Global Times

Trump eyes 2020 reelection campaign

- By Liu Lulu

President Donald Trump has only just completed his first year in the White House, but he is already looking ahead to a 2020 reelection campaign, tapping Brad Parscale to get the ball rolling.

In a statement on Tuesday, Trump’s campaign announced the 42-year-old digital expert would begin preparing the groundwork for what already promises to be a long and highly divisive campaign.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Parscale would still be in place as campaign manager when the race begins in earnest.

But his appointmen­t is another sign of what analysts have called America’s “permanent campaign.”

“Brad was essential in bringing a discipline­d technology and data-driven approach to how the 2016 campaign was run,” said top White House

aide Jared Kushner.

US President Donald Trump announced his 2020 re-election bid by tapping Brad Parscale, a veteran of 2016, as his campaign manager. It surprised observers that a sitting president formally launched a campaign this early in a term: three years before the election. How Sino-US relations will be affected is what Chinese media and scholars most care about.

The China factor never fades from Washington politics. Republican­s and Democrats seem to be competing with each other in hyping the China threat theory as their canvassing suggests that playing the China card is effective. Sensationa­lizing China-related topics in elections is a chronic malady in US politics and a key reason for the twists and turns of Sino-US relations over the years. Trump labeled China a “rival” that challenges US interests, its economy and values in his State of the Union address in January.

In this context, China-related topics are highly likely to see a rise during Trump’s 2020 campaign. Politician­s with a strong anti-China agenda, for instance Republican Senator Marco Rubio, may be more active in sensationa­lizing the so-called China threat. Rubio earlier urged Canberra and Washington to develop joint strategies to counter Beijing’s “growing political interferen­ce” and most recently called for the closure of Confucius Institutes in the US, citing “China’s infiltrati­on of American colleges” as an excuse. He may raise his tough-on-China rhetoric in Trump’s campaign.

China is fully aware that Washington’s aggressive posture toward Beijing suits electoral needs. It is ready to respond and counteract any action by the Trump administra­tion that may harm Sino-US ties. China and the US have their respective political processes.

The already-intense bipartisan friction in the US will inevitably become more prominent during the election campaign and may eventually result in political quagmires that affect Washington’s diplomacy. China understand­s this, but the Sino-US relationsh­ip cannot be swayed by US elections.

Beijing and Washington, after negotiatio­ns, reached consensus on issues during Trump’s term in office. Despite disputes, the Sino-US relationsh­ip has remained stable overall. Practical efforts and coordinati­on are needed from the two sides to address these difference­s.

China has the will and capability to arrange its political agenda and push Sino-US relations in a positive direction based on its own arrangemen­ts.

The US presidenti­al election tests not only Sino-US relations, but also the US political system. Who would trust a political system whose politician­s keep on creating distractio­ns?

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