Why China seems so fascinated by US Ambassador Gary Locke
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| Beijing
Another week, another public round of warm applause for America鈥檚 new ambassador to China, Gary Locke, the first Chinese-American to hold the job.
China seems to be fascinated by him.
This Monday, 鈥淐hina Economic Weekly,鈥 published by the ruling Communist Party, took its turn running a star-struck story about Mr. Locke鈥檚 common touch. It was only the latest in a spate of positive press reports and Internet comments since Washington鈥檚 man in Beijing took up his post last month.
This time, the reporter recounted how Locke and his family waited in line for an hour, just like any ordinary person, for a seat on the cable car carrying tourists down from the Great Wall.
The Chinese public鈥檚 fascination with this sort of thing, says social commentator Yao Bo, derives from the fact that 鈥渢he ambassador looks Chinese, but his behavior is completely un-Chinese.鈥
In this country, nobody of Locke鈥檚 status would be caught dead carrying his own luggage, which the US ambassador is wont to do, or trying to pay for a Starbucks coffee with a coupon, as Locke was photographed doing at Seattle airport on his way to China last month.
A senior official behaving as humbly as a normal human being is a breath of fresh air in China, where officials are widely reviled for the lavish lifestyles many of them enjoy, often paid for by corruption. Locke has drawn a lot of friendly attention here, where Mao Zedong鈥檚 injunction that Communist Party members should 鈥渟erve the people鈥 seems to ring hollow in most people鈥檚 ears.
Since the photo of Locke at a Seattle airport Starbucks, snapped by a passing Chinese-American businessman, went viral on the Chinese Internet last month, the US ambassador has been a popular subject for commentary on microblogs.
鈥淚 found him modest, unassuming, and easy to get along with,鈥 wrote one blogger, Sun Mingnan, who said he had met Locke during the Summer Davos meeting in the coastal city of Dalian last week. 鈥淚 think a lot of people could learn from America how to be an official.鈥
The attention Locke has garnered is freighted with political significance, says Mr. Yao. 鈥淣one of the things written about him are really about him at all,鈥 explains Yao. 鈥淭hey are just painting a picture to contrast with Chinese officials; it is all meant as ironic commentary.鈥
The Chinese press is almost as full of stories about the misdeeds of Chinese officials and their offspring as it is of articles about the American ambassador. Last week the teenage son of an Army general was sent into a year鈥檚 detention after beating up an older couple in a road rage incident.
鈥淲hen it is compared to Chinese officials鈥 special privileges, Locke鈥檚 behavior as a normal person has special meaning,鈥 says Yao.