WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed a bill on Tuesday to tighten foreign investment rules, spurred by bipartisan concerns about Chinese bids to acquire sophisticated U.S. technology.

FILE PHOTO: Staff members set up Chinese and U.S. flags for a meeting between Chinese Transport Minister Li Xiaopeng and U.S. Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao at the Ministry of Transport of China in Beijing, China April 27, 2018. REUTERS/Jason Lee/Pool/File Photo

The bill, passed 400-2, is one of a series of measures being considered by the Trump administration and Congress to address national security concerns as well as what they see as China’s unfair trade and intellectual property practices.

Other measures include tariffs on goods ranging from aluminum to automobiles, and efforts to prevent the expansion in the United States of Chinese telecommunications companies Huawei Technologies Co Ltd and ZTE Corp.

The House bill, and a Senate version, address worries that Chinese companies, many with links to the government, have tried to buy U.S. semiconductor manufacturers and other technology firms. The U.S. Defense Department also fears losing America’s technological edge in warfare.

Both the House and Senate bills involve the U.S. Committee on Foreign Investment (CFIUS), which reviews foreign investment to ensure it does not harm national security.

President Donald Trump supports the CFIUS legislation but has opposed a measure in the Senate version which would kill his administration’s agreement to allow ZTE to resume business with U.S. suppliers.

The House bill passed on Tuesday would allow CFIUS to expand its reviews to minority stakes in U.S. companies. It also puts a focus on investments that may expose sensitive data about Americans to foreign governments or reveal information about critical infrastructure, like the telecommunications network.

“This landmark legislation will take enormous steps to improve our foreign investment review process to prevent further transfers of military applicable technologies to the Chinese government,” said Republican Representative Robert Pittenger, a driver behind the legislation.

Another effort aimed at hemming in Chinese influence may come on Friday, when the U.S. Treasury Department is due to issue recommendations on investment restrictions. There have been conflicting signals from the Trump administration over whether they would focus on China.

Several members of Congress from both parties have worried that U.S. scrutiny could push Chinese investment to Europe, with Beijing’s influence growing there.

On Capitol Hill on Tuesday, senators questioned a top State Department official about whether the Trump administration is encouraging European countries to adopt a CFIUS-like process.

Wess Mitchell, assistant secretary of state for European affairs, said the administration is “in active, ongoing dialogue” with allies in central and eastern Europe to find a way to differentiate between investments that are commercial and those that create national security concerns.

“The Chinese investment in central and eastern Europe is serious, it’s strategic and it’s growing,” Mitchell said, adding that between 2005 and 2017 there was more than $24.19 billion in Chinese investment in the countries of central and eastern Europe. “They’re competing for influence,” Mitchell said.