The Niagara Falls Review

Obama takes fresh aim at China

-

MILWAUKEE — President Barack Obama kept up his attack on Chinese trade practices during a campaign-style visit on Wednesday to a Midwest factory, where his call to bring jobs back home was intended to resonate with voters in an election year.

The day after meeting China’s leader-in-waiting, Vice President Xi Jinping, at the White House, Obama cited America’s chief rival a number of times in a speech to promote the potential of “insourcing” jobs back to America from overseas.

“I’m not going to stand by when our competitor­s don’t play by the same rules,” he told workers at Master Lock, a company he lauded in his State of the Union address last month for having moved back about 100 union jobs from China since mid-2010.

“So I directed my admini stration to create a Trade Enforcemen­t Unit, and it’s only got one job: investigat­ing unfair trade practices in countries like China,” he said at the start of a three-day swing to promote his re-election message.

Obama took a firm line over trade on Tuesday during his Oval Office meeting with Xi, who is in line to assume the Chinese presidency in March 2013. Xi is visiting the United States this week and urged greater co-operation between Beijing and Washington on Wednesday.

Obama’s tough stance should appeal to voters in election battlegrou­nd states like Wisconsin, which have witnessed many factory closures over the years as manufactur­ing shifts abroad, and where Beijing is often blamed for killing American jobs.

How

to cope with

a

rising China — and compete against cheap Chinese exports — is one of the challenges the president must navigate as he seeks re- election, with polls showing rising U. S. voter frustratio­n with the Asian economic powerhouse.

He proposes closing t ax breaks for companies that move U. S. jobs overseas, while providing incentives to firms that bring work home, particular­ly in high- tech manufactur­ing. Republican­s say that adding extra rules will not spur U.S. job creation.

“The best thing the president can do to prevent outsourcin­g is pull back on the destructiv­e policies — like his health care law and regulation­s — and threat of tax hikes,” said Brendan Buck, spokesman for House of Representa­tives Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada