Boston Herald

What did Joe Biden know, and when did he know it?

- By rich lowry Rich Lowry is editor-in-chief of the National Review.

The walls evidently aren’t closing in on President Joe Biden.

Despite the mainstream press finally taking up the sleazy business dealings discussed in emails found on Hunter Biden’s laptop, the media’s lack of interest in the president’s knowledge or involvemen­t in this lucrative part of the family business is palpable.

If President Donald Trump were caught up in similar circumstan­ces, he’d be hounded at every press conference with the question of what he knew and when he knew it. It’d dominate cable news and the Sunday shows, newspaper editorials and op-ed pages.

While it’s nice that the laptop, once dismissed as Russian disinforma­tion, is now finally considered a legitimate source of news by what are supposed to be news outlets, the reporting comes a year and half late and doesn’t add new informatio­n commensura­te with the delay.

The president’s son, Hunter, and his brother, Jim, have made a living from traffickin­g on their family name and political connection­s. The laptop is a guide to a particular­ly ripe example, a deal with CEFC China Energy, a cat’s paw of the Communist Party of China, that funneled nearly $5 million to Hunter and his uncle.

The president has said that he’s “never spoken” to Hunter about “his overseas business dealings.” Let’s stipulate that’s true. It still wouldn’t have taken much conversati­on for the then-vice president to understand why his son was hitching a ride on Air Force Two with him on a trip to China in 2013. It wasn’t for sightseein­g.

Hunter met with banker Jonathan Li, whose private equity fund got approved by Chinese authoritie­s shortly afterward. Hunter sat on the board.

Until they had a falling out over Hunter joining the board of the Ukrainian energy firm Burisma, Biden’s son was in business with John Kerry’s stepson, Chris Heinz.

How could Joe Biden and John Kerry, these sophistica­ted statesmen, not notice what was going on? Had they never encountere­d the phenomenon of relatives of government officials cashing in on proximity to power before?

Even if Joe Biden wanted to avert his gaze from Hunter, in the grip of a terrible addiction, what about his brother, Jim? Did Joe never talk to him about business either?

Even though we knew about it back in 2020, the CEFC deal remains jaw dropping. The company sought to extend Chinese influence as part of Beijing’s “Belt and Road” initiative. The founder of CEFC, Ye Jianming, roped in Hunter Biden, infamously giving him a 2.8 carat diamond after their first meeting. Everyone knew the score.

Hunter told Tony Bobulinski, recruited to structure the deal, that CEFC was “coming to be MY partner to be partners with the Bidens.”

The only one who didn’t understand the nature of this relationsh­ip was Joe Biden, who must have believed well-heeled Chinese companies sought out his son for his business acumen and sound judgment.

A notorious e-mail says that “the big guy,” identified by Bobulinksi as Joe Biden, was going to get a 10% cut of the deal. In a text, Hunter’s associate James Gilliar reminded Bobulinksi, “Don’t mention Joe being involved, it’s only when u are face to face.”

If Republican­s take the House, they should make all of this a major focus of investigat­ion. In the meantime, the press ought — out of shame, if nothing else — to bring more skepticism to assurances that Joe Biden knew nothing. Even the president’s fiercest critics don’t believe that he’s that clueless.

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