Daily News (Los Angeles)

Dems blast GOP disloyalty charge against Chu

- By Ryan Carter rcarter@scng.com

Democrats in Southern California and nationally are rallying around San Gabriel Valley-area Rep. Judy Chu, who is fiercely pushing back after a GOP congressma­n suggested she was disloyal to the nation after reports in conservati­ve media that she and the longtime CEO of a Pasadena-based bank have ties to the Chinese Communist Party.

The accusation­s, denied as racist and unfounded by Chu in a series of statements over the past two weeks, sparked among the fiercest pushback after Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Texas appeared on Fox News on Wednesday, saying that Chu “should be looked into” by the FBI following reports in the conservati­ve outlet the Daily Caller of her ties to Dominic Ng, the CEO of San Gabriel Valley-based East West Bank, and that she was “honorary president” for the All American Chinese Youth Federation, a group whose other leaders are said to have belonged to an alleged Chinese intelligen­ce service.

“I think that everyone that's standing up for the Chinese Communist Party should be looked into, yes,” Gooden answered to a question from host Jesse Waters.

“I think Judy needs to be called out,” he said, adding that he questioned “her either loyalty or competence. If she doesn't realize what's going on, then she's totally out of touch with one of her core constituen­cies.”

Gooden suggested that Chu should no longer have access to intelligen­ce briefings.

The comments, which echoed an earlier letter penned by Gooden and five other Republican­s to the FBI demanding an investigat­ion into

Ng's ties to the Chinese

Communist

Party, drew immediate ire from Democrats and Chu herself as the allegation­s questionin­g her loyalty, and that of Ng's, echoed over cable news and print in recent days.

Chu immediatel­y pushed back, telling the Washington Post after Gooden's Fox spot that Gooden's com

ments questionin­g her loyalty to the U.S. were “absolutely outrageous,” based on “false informatio­n spread by an extreme, right-wing website. Furthermor­e, it is racist. I very much doubt that he would be spreading these lies were I not of Chinese American descent.”

In recent days, irate Democrats have rushed to support Chu, who rose from a school board member at the Garvey School District in Rosemead to the Monterey Park City Council to ultimately the first Chinese American woman elected to Congress in 2009.

On Friday, Irvine state Sen. Dave Min condemned Gooden's comments, adding that “throughout her career in public service, Congresswo­man Chu has served honorably and the racist, xenophobic, antiAsian hate directed toward her by a fellow member of Congress is disgusting and appalling.”

House Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries called the comments “slanderous,” calling the questionin­g of Chu's loyalty to the nation “dangerous, unconscion­able and xenophobic.”

Jeffries called Gooden's comments “dangerous, unconscion­able and xenophobic,” according to Axios. “Congressma­n Gooden appears to sympathize with violent insurrecti­onists and spreads big lies to the American people, having voted not to certify the election of President Joe Biden. Look in the mirror, Lance. You have zero credibilit­y,” Jeffries said.

The Washington Post noted that the Daily Caller has also alleged that Chu has said she wished for Taiwan and China “to become one family” at a 2019 dinner for an organizati­on against Taiwan's independen­ce. But Chu reiterated to the Post and in an earlier statement that she had no affiliatio­n with such a group.

“I have been accused of serving as the honorary president of an organizati­on … with ties to the Chinese Communist Party. I am not and have never been a member of this group, and I never gave my permission to be listed as the `honorary president' for it or any other organizati­on like it,'” she said in a Feb. 14 statement.

Gooden's accusation­s on Fox News were actually a step beyond those formalized in the Feb. 15 letter written by Gooden and the five other Republican­s, demanding that FBI Director Christophe­r Wray investigat­e Ng. President Joe Biden appointed Ng to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n Business Advisory Council last April.

In the role, according to the U.S. State Department, Ng and his counterpar­ts advise APEC leaders on issues affecting economic growth in the Asia-Pacific region. For decades, APEC itself has served as a highprofil­e economic platform for the United States to engage its regional partners on structural issues “to advance a fair, open, sustainabl­e and inclusive economic and trade architectu­re,” according to the State Department.

But the House members essentiall­y echoed allegation­s published on the conservati­ve news site that Ng served in leadership roles in two Chinese intelligen­ce front groups and said that “political actors like Ng use such roles to try to gain influence in sensitive American institutio­ns to advocate for the interests of China,” a U.S. adversary.

In the letter, Gooden and his co-authors pointed to Chu's support of Ng — prior to his appointmen­t to APEC — for U.S. secretary of commerce, and Chu's membership as “honorary president” for the All America Chinese Youth Federation, a communist front group, they alleged, as suggestive of her ties to Ng and to China.

What's at stake, they said, is that the appointmen­t of Ng was an example of a lack of scrutiny on appointees and demanded the Biden Administra­tion take steps to not let it happen again.

“If the Biden Administra­tion does not take the CCP seriously, our leaders are risking an endless slew of national security breaches,” they wrote to Wray.

According to the Washington Post, the bank Ng runs said in a statement Thursday that he was never an active member of either of the groups cited by the GOP letter and by the Daily Caller.

Ng, the top executive of East-West since 1991, is known for building the bank founded in Los Angeles and headquarte­red in Pasadena from a small savings and loan institutio­n to a giant among regional banks, with more than $64 billion in assets, more than 3,000 employees and 600,000 customers globally.

His resume includes previous board service on the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and the United Way of Greater Los Angeles, and he was named one of Forbes' 25 most notable Chinese Americans, and the Los Angeles Business Journal's Business Person of the Year, among other things.

Chu, among others, defended Ng.

“We are extremely disturbed and outraged — but not surprised — that some of our Republican colleagues in Congress would undermine his candidacy and even question his loyalty to the United States based entirely on loose claims of associatio­n trafficked on extreme-right outlets with extensive histories of spreading misinforma­tion,” Chu said in a joint statement along with Ted Lieu, D-Torrance; Grace Meng, D-New York; and Mark Takano, D-Riverside, all leaders of the Asian Pacific American Caucus.

“No Chinese Americans — indeed no Americans — should face suspicions of disloyalty or treason based on their ethnicity, nation of origin, or that of their family members,” the statement added, “That kind of profiling is beneath us all, particular­ly those entrusted with public office.”

The growing episode has arrived amid simmering tension with China in recent weeks but also deepening division between Republican­s and Democrats in Washington, D.C., propelled by squabbles over the nation's relationsh­ip with the Asian power.

A Chinese spy balloon a U.S. fighter jet shot down Feb. 4 off the coast of South Carolina amplified tensions. Congressio­nal Republican­s and the White House scrapped over the incident, with the GOP pressing for answers about why the balloon was allowed to traverse the continenta­l U.S. before going after it.

Chu agreed the balloon flyover into U.S. air space was a violation of national sovereignt­y that has hurt relations between the two nations. But what it's not, she added, was an “excuse to misreprese­nt and cast aspersions on the loyalties of Americans of Chinese descent like me.”

 ?? ?? Chu
Chu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States