Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Toughness on China key in U.S. race

- DEB RIECHMANN AND JONATHAN LEMIRE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Hannah Fingerhut of The Associated Press.

WASHINGTON — China has fast become a top election issue as President Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden argue over who’s better at playing the tough guy against Beijing.

The Trump campaign put out ads showing Biden toasting China’s Xi Jinping, even though Trump did just that with Xi in Asia and hosted the Chinese leader at his Florida club. Spots from the Biden campaign feature Trump playing down the coronaviru­s and praising Xi for being transparen­t about the pandemic, even though it’s clear China hid details of the outbreak from the world.

“I think it’s going to be absolutely critical, but I don’t know who is going to have the advantage,” said Republican poll- ster Frank Luntz. He has been reviewing the ads and thinks China is one of the three leading issues along with the economy and the handling of the pandemic.

Voters also will be asking themselves whether Trump or Biden can best defend the U.S. against China’s unfair trade practices, theft of intellectu­al property rights, rising aggression across the globe and human-rights abuses.

“Which person looks more subservien­t to the Chinese leaders is the person who’s in more jeopardy,” Luntz said.

Trump’s advisers see China as an opportunit­y to portray Biden as deferentia­l to Beijing when he was President Barack Obama’s vice president and point person on Asia, according to three campaign officials and Republican­s close to the White House.

The Trump campaign credits the president with signing the first phase of a trade deal with China in January, which boosted stock markets and seemingly ended a bruising trade war. Republican­s want to tether Biden to past multinatio­nal agreements and trade deals blamed for an exodus of manufactur­ing jobs across the Midwest.

The White House lists more than two dozen actions the administra­tion has taken since April to protect U.S. jobs, businesses and U.S. supply chains from damage caused by the Chinese Communist Party’s policies. That includes last week’s move to impose sanctions on Chinese officials for their roles in repressing religious and ethnic minorities. More than a few administra­tion officials have recently delivered speeches calling out China’s policies.

Peter Navarro, one of Trump’s senior economic advisers, kept up the drumbeat on Fox News Channel’s “Sunday Morning Futures,” saying “the Chinese Communist Party basically hit us with that deadly virus, that weaponized virus” and disrupted the U.S. economy. He suggested Beijing was using social media apps such as TikTok to steal American intellectu­al property as part of a plan to hurt Trump for his strong stands against China.

“Trump, buy American. Joe Biden, buy China,” Navarro said.

The Trump campaign believes that could strike a chord with Americans who have an unfavorabl­e view of the Asian power. There also is rising concern about U.S. dependence on China for supplies — something that drew attention during the scramble for protective gear for U.S. health workers.

The Biden campaign is working to portray Trump as someone who talks tough but has failed to hold China accountabl­e for its response to the virus and has signed only the first phase of a trade deal. It says that while that deal was being negotiated, Trump was saying that covid-19 would “miraculous­ly” be gone in April.

“Trump said he’d get tough on China,” one of Biden campaign ads says. “He didn’t get tough. He got played.”

The Biden camp highlights other Trump vulnerabil­ities on China that surfaced in former national security adviser John Bolton’s new book, which claims Trump urged Xi to increase Chinese purchases of soybeans and wheat to help Trump in farm states in November.

Bolton also wrote that Trump told Xi that building detention camps for hundreds of thousands of Muslim and other ethnic and religious minorities in western China was “exactly the right thing to do.”

Trump claims he’s been tougher on China than any other president. The Biden campaign says Trump has weakened relations with allies and pulled the U.S. out of internatio­nal organizati­ons, giving China more room to exert its influence. Campaign officials say Biden aims to restore relationsh­ips with U.S. allies and rally the internatio­nal community to form a united front against China.

“What’s striking to me is the extent to which the Trump campaign seems to have thought that China would be a winning issue for them,” said Jeff Prescott, a foreign policy adviser for Biden.

“He was hiding from the warning signs coming in on the pandemic to get his trade deal done with Xi Jinping and then spent all of January and February and into March praising Xi — praising China’s handling of the coronaviru­s — and talking up his very flimsy phase one trade deal,” Prescott said.

 ?? (AP/Susan Walsh) ?? In this June 2019 photo, President Donald Trump (left) poses for a photo with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan. China has fast become a top election issue as Trump and Democrat Joe Biden spar over who’s better at playing the tough guy against Beijing.
(AP/Susan Walsh) In this June 2019 photo, President Donald Trump (left) poses for a photo with Chinese President Xi Jinping during a meeting on the sidelines of the G-20 summit in Osaka, Japan. China has fast become a top election issue as Trump and Democrat Joe Biden spar over who’s better at playing the tough guy against Beijing.

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