Did Donald Trump endorse Mitt Romney because of China?
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Why did Donald Trump endorse Mitt Romney, anyway? At first glance they seem an odd couple. Mr. Trump鈥檚 pugnacity is more Gingrichian than Romneyesque. Trump likes to be wooed, yet Romney devoted little energy to cultivating the developer/reality show star.
Romney even dissed Trump by declining to appear at the debate Trump was supposed to moderate in December. Yet there was Trump at a Las Vegas podium on Feb. 2 bestowing a blessing on a smiling Romney. What gives?
One word: China.
Yes, it seems as if Trump picked Romney because he liked the cut of Romney鈥檚 China policy jib. That鈥檚 what聽聽Thursday on Fox News, anyway.
鈥淚 love what Mitt was saying about China and the rest of the world, which is just absolutely ripping us off and trying to destroy this nation with a smile. And I think that Mitt Romney really sees China for what they are,鈥 Trump told Ms. Van Susteren.
Shouldn鈥檛 that be, 鈥渟ees the Chinese for what they are?鈥 Well, moving on, it鈥檚 true that China-bashing was a big part of Trump鈥檚 dalliance with a GOP campaign of his own. He complained that China is stealing our jobs and manipulating its currency to keep its exports cheap, and that President Trump wouldn鈥檛 stand for it. His solution: slap a 25 percent tariff on Chinese goods imported in the US.
Trump has insisted that just a whiff of such an approach would make the Chinese behave. But here鈥檚 the flip side: Walk into a Walmart, and look around. Everything鈥檚 made in China, pretty much, right? Now imagine everything suddenly 25 percent more expensive, due to a new US government tariff. Would you be happy? Us neither.
Mitt Romney鈥檚 China policy is indeed something which can see Trump鈥檚 counterpart from where it鈥檚 standing. Of the GOP candidates, Romney has been the toughest on Beijing.
鈥淐hina has been able to run roughshod over many industries in this country and presidents have looked at it, complained about it, but really haven鈥檛 taken action to stop China from taking away our jobs,鈥 said Romney Thursday during an appearance with Sean Hannity on Fox News.
So what would President Romney do about this?
鈥淥n my first day in office, I will label China a currency manipulator and under US law once that label has been affixed the president is able to apply tariffs to any of their goods ... I鈥檝e made it very clear to the Chinese that鈥檚 where we鈥檒l go if they continue the practices they鈥檙e pursuing right now,鈥 said Romney.
When Hannity asked if this wouldn鈥檛 start a trade war, Romney noted that China sells more to us than we do to them. Thus, if Beijing imposes retaliatory tariffs, the US has less to lose.
But as we鈥檝e noted, that鈥檚 backward: US consumers would pay more for everything from China, and they鈥檙e used to cheap Asian goods.
It鈥檚 easy to see why Romney might adopt this position, in political terms. It鈥檚 a populist stance that appeals to blue collar workers and cuts against Romney鈥檚 venture capitalist image. Would President Romney really do it? Never say never in geopolitics. But US politicians have a history of being tough on China on the stump, only to realize the difficulty of handling the US-Chinese relationship when they take office.
鈥淐onventional wisdom with tough campaign rhetoric on China ... and some members of the business community suggest that if elected, Romney would eventually moderate his stance to deal with the complexity of US policy on China,鈥 wrote Michael Swaine and Oliver Palmer, Asia analysts at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, in a Jan. 30 commentary.