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Biden Administration International Affairs Personnel Tracker

Bill Nelson

Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration

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Bill Nelson has served in public office over four decades, first in the state legislature and U.S. Congress, then as State Treasurer. Starting in 2000, he was elected three times as U.S. Senator for the state of Florida and has worked on committees on government policy ranging from “defense, intelligence and foreign policy to finance, commerce and health care.” During his time in Congress, he chaired the Space Subcommittee in the U.S. House of Representatives for 6 years and in the Senate was the Chairman or Ranking Member of the Senate Space and Science Subcommittee and Ranking Member of the Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. 

According to the White House announcement of his nomination, “[m]ost every piece of space and science law has had his imprint, including passing the landmark NASA bill of 2010…[which] set NASA on its present dual course of both government and commercial missions” and was “known as the go-to senator for our nation’s space program.” He also has first-hand experience on Space Shuttle flights, medical research, and other university-related research projects and policy projects on space. Upon leaving Congress after the 2018 congressional races, Senator Chuck Schumer spoke on the Senate floor on Nelson’s history and contributions, noting that “it will be a long time before the Senate sees a champion for NASA and space exploration like Bill Nelson. It may never see one as committed again.” Nelson has been serving on the NASA Advisory Council since May 2019.

President Biden announced his nomination for Bill Nelson as NASA Administrator on March 19, 2021. Nelson’s appointment was confirmed by the Senate by consensus vote on April 29, 2021 and was sworn in on May 3, 2021.

Views On China

During his 30 years serving in Congress, Bill Nelson primarily focused on domestic issues and those related to his home state of Florida. There are spots of evidence, however, that show Nelson at least has had a long-term awareness of China’s relationship with the United States and its growing influence on the world. In 2006, he asked the NASA Administrator during a Senate Subcommittee meeting “Where do you see us going with China — competitor or colleague?” Over the last decade, his skepticism of Beijing’s reportedly cooperative intentions and transparency only grew; especially in space and telecommunications policy-building.

Since leaving public office in December 2018, Nelson has been relatively quiet on China and U.S.-China relations, though some in the media still regard him as a “longtime advocate for Sino-American space cooperation” who “clearly has a soft spot for China.”

In the past, Nelson has viewed China as a potential partner and friend. For instance, when Senator Nelson met with Mr. Yang Liwei, China’s first astronaut, for a goodwill visit in 2004, Nelson reportedly asked the Chinese Ambassador “So when are China and the United States going to cooperate together in space exploration, Mr. Ambassador?” adding that “I want us to go to Mars and I think we ought to go to Mars together.”

This idea of cooperation extended to dealing with issues like the North Korean nuclear crises. At a hearing on China’s role in Latin America in September 2005, Nelson stated that “the United States and China are increasingly coming together” especially on issues like denuclearization and Venezuelan oil. At a Senate Debate in October 2006, Nelson explained: “The US has got to do everything possible to stop the continued nuclear program, through diplomacy particularly via China and South Korea.” In response to the question “What would you do about China with regards to aligning trade policy with foreign policy?” at the same debate, Nelson replied with the following: 

This is the one area that we have trade that we can use as a hook to put pressure on North Korea. And then we can address the balance of trade. One of the things is the way they value their currency. We have been putting pressure on China to re-evaluate so the goods will more normally flow according to their value. But because of our trade deficit, we can use this as leverage to get them to help with the nukes in North Korea.

As the years wore on, Nelson’s view of China appeared to shift more towards openly cautious and contentious. Early on in Barack Obama’s presidency, Nelson continuously pressured the White House to confront China about “tainted Chinese drywall” while heading a bill that would have imposed an immediate recall and ban on the gas-emitting drywall from China. These calls for investigation were echoed in 2015 when safety concerns over laminated wood produced in China came to light. In a May 2008 hearing on “United States-China Relations in the Era of Globalization,” Nelson heavily questioned China’s lack of support in global counterterrorism efforts and brought up “long-term security concerns” over China’s massive infrastructure and energy investments in Africa. At the same meeting, At the same hearing, Nelson brought questions about China’s expanding goals and activities in space, concluding that “from a standpoint of United States diplomatic relations with them, and the balance of power, and holding the high ground…that’s something we’ve got to be concerned about.”

In 2014, in response to a National Research Council report that suggested bringing in China to the global space partnership, Nelson said “I just don’t trust them at this point. … The Chinese would like to steal everything we have.” He concluded by adding: “We’ll see. Things can change. I mean whoever thought we’d have the cooperation with the former Soviet Union.”

At the end of his career in Congress in 2018, Nelson was seen among a bipartisan group of six senators who were pushing Washington to reinstate penalties on Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE over concerns of the company conducting espionage for Beijing. Still, when President Trump followed through on steel and aluminium tariffs in 2018, Nelson expressed concerns that it could “start an international trade war.”

Simultaneously, Nelson has been criticized for making investments connected to Chinese telecom giant China Mobile, which the U.S. Department of Defense blacklisted in November 2020 along with 19 other major Chinese companies for its ties to the Chinese military. When fellow Florida Senator Rick Scott pointed them out, Nelson “dismissed [them]…as unimportant compared with Scott’s own investments.”

While he did not address China in his written testimony at his nomination hearing before the Senate on April 21, 2021, he did note that space investments “keep America competitive” and NASA is “in a new age of development full of limitless opportunities”. At another point in the hearing, Nelson acknowledged concerns about information security with China. Most notably, he noted (02:30:00) that “NASA will abide by” the Wolf Amendment that restricts information sharing on space issue with China; a policy that he echoed in a May 17 interview with The Verge. He added that “you better be concerned” about China’s partnering with Russia to go to the Moon together, though he indicated in the same May 17 interview with The Verge that this partnership would not impact the long-standing cooperation NASA has had with its Russian counterpart.

Starting in July 2021, Nelson has openly stated that he believes the U.S. and China are in a space race; though he is careful to note that this does not eliminate the potential for cooperation, drawing parallels to the U.S.-Soviet space race of the 20th century. Nelson told Scientific American this summer:

The Chinese civilian space program is, in reality, their military space program…That’s why I think we are going into a space race with China.

Still, Nelson’s intent to keep NASA and the U.S. space program open to cooperation with all parties is evident. By early June 2021, Nelson had made multiple statements about cooperation being an undeniable necessity in space and “look[ing] forward” to engaging with China in areas like “avoidance” and “space debris” to start with. In a press conference on June 2 following his first State of NASA Address, Nelson expressed “hope that China will respond” to expanded cooperation with transparency and acknowledged that, while recent Sino-Russian cooperation in space over the Moon “is concerning”, it does not and should not diminish opportunities for cooperation with NASA.

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Page Last Updated: October 27, 2021

*None of the personnel in this tracker are associated with the Institute for China-America Studies. All images used on this page are sourced from the official Biden-Harris transition website buildbackbetter.gov or the public domain.*