The Mercury News

A key GOP strategy: Blame China, but Trump goes off the message

- By Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman

WASHINGTON >> The strategy could not be clearer: From the Republican lawmakers blanketing Fox News to new ads from President Donald Trump’s super PAC to the biting criticism on Donald Trump Jr.’s Twitter feed, the GOP is attempting to divert attention from the administra­tion’s heavily criticized response to the coronaviru­s by pinning the blame on China.

With the death toll from the pandemic already surpassing 32,000 Americans and unemployme­nt soaring to levels not seen since the Great Depression, Republican­s increasing­ly believe that elevating China as an archenemy culpable for the spread of the virus, and harnessing America’s growing animosity toward Beijing, may be the best way to salvage a difficult election.

Republican senators locked in difficult races are preparing commercial­s condemning China. Conservati­ves with future presidenti­al ambitions of their own, like Sens. Tom Cotton and Josh Hawley, are competing to see who can talk tougher toward the country where the virus first emerged. Party officials are publicly and privately brandishin­g polling data in hopes Trump will confront Beijing.

Trump’s own campaign aides have endorsed the strategy, releasing an attack ad last week depicting Joe Biden, the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee, as soft on China. The ad relied heavily on images of people of Asian descent, including former Gov. Gary Locke of Washington, who is Chinese American, and it was widely viewed as fanning the flames of xenophobia.

“Trump has always been successful when he’s had a boogeyman, and China is the perfect boogeyman,” said Chris Lacivita, a longtime Republican strategist.

But there is a potential impediment to the GOP plan — the leader of the party himself.

Eager to continue trade talks, uneasy about further rattling the markets and hungry to protect his relationsh­ip with President Xi Jinping at a moment when the United States is relying on China’s manufactur­ers for lifesaving medical supplies, Trump repeatedly has muddied Republican efforts to fault China.

Even as the president tries to rebut criticism of his slow response to the outbreak by highlighti­ng his January travel restrictio­ns on China, he repeatedly has called Xi a friend and said “we are dealing in good faith” with the repressive government. He also dropped his periodic references to the disease as “the China virus” after a telephone call with Xi. Yet in private, he has vented about the country. Sen. Kevin Cramer of North Dakota said he informed Trump in a Thursday telephone conversati­on that the meat-processing plant in South Dakota suffering a virus outbreak is owned by a Chinese

conglomera­te. The president responded, “I’m getting tired of China,” according to Cramer.

It remains to be seen whether Trump’s conflicted messaging on China will hurt him with voters, who repeatedly have seen the president argue both sides of issues without suffering the harm that another politician would. And though Trump’s team knows that his own words will be used against him, they believe they can contrast his history favorably with that of Biden.

On Tuesday, at his daily briefing, Trump was candid about the transactio­nal rationale behind his stance toward China. Pressed on how he could criticize the World Health Organizati­on for what he called pushing “China’s misinforma­tion,” after he also had lavished praise on Beijing’s purported transparen­cy, he responded, “Well, I did a trade deal with China, where China is supposed to be spending $250 billion in our country.”

“I’d love to have a good relationsh­ip with China,” he added.

On Friday, however, he incorrectl­y posited that China must have the most deaths from the coronaviru­s — the United States does — and later said, “I’m not happy with China.”

Despite the president’s diverging public statements, a central pillar of his campaign’s approach is to deflect anger over the human casualties and economic pain of the coronaviru­s onto an adversary that many Americans already view warily.

The strategy includes efforts to leverage the U.s.china relationsh­ip against Biden, who Republican­s believe is vulnerable because of his comments last year playing down the geopolitic­al challenge posed by China and the high-paying work that his son, Hunter, has done there.

Biden, for his part, has criticized Trump’s warm words for China. On Friday, his campaign released a video assailing the president for not pressing Xi to let the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention into his country and for being “more worried about protecting his trade deal with

China than he was about the virus.” On a conference call with reporters, Antony Blinken, a senior Biden adviser, noted that in January and February “the president praised China and President Xi more than 15 times.” He attributed the flattery to the administra­tion’s not wanting to “risk that China pull back on implementi­ng” the initial trade agreement the two countries signed in January. Trump’s clashing comments on China illustrate not only his unreliabil­ity as a political messenger but also his longstandi­ng ambivalenc­e over how to approach the world’s second-largest economy. He ran for president four years ago vowing to get tough with China, but his ambition was not to isolate the Chinese but to work with them — and especially for the United States to make more money from the relationsh­ip.

This goal has prompted him to often lavish flattery on Xi, most memorably when Trump rhapsodize­d about the way they bonded over “the most beautiful piece of chocolate cake you’ve ever seen” at his Mar-a-lago resort in 2017.

The president’s hopes for securing a major trade agreement with China have been reinforced by a coterie of his advisers, including Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, who have often prevailed in internal battles over White House hard-liners.

But with the coronaviru­s death toll growing and the economy at a standstill, polls show that Americans have never viewed China more negatively.

In a recent 17-state survey conducted by Trump’s campaign, 77% of voters agreed that China covered up the extent of the coronaviru­s outbreak, and 79% of voters indicated they did not think China had been truthful about the extent of infections and deaths, according to a Republican briefed on the poll.

Yet those polling numbers also come as 65% of Americans say they believe that Trump was too late responding to the outbreak, according to a Pew Research Center survey this past week.

More ominous for the

president are some private Republican surveys that show him losing ground in key states like Michigan, where one recent poll has him losing by double digits, according to a Republican strategist who has seen it.

So as Biden unites the Democratic Party, Trump’s poll numbers are flagging and GOP senators up for reelection find themselves significan­tly outraised by their Democratic rivals. That has led to a growing urgency in Republican ranks that the president should shelve his hopes for a lucrative rapprochem­ent with China.

“At this moment in time a trade deal is not the right topic of discussion,” said Sen. Steve Daines, R-mont., who said the pandemic had highlighte­d the country’s reliance on China in the same painful fashion that the oil crisis of the 1970s revealed how it was at the mercy of the Middle East. “This has exposed our dependency on China for PPE and for critical drugs.”

Hawley, a first-term Missouri senator has also denounced China, calling for a United States-led internatio­nal commission to determine the origin of the virus and demanding that American victims be allowed to sue the Chinese government.”this is the 9/11 of this generation,” said Hawley, adding that he hopes Trump “keeps the pressure high.”

He said Republican­s should make the issue central this fall and demonstrat­e “how are we going to come out of this stronger by actually standing up to the Chinese.”

In response to GOP attacks, an outside Democratic group, American Bridge, on Friday unveiled a $15 million ad campaign hammering Trump for sending medical supplies to China and for initially praising the Chinese response to the virus. Cramer, of North Dakota, said Democrats were courting political risk if they were seen as defending China. But he conceded that Trump’s “rhetoric about Xi gets confusing.”

“I’d have a hard time being that nice to a communist leader,” Cramer said, “but the president knows he’s got to appeal to an audience of one there.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump, whose campaign wants him to blame China for his slow response to the coronaviru­s breakout in the U.S., continues to call President Xi Jinping “a friend.”
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump, whose campaign wants him to blame China for his slow response to the coronaviru­s breakout in the U.S., continues to call President Xi Jinping “a friend.”

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