The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Trump accuses China of election meddling in trade war

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China has openly stated that they are actively trying to impact and change our election by attacking our farmers, ranchers and industrial workers because of their loyalty to me. Donald Trump, US President

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump accused China of seeking to influence knife-edge midterm congressio­nal elections by taking aim at his political base in the economic giants’ rapidly escalating trade war.

The allegation raised the temperatur­e in the escalating dispute after Trump pulled the trigger Monday on 10 per cent tariffs against another US$200 billion in Chinese goods from next week, with a threat of more tariffs on another US$267 billion.

Beijing responded by announcing new tariffs on US$60 billion of US imports to take effect at the same time.

In a combative series of tweets, Trump, whose Republican­s fear losing control of Congress in November, accused China of targeting retaliator­y trade measures for political effect.

Accusation­s of election meddling are especially sensitive, given the political maelstrom over Russia’s alleged interventi­on to support Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al vote.

“China has openly stated that they are actively trying to impact and change our election by attacking our farmers, ranchers and industrial workers because of their loyalty to me,” Trump wrote.

“China has been taking advantage of the United States on Trade for many years. They also know that I am the one that knows how to stop it,” he added.

“There will be great and fast economic retaliatio­n against China if our farmers, ranchers and/or industrial workers are targeted!”

It was unclear to which open statements by China – if any – Trump was referring.

However, China and other US trading partners have targeted their retaliatio­n to inflict pain in politicall­y sensitive areas, including in areas that Democrats hope take from Republican­s in November.

Recent NBC News/Marist polling has also found the trade war is unpopular in six states: Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, Pennsylvan­ia, Tennessee and Texas.

Trump believes that his tearing up of the internatio­nal trade rulebook is long overdue.

His promise to end what he says are grossly skewed Chinese trade relations was a key plank of his election.

At a news conference on Monday, Trump again said the United States had been “ripped off” by China.

“They rebuilt their country with tremendous amounts of money pouring out of the United States. I have changed that around,” Trump said during a news conference with Polish President Andrzej Duda.

“Our country has been abused and taken advantage of by virtually every country that it does business with. And we’re just not letting that happen anymore.”

Washington accuses China in particular of seeking global industrial dominance through industrial espionage and forced transfers of technology from foreign companies, statespons­ored corporate acquisitio­ns, illicit market interventi­ons, subsidies and dumping.

Administra­tion officials told reporters this week that China had been “obdurate” in refusing to address American grievances.

Once the new round of tariffs takes effect on Sept 24, punitive duties will be in place on US$250 billion in goods the US buys from China – its largest source of imports.

This latest round of imports will face 10 per cent tariffs through the end of the year, when the rate jumps to 25 per cent.

Trump has warned further retaliatio­n from China will see the US put duties on all US imports from the Asian economy.

The new taxes will hit a broad swath of products, including billions in Chinese-made voice data receivers, computer memory modules, data processors, and accessorie­s for office equipment such as copiers and banknote dispensers – instantly making widely used goods more expensive.

However, officials told reporters the initial list announced in July was reduced by 300 products following complaints from US industry.

The products spared included consumer electronic­s like smartwatch­es and Bluetooth devices, child safety products such as high chairs, car seats and playpens, and certain health and safety products such as bicycle helmets.

The removal of smartwatch­es and wireless headphones represents a win for tech giant Apple, which had warned the tariffs would hit its Apple Watch and Airpods product lines.

The escalating confrontat­ion initially shook up global stock markets, but Wall Street closed up solidly with investors relieved Trump’s measures had not been harsher.

While officials say the impact on the US economy has been minimal, firms across the country have reported lost business, layoffs and possible bankruptci­es as input costs rise.

US officials told reporters the lower initial tariff rate would give businesses time to find new suppliers.

In Brussels, EU Trade commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom described the new US tariffs as “very regrettabl­e” and added that Europeans were “at odds with Washington’s methods.”

“The escalation” in the USChinese trade dispute “is very worrying,” said Dieter Kempf, president of the German Industrial Federation, adding however that China must “take seriously the criticism of its partners.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Photo shows China’s President Xi Jinping (left) and US President Trump at a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing last year.Trump accused China of seeking to influence knife-edge midterm congressio­nal elections by taking aim at his political base in the economic giants’ rapidly escalating trade war. — AFP photo
Photo shows China’s President Xi Jinping (left) and US President Trump at a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing last year.Trump accused China of seeking to influence knife-edge midterm congressio­nal elections by taking aim at his political base in the economic giants’ rapidly escalating trade war. — AFP photo

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