Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Trump signs bill and an order rebuking China

- By Zeke Miller, Deb Riechmann and Matthew Lee

WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump signed legislatio­n and an executive order on Tuesday that he said will hold China accountabl­e for its oppressive actions against the people of Hong Kong, then quickly shifted his policy speech into a political one, hurling broadsides against Democratic rival Joe Biden.

The legislatio­n and order are part of the Trump administra­tion’s steppedup offensive against China for what he calls the rising Asian superpower’s exploitati­on of America and its effort to conceal details about the human-to-human transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s from the world. The almost daily administra­tion attacks on Beijing come as Trump defends his own response to the virus, with cases surging in parts of the United States, and as he works ahead of the election to portray Biden as soft on China.

“So Joe Biden and President Obama freely allowed China to pillage our factories, plunder our communitie­s and steal our most precious secrets,” Trump said, adding, “I’ve stopped it largely.”

Trump said that as vice president, Biden advocated for the Paris Agreement addressing climate change; Trump withdrew the U.S. from the accord. “It would have crushed American manufactur­ers while allowing China to pollute the atmosphere with impunity, yet one more gift from Biden to the Chinese Communist Party,” Trump said.

Trump talked up his own tough approach to Beijing, though he spent the early weeks of the pandemic praising Chinese President Xi Jinping. The two nations signed phase one of a trade deal, but since then, relations have soured and Trump told reporters in the Rose Garden that he has no interest in talking to Xi.

The legislatio­n Trump signed into law targets police units that have cracked down on Hong Kong protesters as well as Chinese Communist Party officials responsibl­e for imposing a new, strict national security law widely seen as chipping away at Hong Kong’s autonomy. The mandatory sanctions are also required to be imposed on banks that conduct business with the officials.

While he signed the bill into law, Trump issued a statement saying the administra­tion would not view as binding certain sections of the law that the White House believes limit a president’s powers to conduct foreign policy.

Lawmakers from both parties have urged Trump to take strong action in response to China’s new national security law that erodes the “one country, two systems” framework under which Britain handed Hong Kong over to China in 1997. Hong Kong is considered a special administra­tive region within China and has its own governing and economic systems.

“This law gives my administra­tion powerful new tools to hold responsibl­e the individual­s and the entities involved in extinguish­ing Hong Kong’s freedom,” Trump said. “Their freedom has been taken away. Their rights have been taken away, and with it goes Hong Kong in my opinion because it will no longer be able to compete with free markets. A lot of people will be leaving Hong Kong, I suspect.”

The executive order he signed did not appear to go beyond his administra­tion’s previous determinat­ions that Hong Kong is no longer eligible for preferenti­al treatment from the United States. Trump said the order strikes those privileges but, in fact, the administra­tion already has been in the process of eliminatin­g them for nearly two months.

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