chains.