HR-8559-119
Referred to the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology.
Sponsored by Elise Stefanik (R-NY)
What it does
This bill would amend the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 to prohibit any U.S. institution of higher education from receiving federal research and development awards for five years if it accepts funds from a "foreign source" — defined as governments of China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, Turkey, Qatar, or any country the Secretary of State designates — to carry out research in artificial intelligence, biotechnology, or quantum information science with national security or military applications. The ban would apply to the institution as a whole, not just the specific program or department that received the foreign funds.
Who benefits
U.S. national security and defense agencies seeking to limit foreign access to sensitive research. Domestic research institutions that do not accept foreign adversary funding, who would face less competition for federal R&D awards. U.S. technology companies that rely on federally funded university research and prefer it remain insulated from foreign influence. American researchers working in AI, biotech, and quantum science at institutions that comply, who may see increased federal funding availability. Taxpayers, to the extent that sensitive research is better protected from foreign exploitation.
Who is hurt
Universities that currently accept any funding from the listed countries — even for unrelated programs — and would face a blanket five-year loss of all federal R&D awards. International researchers and students at U.S. universities, who may face reduced institutional resources or program cuts. Researchers in AI, biotech, and quantum science at affected institutions, who could lose federal grants regardless of their personal involvement with foreign funding. Smaller or less-endowed universities that rely more heavily on diverse funding sources, including international partnerships. Institutions with legitimate academic exchange programs with countries on the list, such as Turkey or Qatar, which are U.S. treaty allies. Federal agencies that depend on a broad university research base to fulfill their R&D missions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that adversarial foreign governments — particularly China and Russia — have systematically exploited U.S. university research programs to acquire sensitive technologies in AI, biotechnology, and quantum computing, citing documented cases of espionage and technology transfer prosecuted by the Department of Justice under the China Initiative. They contend that a five-year funding bar creates a meaningful financial deterrent that existing disclosure requirements under the Higher Education Act's Section 117 have failed to provide, since many universities have underreported or failed to report foreign gifts. They further argue that protecting federally funded research in these three fields is essential to maintaining U.S. technological superiority in areas with direct military applications.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill's blanket institutional penalty — cutting off all federal R&D funding for five years — is disproportionate, since a single foreign-funded grant in one department would disqualify an entire university from unrelated federal research. They contend that including U.S. treaty allies Turkey and Qatar alongside designated adversaries like North Korea and Iran conflates legitimate academic partnerships with national security threats, and that the Secretary of State's open-ended designation authority lacks clear standards or congressional oversight. They further argue that the penalty's breadth could devastate research programs at affected institutions, driving away American scientists and ultimately weakening, rather than strengthening, U.S. competitiveness in the very fields the bill aims to protect.