European Parliament heads to China after 8 years; members say it’s no sign of giving in
After an eight-year hiatus, a delegation from the European Parliament's Internal Market and Consumer Protection committee will travel to China next week, followed by the parliament's official China delegation in late May. The visits to Beijing and Shanghai aim to address concerns about Chinese trade practices, product standards, and the influx of e-commerce from companies like Shein, Temu, and ByteDance, which are under EU regulatory scrutiny.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedAfter an eight-year hiatus, a delegation from the European Parliament's Internal Market and Consumer Protection committee will travel to China next week, followed by the parliament's official China delegation in late May. The visits to Beijing and Shanghai aim to address concerns about Chinese trade practices, product standards, and the influx of e-commerce from companies like Shein, Temu, and ByteDance, which are under EU regulatory scrutiny. The delegation will meet with officials, lawmakers, and company representatives. These trips mark a resumption of dialogue after a long period strained by the pandemic and human rights sanctions, despite ongoing disagreements on issues like Russia and Taiwan. The goal is to ensure fair trade practices and adherence to EU product standards.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe sides clashed over thorny issues such as Russia and Taiwan during their first official talks for seven years in Brussels in October.
We want to send a message that it is vitally important that the internal market is not overflooded with dumped or overcapacity products from China.
The visit opens the door to travel by members (MEPs) to China, which was halted for years under the strains of the pandemic and sanctions over human rights.
Seven members from the parliament’s Internal Market and Consumer Protection committee will travel to Beijing and Shanghai.
European Parliament is sending an official delegation to China after eight years.