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Bill > S1838


US S1838

Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019


summary

Introduced
06/13/2019
In Committee
09/25/2019
Crossed Over
11/20/2019
Passed
11/21/2019
Dead
Signed/Enacted/Adopted
11/27/2019

Introduced Session

116th Congress

Bill Summary

Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019 This bill directs various departments to assess whether political developments in Hong Kong justify changing Hong Kong's unique treatment under U.S. law. (Hong Kong is part of China but has a largely separate legal and economic system.) The Department of State shall report and certify annually to Congress as to whether Hong Kong is sufficiently autonomous from China to justify its unique treatment. The report shall address issues including (1) demands for universal suffrage; (2) law enforcement cooperation, including extradition requests; (3) sanctions enforcement and export controls; (4) decision-making within the Hong Kong government; (5) judicial independence; (6) civil liberties in Hong Kong, including freedom of assembly and freedom of the press; and (7) how any erosion to Hong Kong's autonomy impacts areas of U.S.-Hong Kong cooperation. The Department of Commerce shall report annually to Congress on China's efforts to use Hong Kong to evade U.S. export controls and sanctions and the extent of such violations occurring in Hong Kong generally. The report shall also (1) identify any items that were improperly reexported from Hong Kong, (2) assess whether dual-use items subject to U.S. export laws are being transshipped through Hong Kong, and (3) assess whether such dual-use items are being used to develop various mass-surveillance and predictive-policing tools or the social-credit system proposed for deployment in China. If the President determines that Hong Kong has proposed or enacted legislation that puts U.S. citizens at risk of extradition to mainland China or to another country that lacks defendants' rights protections, the President shall report to Congress on (1) a strategy for protecting U.S. citizens and businesses in Hong Kong, and (2) whether Hong Kong is legally competent to administer various law-enforcement agreements between Hong Kong and the United States. The State Department may not deny work- or student-visa applications from an otherwise qualified Hong Kong resident due to a politically motivated adverse action by the Hong Kong government against the applicant. The State Department shall encourage other democratic countries to take a similar approach. The President shall report to Congress a list of individuals responsible for committing acts that violate internationally recognized human rights in Hong Kong, including the extrajudicial rendition or torture of any person in Hong Kong. The bill bars such individuals from entering the United States and imposes sanctions on them.

AI Summary

This bill: The Hong Kong Human Rights and Democracy Act of 2019 directs the U.S. government to assess whether political developments in Hong Kong justify changing Hong Kong's unique treatment under U.S. law. It requires annual reports from the State Department on Hong Kong's autonomy and the extent to which it continues to warrant different treatment from mainland China. The bill also aims to protect U.S. citizens and businesses in Hong Kong, bar individuals responsible for human rights abuses from entering the U.S., and impose sanctions on them. Additionally, it encourages the State Department to work with other democratic countries to support Hong Kong's democratic aspirations and fundamental freedoms. The bill responds to concerns about Hong Kong's autonomy and democratic freedoms being undermined by the Chinese government.

Committee Categories

Government Affairs

Sponsors (57)

Marco Rubio (R)* Michael Bennet (D),  Marsha Blackburn (R),  Richard Blumenthal (D),  Cory Booker (D),  John Boozman (R),  Mike Braun (R),  Sherrod Brown (D),  Shelley Moore Capito (R),  Ben Cardin (D),  Bob Casey (D),  Susan Collins (R),  Chris Coons (D),  John Cornyn (R),  Catherine Cortez Masto (D),  Tom Cotton (R),  Kevin Cramer (R),  Ted Cruz (R),  Steve Daines (R),  Tammy Duckworth (D),  Dick Durbin (D),  Kirsten Gillibrand (D),  Lindsey Graham (R),  Chuck Grassley (R),  Kamala Harris (D),  Josh Hawley (R),  John Hoeven (R),  James Inhofe (R),  Johnny Isakson (R),  John Neely Kennedy (R),  Angus King (I),  Amy Klobuchar (D),  James Lankford (R),  Ed Markey (D),  Mitch McConnell (R),  Martha McSally (R),  Bob Menendez (D),  Jeff Merkley (D),  Jerry Moran (R),  Chris Murphy (D),  Patty Murray (D),  Jack Reed (D),  Jim Risch (R),  Mitt Romney (R),  Ben Sasse (R),  Chuck Schumer (D),  Rick Scott (R),  Jeanne Shaheen (D),  Dan Sullivan (R),  Pat Toomey (R),  Chris Van Hollen (D),  Mark Warner (D),  Elizabeth Warren (D),  Sheldon Whitehouse (D),  Roger Wicker (R),  Ron Wyden (D),  Todd Young (R), 

Last Action

Became Public Law No: 116-76. (TXT | PDF) (on 11/27/2019)

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