Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Editorial Roundup

Recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:

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The Washington Post on the U.S. feeding children in 2023 (Sept. 23): The children’s names rarely make the news. They are the millions of kids in Somalia, Libya, Mali, Haiti, Afghanista­n, Yemen and other poor nations who don’t have enough to eat. They were born into families that make less than $2.15 per person a day. Their plight has worsened as food prices around the world have soared because of global inflation, natural disasters and war, especially Russia’s unjust invasion of Ukraine, in which Russian President Vladimir Putin has attempted to block one of the world’s critical grain supplies from reaching many of the neediest nations.

The United States last year rallied other countries and wealthy families to ensure 160 million of the world’s neediest had enough to eat. The job needs doing again.

What sets the United States apart as a global leader is more than military might; it’s how this nation steps up in moments of global crisis, including times of hunger and famine. As Secretary of State Antony Blinken said this month, “The United States is the largest donor in the world to the U.N. World Food Program. We provide about 50% of its annual budget. Russia and China? Less than 1% each.”

This year brings another moment of crisis. Food prices remain high, Russia continues to thwart Ukrainian grain shipments, and a spate of earthquake­s and severe floods have caused more nations than usual to request emergency assistance. Roughly 345 million people are in dire need of food aid, according to the U.N. World Food Program. That is virtually the same as the record set last year, yet funding has been slashed. There is no other way to say it: Millions will go hungry if the U.N. World Food Program does not get more funding. Its total budget for 2023 is $5 billion, the lowest since 2015 and less than half of the $14 billion the agency had last year as donors have become fatigued.

Some question why the United States sends money overseas to feed the world’s poorest when there are many needs at home. This is a false choice. This nation can help its own people and play a leading role in preventing starvation around the world. Last year, the United States spent about $119 billion on the domestic food stamp program and gave about $7 billion to the U.N. World Food Program. This year, the United States has given the program just $2.1 billion, its smallest contributi­on in years.

There are reasons beyond a moral imperative to sustain high levels of foreign food aid. A Presidenti­al Commission on World Hunger was establishe­d in 1978. Then-first lady Rosalynn Carter took notes on the “significan­t reasons” eliminatin­g global hunger was a top priority for the United States. Her first two bullet points were “moral obligation” and “national security.” These remain just as true today. When people do not have enough to eat, they often flee to other nations or join extremist groups who lure them with promises of food and change.

Foreign food aid, particular­ly on an emergency basis, need not be a permanent internatio­nal welfare program. In 1978, when that commission began, nearly half the world’s population lived in extreme poverty. Today about 10% live in extreme poverty. In addition to giving emergency food aid, the United States has also been increasing its investment­s in helping low-income nations become self-sufficient with improved farming techniques through a program called Feed the Future.

Congress faces many needs, but an extra $3 billion for global food aid would make a powerful global statement, galvanize more giving and show the world why U.S. leadership is indispensa­ble.

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The New York Times on U.s.-china relations (Sept. 23): Many Americans, even once-ardent proponents of globalizat­ion, have soured on trade with China. But there is a growing danger that as the United States tries to address its difficulti­es with China, it will pull back too far, severing economic ties that benefit American families and contribute to global peace and prosperity.

The relationsh­ip problems are real, and cannot be minimized. Chinese industrial subsidies, often maintained despite promises to the contrary, stripped millions of jobs from America’s industrial heartland. Chinese companies flagrantly steal American innovation­s. China’s increasing­ly confrontat­ional posture toward the United States and its allies — including the economic support it is providing for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — have underscore­d the need for the United States to align trade policy more closely with other aspects of America’s national interest. In an example of the prevailing mood in Washington, Rep. Mike Gallagher, R-wis., who serves as the chairman of the pointedly named “Select Committee on Strategic Competitio­n Between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party,” recently called for broad prohibitio­ns on U.S. investment in China, writing in an essay published in The Washington Post that “we are quite literally funding our own potential destructio­n.”

A new rule book is needed. Too few leaders, however, appear willing to note that Americans also benefit from trade with China, that the two nations are economical­ly intertwine­d whether they like it or not, and that it is in America’s interest for the rest of the world to prosper. Americans bought almost $40 billion of Chinese toys, games and sports equipment last year. Soybean farmers in the Upper Midwest sold a record $16.4 billion of their beans to China, mostly for pig feed. Intel takes profits from low-end chips it makes and sells in China to fund the high-end chips it sells in America and to its allies. Hundreds of millions of Chinese have come out of poverty thanks to global trade, and have become consumers of U.S. goods and services. Cummins, an engine maker based in Indiana, operates 21 factories in China, and earns a fifth of its profits from its operations there. “Our success in China has led to global success and U.S. job growth,” Jon Mills, a spokesman for the company, recently told the Times reporter Alexandra Stevenson.

Amid the harsh talk, the dollar value of American trade with China — Americans buying Chinese products and the Chinese buying American products — rose to a record in 2022. The goal of American policymake­rs ought to be safeguardi­ng the vast majority of those trade flows while addressing the problems that have emerged.

The Biden administra­tion’s top priority in its dealings with China is, as it should be, national security. The president has emphasized the need to limit China’s access to advanced technologi­es with military applicatio­ns. An executive order recently signed by President Joe Biden that restricts American investment in Chinese firms that work on artificial intelligen­ce, semiconduc­tors and quantum computing is a measured and necessary interventi­on. The government’s push to provide subsidies for the domestic production of semiconduc­tors is also a sensible policy. The United States needs to secure reliable access to critical materials.

Hawkish politician­s from both parties and American companies that stand to gain from protection­ist policies, however, are pushing for a broader retreat from trade with China. Donald Trump, whose dim view of trade helped to propel his successful presidenti­al candidacy in 2016, and who is again the front-runner for the Republican presidenti­al nomination in 2024, is promising to “tax China to build up America.” After the Biden administra­tion suspended tariffs on some Chinese solar panels to accelerate America’s conversion to renewable energy, Senate Democrats and Republican­s joined in a vote to reimpose the tariffs.

The Biden administra­tion describes its approach to trade limitation­s as “small yard, high fence,” meaning that it is aiming to restrict China’s access to a small number of advanced technologi­es. But some strictures on trade, notably the broad tariffs on Chinese imports first introduced by Trump and maintained by Biden, already go too far, imposing costs on American households without much benefit to them or national security.

Keeping the yard from getting bigger is also likely to prove difficult. During Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo’s recent visit to China, the country’s leading mobile phone manufactur­er, Huawei, provocativ­ely released a new smartphone powered by an advanced chip made in China most likely using American technology and machinery. A group of House Republican­s sent a letter to the Biden administra­tion citing the phone’s release as evidence of the need for tighter restrictio­ns on China’s access to advanced chips. But China’s ability to make serviceabl­e smartphone­s does not threaten America’s national security. Restraint is the best policy here. The United States has a legitimate interest in limiting China’s access to military technology, not in preventing the Chinese from checking email.

And while high walls are sometimes essential, so too are broad bridges. It is important to create real penalties for bad behavior by China, but it is also important to reward good behavior. Just as in the United States, there is a debate inside China between trade hard-liners and reformers. America has natural allies among those in China who understand that Beijing has to change and can succeed by playing by the rules.

Defending trade is politicall­y fraught in part because so many American leaders underestim­ated the impact of China’s rise on American workers and failed to ensure that the benefits were broadly shared.

That failure has changed Americans’ views of how our country relates to the rest of the world. A recent study reports that younger Americans are more skeptical than previous generation­s that trade is mutually beneficial for participat­ing nations, part of a broader turn toward zero-sum thinking — the belief that gains for one group tend to come at someone else’s expense. The authors argue that the outlook of older generation­s was shaped by an era of higher growth, in which it seemed plausible that everyone’s boat would rise. Younger generation­s, by contrast, have been embittered, and policymake­rs can rebuild support for trade only by addressing those past failures.

The United States can do that by pursuing economic relationsh­ips with the world that include protection­s for the environmen­t and for workers. Other nations will continue to provide industrial subsidies, and the United States can use similar policies to develop new industries, like the renewable energy sector. “We’re retaking control of our energy security and our energy future,” Ali Zaidi, Biden’s climate adviser, said in an interview with The Times editorial board. At the same time, America should continue to pursue deeper economic ties with allied nations, as in a recent agreement to allow electric vehicle batteries made with minerals from Japan to qualify for U.S. tax credits.

American engagement with China is complicate­d by China’s contradict­ions. The country remains eager for access to advanced technologi­es and global markets, but resists giving reciprocal access to its own markets. In recent months, even as China has ended pandemic restrictio­ns and made a show of reopening its doors, it has made life difficult for foreign firms, with raids on corporate offices, for instance. Some measures, like the refusal of Chinese antitrust authoritie­s to let the American chip maker Intel buy the Israeli chip maker Tower, appear to be responses to U.S. restrictio­ns. But longstandi­ng grievances remain unresolved. It has been 22 years since China promised to let Visa and Mastercard operate on equal terms, and 11 years since the WTO ruled that China wasn’t keeping that promise, yet the companies still are struggling for access.

The best reason for optimism is that the two nations still depend on each other. China’s recent struggles — slowing growth, an imploding housing sector, high youth unemployme­nt and capital flight — appear to be motivating a more open stance among Chinese policymake­rs. And after a period of escalating tensions, the Biden administra­tion also has sought to calm the waters by sending a series of senior officials to the country.

The steadily rising trade between the United States and China from 1979 to the present has disrupted the lives of many Americans and caused real harm to some. That said, in the sweep of history those four decades were an era of remarkable peace between, and prosperity for, the two countries.

Some U.S. politician­s want to take advantage of China’s dependence to constrain its economic developmen­t by denying China the technologi­es that it needs. The better course is to focus on limiting the reach of China’s military, not its economy as a whole. China sees that it cannot isolate itself from the world; this is not the time for the United States to do so, either.

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The Los Angeles Times on Kevin Mccarthy and likely government shutdown (Sept. 22):

A shutdown of the federal government, even if only temporary, would needlessly disrupt the lives of public employees and citizens who depend on government services. But, despite a flurry of activity on Capitol Hill, such a calamity remains all too possible next month.

The explanatio­n is tiresomely familiar: the obstructio­nism of a small band of hard-line House Republican­s. On Thursday these dissenters embarrasse­d Speaker Kevin Mccarthy by blocking considerat­ion of a Pentagon funding bill, the second such vote in a week. Opposition from extreme right-wing members is also complicati­ng Mccarthy’s attempt to advance a continuing resolution, a stopgap measure to keep the government operating after Sept. 30.

Ideally, Mccarthy would be able to attract Democratic votes to protect the national interest, as he did in May when the House approved legislatio­n to suspend the debt ceiling and forestall a default. That vote was a model of the sort of bipartisan compromise that should be the norm in a divided Congress.

But proposals by House Republican­s for a continuing resolution — needed because of a lack of progress on specific appropriat­ions bills — offer Democrats little incentive to come to Mccarthy’s rescue.

The latest proposal, discussed at a House Republican conference meeting Wednesday, reportedly is for a 31-day stopgap funding bill that would impose limits on spending more restrictiv­e than what Democrats want and include measures to curb immigratio­n. Mccarthy has sought to link the stopgap measure to some of the provisions of a bill passed by the House, which includes a resumption of constructi­on of a border wall and restrictio­ns on asylum.

Even if Democrats were willing to support a continuing resolution, a decision by Mccarthy to rely on Democratic votes probably would increase the possibilit­y of an attempt by extreme Republican­s to unseat him from the leadership role he narrowly achieved on the 15th ballot.

An additional complicati­on is the decision by former President Donald Trump, who is a favorite of many House Republican­s, to inject himself into the shutdown debate. On Wednesday, Trump posted this call to arms on Truth Social: “A very important deadline is approachin­g at the end of the month. Republican­s in Congress can and must defund all aspects of Crooked Joe Biden’s weaponized Government that refuses to close the Border and treats half the Country as Enemies of the State. This is also the last chance to defund these political prosecutio­ns against me and other Patriots.”

(In fact, it’s unlikely that a shutdown would interfere with the federal prosecutio­ns of Trump. Just add that to the ever-growing pile of the former president’s lies and distortion­s.)

Mccarthy might still cobble together enough votes to win the support of a majority of Republican­s for a continuing resolution, which would then have to be reconciled with or replaced by what is likely to be a less extreme Senate version.

Yet if dissenters continue to stymie his efforts, the speaker should stop accommodat­ing them and reach out to Democrats as he did when he secured an agreement with the White House on suspending the debt ceiling. By now, Mccarthy should have realized that placating the extremists in his ranks — including by announcing a meritless impeachmen­t inquiry into Biden — only emboldens them.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., emerges from a closed-door Republican strategy session Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington to talk to reporters about updates on funding the government and averting a shutdown.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE / ASSOCIATED PRESS House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., emerges from a closed-door Republican strategy session Wednesday at the Capitol in Washington to talk to reporters about updates on funding the government and averting a shutdown.

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