Chinese Parts Power American Cars: The Congress Panic
May 16, 2026 – 7:36 am
Image by: Canva
TL;DR
Bipartisan US lawmakers introduced the Connected Vehicle Security Act to ban Chinese-linked vehicles, software, and hardware from the American market, as Trump meets Xi Jinping in Beijing. But with over 60 Chinese-owned suppliers embedded in the US auto supply chain and BYD now the world’s top EV seller, the push highlights a tension between national security and economic reality.
Somewhere in the wiring of the car you drove this morning, there is almost certainly a Chinese component—an airbag inflator, a windshield, or a steering column bearing. According to global consulting firm AlixPartners, more than 60 US-based auto suppliers are now owned by Chinese companies, manufacturing everything from axles to electronic control units.
This backdrop concerns lawmakers in both parties, urging President Donald Trump not to compromise the US car market during his visit to Beijing this week. The message from Capitol Hill: do not use automobiles as a bargaining chip.
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Automakers and Political Pressure
In January, Trump suggested welcoming Chinese automakers to build factories in the US, provided they employed Americans. This sparked a jolt through an industry lobbying to keep Chinese vehicles out. Though later walked back, the damage was done.
On May 12, Representative John Moolenaar (R), chairman of the House Select Committee on China, and Representative Debbie Dingell (D) introduced the Connected Vehicle Security Act of 2026.
The bill proposes to:
- Ban the importation, manufacture, and sale of connected vehicles, software, and hardware linked to China, Russia, North Korea, and Iran.
- Implement software prohibitions on January 1, 2027, and hardware restrictions by January 1, 2030.
- Impose civil penalties of at least $1.5 million, or five times the transaction’s value, for each violation.
Similar legislation was introduced in the Senate by Elissa Slotkin (D) from Michigan and Bernie Moreno (R) from Ohio. Slotkin described Chinese-made connected vehicles as "TikTok on wheels", referencing data-harvesting fears that fueled TikTok’s separation from its Chinese parent company.
This legislation codifies and expands restrictions initially implemented under President Biden.