Boston Herald

Democrats’ environmen­tal, tax policies a gift to China

- By betsy mCCAughey Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York and author of “The Next Pandemic.”

China’s leaders must be trading high-fives as they watch the American left push policies that will cripple American competitiv­eness.

While China is cracking down on students wasting time on video games, America’s racial equity warriors are trying to ban advanced placement math, competitiv­e entrance exams and school honor rolls. Americans don’t want their government to wield power over how kids spend out-ofschool time, but they also don’t want their children discourage­d from pursuing excellence. It’s a recipe for personal failure and national decline.

On the economic front, congressio­nal Democrats are trying to ram through President Joe Biden’s tax plan, which would make America’s combined state and federal corporate tax burden the highest in the developed world, according to the Tax Foundation. This would motivate companies to relocate elsewhere. That’s good news for China, which is vowing to outproduce the U.S. by 2035.

And China couldn’t be happier about the American left’s Green New Deal. It will deliver plenty of green — money, that is — to China. Electric-powered cars will depend on batteries made in, you guessed it, China. China controls access to more than 80% of the minerals used to make those batteries.

China is the world’s largest polluter of carbon emissions. Biden’s climate envoy, John Kerry, spent two days in China last week spinning his wheels, begging China to stop building coal-fired energy plants. Coal plants are key to China’s plan to overtake the U.S. economy.

When Biden delivered his first address to the joint session of Congress in April, he announced, “We’re in a competitio­n with China and other countries to win the 21st century,” and he warned that China “is closing in fast.”

What is stunning is how many Democrats in Washington, D.C., seem oblivious to the damaging impact of their tax hikes, education agenda and domestic energy policies on the U.S.-China rivalry.

The U.S. Senate passed a bipartisan bill in June that purports to address the China threat by beefing up funding for research and developmen­t and incentiviz­ing domestic manufactur­e of semiconduc­tors. The bill is stalled in the House. And even if it reaches the president’s desk, its benefit would be minuscule compared with the Democratic Party’s frontal assaults on educationa­l merit, fossil fuels and economic growth. That bill is like a sip of water for someone who’s being beaten to a pulp. The Democrats are beating down America’s future economic potential.

Most Americans don’t want their country to decline. They’re especially outraged at the dumbing down of their children’s education. Oregon is scrapping requiremen­ts that high school students pass tests in reading, writing and math to graduate. The rationale is that minority students don’t test well.

In California, the educationa­l establishm­ent is trying to eliminate accelerate­d math until eleventh grade, forcing talented kids to go slow for the sake of other students. As one California father protested, “You don’t lift people by bringing other people down.”

And you don’t win the global competitio­n by reducing your pool of talented, highly educated people.

Fortunatel­y, American parents are showing up at school board meetings outraged by government-imposed mediocrity, among other issues.

New York Times opinion writer Michelle Cottle tells us “it is not a pretty sight” to see parents storming the meetings. Wrong. It’s a beautiful sight. It’s time for parents to take back control.

As for the growing threat from China, on Aug. 31, Biden pointed to it as justificat­ion for pulling out of Afghanista­n.

He pledged to “shore up American competitiv­eness.”

Step one, Mr. President, is to get tough with the taxhiking, radical environmen­talists in your own party, and speak out for high standards in schools.

 ?? U.s. departMent of state file ?? HOT AIR: U.S. Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry attends a meeting with Yang Jiechi, director of China’s Office of the Central Commission for Foreign Affairs, via video link in Tianjin, China. Though seeking to press China on curtailing greenhouse gas emissions, Kerry got pushback from China on other issues.
U.s. departMent of state file HOT AIR: U.S. Special Presidenti­al Envoy for Climate John Kerry attends a meeting with Yang Jiechi, director of China’s Office of the Central Commission for Foreign Affairs, via video link in Tianjin, China. Though seeking to press China on curtailing greenhouse gas emissions, Kerry got pushback from China on other issues.

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