Miami Herald

To compete with China, Biden needs bipartisan help

- BY TRUDY RUBIN The Philadelph­ia Inquirer Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial board member for the The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. Tribune Content Agency

As President Donald Trump continues to spew lies about “election fraud,” he is handing China a huge Christmas gift.

Trump touts his hardline tack toward Beijing as a historic policy shift. He warned during the election campaign that if Joe Biden won, China “would own the United States.”

On the contrary, President-elect Biden grasps something Trump never understood. The president’s chaotic China policy — and his failed trade deal — ignored the essential elements for success: convincing Chinese leaders that America’s democratic system is not crumbling and uniting with other democracie­s to beat China at its own game.

The bitter, Trump-driven effort to discredit the election has only strengthen­ed Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s message to his people — that their authoritar­ian system and high-tech achievemen­ts are poised to overtake the United States.

Chinese state-controlled media are filled with disdainful commentary about the election — and over the still soaring U.S. deaths from COVID-19 after Beijing stamped out the pandemic there.

“Hopeless America,” proclaimed a columnist at the official Xinhua News Agency. “U.S. democracy now a joke,” wrote the Ta Kung Pao broadsheet. “Time to wake up from blind faith in the Western system,” said the state-run China Education News last week. “Vicious partisan fighting has worsened … and a severe social crisis is brewing.” And on and on.

And Trump’s trade deal certainly didn’t dissuade Xi Jinping from an increasing­ly aggressive policy overseas.

Trump’s instincts about unfair Chinese trade practices were correct. But as his former national security adviser John Bolton has written, the president’s trade policy was incoherent, driven not by strategy but by his own political needs.

Rather than insist on structural changes that would force China to play fair in trade and technology, Trump focused on sweettalki­ng Xi Jinping to buy

more soybeans in order to help the president win farm states in the election. Meantime, in October, America’s trade deficit with China was as large as last year’s. In the holiday season, imports from China are soaring.

And the cost of Trump’s trade tariffs against China have been borne not by Beijing, as the president claims, but by U.S. consumers and taxpayers.

So Xi Jinping had

Trump’s number, as he continues to strengthen China’s military and make

military gains in the region at America’s expense.

Which brings us to President-elect Biden, for whom China policy will be the biggest foreign policy challenge. Here is what he has recognized, something that Trump never understood:

First, an America First policy will never be enough to make China reconsider its mercantili­st trade policies, such as stealing intellectu­al property, illegal subsidies and forced “technology transfers” from American companies. “The

most effective way to meet that challenge is to build a united front of U.S. allies and partners to confront China’s abusive behaviors,” Biden wrote in the March issue of Foreign Affairs.

Unlike Trump, Biden will work to renew alliances with America’s democratic partners in Europe and Asia, from day one.

Second, to compete effectivel­y with China, America must have a functionin­g political system, with bipartisan cooperatio­n in Congress. Anyone who travels to

China can see the country is pulling ahead of the United States in infrastruc­ture and internet connectivi­ty.

It is prepared to overtake us in critical areas of technology that will determine who leads the world in the future.

But without bipartisan­ship, America cannot make the advances in infrastruc­ture and key technologi­es to prevent China from overtaking us.

It is time for a bipartisan accord on a U.S. industrial policy – call it a Sputnik moment.

Biden gets this. ““There is no reason we should be falling behind China or anyone else when it comes to clean energy, quantum computing, artificial intelligen­ce, 5G, high-speed rail, or the race to end cancer as we know it,” he wrote in Foreign Affairs.

No reason at all, if patriotism finally displaces cowardice on Capitol Hill and proves that American democracy can renew itself.

All it takes is a few upright GOP senators to lead the way.

 ?? ARTYOM IVANOV/TASS TNS ?? Back in 2017, China's President Xi Jinping and President Trump prepared to shake hands during a meeting outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
ARTYOM IVANOV/TASS TNS Back in 2017, China's President Xi Jinping and President Trump prepared to shake hands during a meeting outside the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States