USMCA Review Begins as US Presses to Counter China; Chinese Battery Firm Loses $23 Million Ohio Incentives
July 1 is the deadline for the renewal of the $2 trillion U.S.–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA). But the United States has chosen not to renew it, triggering annual reviews between the three countries. What’s at the heart of the issue?
America’s AI race with China is heating up. Why is the United States lifting export restrictions on some of its most advanced AI models?
Ohio has canceled more than $20 million in tax incentives for a Chinese battery component company after it failed to deliver on its promises.
July 1 marks the anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). Outside China, it’s also observed by anti-communist Chinese communities as Global Quit the CCP Day. We take a look at how they’re marking the occasion.
Beijing is stepping up its global clampdown with a new law that allows the communist regime to target people beyond China’s borders.
- USMCA Review Begins as US Presses to Counter China
- USMCA First Review Begins With No Renewal in Sight
- Chinese Battery Firm Loses $23 Million Ohio Incentives
- Ohio Residents Concerned With Semcorp’s Operations
- Report: CCP Harassment Rising Across US
- US Lifts Anthropic Export Ban Amid AI Race With China
- 462 Million Chinese People Denounced CCP
- End CCP Motorcade Rallies Across New York City
- Chinese New Yorkers Protest Before Chinese Consulate
- China’s Unity Law Expands Global Clampdown
- China Sends New Warship Into Pacific, Raising Concerns
- Birthright Citizenship Fight Far From Over
- Expert: 14th Amendment Blocks Birthright Changes
- Expert: Congress Could Test Birthright Law
- Philipp: Beijing Exploits US Birthright Citizenship
- Expert: Easier to Change Laws Than Constitution










