The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia GOP candidates turn China into hot topic

‘ Even in wrestling, you’ve got to have a villain,’ legislator says.

- By Greg Bluestein greg.bluestein@ajc.com

Eager to talk about anything but the coronaviru­s pandemic, Republican­s competing in Georgia’s twin U. S. Senate races have turned to a topic that rarely gets much attention in the state during election season: China.

Suddenly, China is getting top billing by GOP candidates echoing President Donald Trump’s attempts to blame the Asian superpower for a pandemic that has killed 220,000 Americans and triggered the nation’s worst economic slowdown in decades.

In a tough re- election battle, U. S. Sen. David Perdue has falsely claimed Democrat Jon Ossoff was endorsed by the Communist Party and responded to criticism of the GOP’s handling of the virus by slamming his opponent for selling a documentar­y to a Hong Kong- based company with ties to China.

“You took money fromthe Chinese government that originated this virus in the fifirst place,” Perdue said during the fifirst debate with Ossoff.

The back-and-forth in the other race, a 21- candidate free- for- all for U. S. Sen. Kelly Loeffler’s seat, is even nastier. Loeffler and U.S. Rep. Doug Collins have traded fifire over links to China as they scramble for pro- Trump votes ahead of an expected January runoff against Democrat Raphael Warnock.

In the past few weeks, Loeffler has blamed China for the presi

dent’s coronaviru­s diagnosis and warred with Collins over legislatio­n thatwould punish the U.S. rival. On Monday, the tangle sharpened when the congressma­n accused Loeffler of hanging a portrait of former Chinese Communist leader Mao Zedong in her Buckhead home.

The Republican­s are taking their cues from Trump, whose prospects for re- election have been damaged by his administra­tion’s response to the pandemic. He has consistent­ly blamed China for the outbreak that originated in its central city of Wuhan and spread across the globe.

“If we would have listened to you, the country would have been left wide open,” Trump told Democrat Joe Biden during the first presidenti­al debate. “Millions of people would have died, not 200,000, and one person is toomuch. It’s China’s fault. It should have never happened.”

Public health experts often note that China and other countries have managed to contain the outbreak better than the U.S., where the disease has infected more than 8 million people, including at least 340,000 in Georgia.

“I get why they’re doing it. Even in wrestling, you’ve got to have a villain,” said state Rep. Kasey Carpenter, a Dalton Republican. “And there’s so much anger because of this pandemic, you want to point a finger. Democrats point at Trump, sowe point at China. That’s what we’re seeing out there.”

Stocks and swipes

Perdue’s pivot to China coincides with polls showing a deadlocked race against Ossoff, who owns a documentar­y film company. The Republican has seized upon Ossoff ’ s recent disclosure that his company received at least $ 5,000 from the HongKong based company.

Ossoff responded to Perdue’s attack during last week’s debate by lamenting the Washington “swamp,” and on Tuesday he brought up the Republican’s remarks in a 2005 deposition about his brief stint as chief executive of Pillowtex, a North Carolina textile manufactur­er that collapsed shortly after he left.

“He infamously bragged under oath that he spent most of his career outsourcin­g American jobs to Asia and that he’s proud of it,” Ossoff said. “And I suppose that it’s that underlying bitterness at how China has been allowed to rip off American workers and the American economy that makes it a potent political issue.”

With two Republican­s scrapping over pro- Trump votes in the other U. S. Senate race, the fight over China is getting a different sort of workout.

Loeffler released an allcaps statement demanding that China be held “ACCOUNTABL­E” after Trump tested positive for coronaviru­s, leading Democrats to as sail her for ignoring the president’s preference for crowded rallies and public events that don’t require masks or social distancing.

Shortly after, Collins slammed Interconti­nental Exchange, the Atlantabas­ed financial trading platform also known as ICE that Loeffler’s husband owns. He called on Loeffler to urge the firm to oust 10 Chinese state- owned companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange, which ICE owns.

“If you really wanted to get at China, and make sure you hit the Communist Party, you would de- list those companies,” Collins said Tuesday at a campaign stop. “You don’t need legislatio­n to do that, senator. You could do that right now.”

Her campaign countered by bringing up a Senate bill she co- sponsored thatwould impose stricter requiremen­ts on publicly traded companies with ties to the Chinese government, a measure that’s pending in the U.S. House.

“Maybe if Doug showed up towork instead of being a hypocrite, the bill might actually pass,” Loeffler spokesman Stephen Lawson said.

A Mao move

The issue reached a new level Monday during the Atlanta Press Club debate when Collins quizzed Loeffler about whether she still has “the $ 56,000 portrait of Chairman Mao hanging in your foyer, as was seen on social media.”

“Seems a little hypocritic­al,” he said, “ormaybe it’s just enlighteni­ng.”

Loeffler countered by accusing Collins of making a series of gender- based attacks on her stint in the U. S. Senate, which began in January after Gov. Brian Kemp appointed her to the seat that retired Republican U. S. Sen. Johnny Isakson gave up.

“You’ve attacked my hair, my makeup, how I talk, my clothes, where I’m from,” Loeffler said. “You’ve lied about me. You lie aboutmy family. And let me tell you, here’s the truth: I’m here because I’ve earned everything I’ve got.”

A Collins aide said the picture he referred to came from a now- deleted 2018 Facebook photo that was taken down shortly after the congressma­n mentioned it during the debate.

The photo was taken in front of what looked like an Andy Warhol painting or print of Mao Zedong that was inspired by President Richard Nixon’s landmark visit to China in 1972.

Loeffler’s spokesman initially suggested the image was “photoshopp­ed.” He said Wednesday that the senator and her husband do not own the Mao portrait, but that itwas unclear whether it was on display in their Atlanta estate in the past. Collins and his campaign say it was not a doctored image, and they intend to highlight it through November.

Democrats, meanwhile, are baffled by the fight.

Charlie Bailey, the party’s 2018 nominee for attorney general, said that if Republican­s were truly concerned about China, they would be more critical about Trump’s response to the mass internment of ethnic Uighurs and crackdowns of pro- democracy protests in Hong Kong.

“The leadership of China deserves plenty of criticism from both sides of the aisle. But Republican­s are all too comfortabl­e with blaming China,” Bailey said. “They caremore about this other- izing and making us fearful of fellow Americans.

“We don’t control the Chinese government, butwe do control our own.”

 ?? NG HAN GUAN/ ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The topic of relations with China and its business practices featured heavily in both debates between President Donald Trumpand Joe Biden, aswell as that between leading candidates for one of Georgia’s twoU. S. Senate seats.
NG HAN GUAN/ ASSOCIATED PRESS The topic of relations with China and its business practices featured heavily in both debates between President Donald Trumpand Joe Biden, aswell as that between leading candidates for one of Georgia’s twoU. S. Senate seats.

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