The House failed Wednesday to override President Joe Biden‘s veto of a bipartisan resolution that would have canceled his moratorium on tariffs on Asian solar imports.
The effort fell short of the two-thirds majority voted required to override Biden’s veto, protecting the tariff moratorium through next summer, when it expires. The final vote was 214-205.
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House lawmakers passed the Congressional Review Act resolution of disapproval in late April, followed by Senate passage days later on May 3, seeking to cancel the tariff moratorium.
Both votes had bipartisan support, and the handful of Democrats in each chamber who supported the resolutions argued the White House was allowing Chinese solar manufacturers to skirt tariffs with the pause, injuring domestic manufacturers.
Opponents of the measure said it would cost solar sector jobs that depend on imported products.
Biden declared an emergency using his trade powers in June 2022, protecting solar imports from four Asian countries from antidumping duties that are in force against Chinese products. The decision was meant to serve as a “bridge,” allowing imports to continue to flow as U.S. manufacturing capacity increases, Biden said.
The Commerce Department later issued a preliminary determination in its anticircumvention investigation finding that Chinese-parented companies exporting solar cells and modules from Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Cambodia to the U.S. are circumventing existing duties on solar products, setting the stage for tariffs to be extended to those imports.
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The moratorium insulates those products from tariffs through next June.