Up First from NPR - Blinken in China, US-China Trade War, Juneteenth History and Symbolism
Episode Date: June 19, 2023Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in Beijing hoping to lay the foundation for better US-China Relations. Why has President Biden kept in place Trump-era tariffs on Chinese goods? Juneteenth became ...a federal holiday in 2021 but it's still unknown to many Americans.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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It's the final day of Secretary of State Antony Blinken's closely watched visit to Beijing.
Foreign policy watchers don't expect a huge breakthrough.
The trip is the initial stage of an exploratory process.
Will the visit stabilize the souring China-U.S. relationship?
I'm E. Martinez, that's Leila Fadl, and this is Up First from NPR News.
Trade relations with China are also not great.
The Trump administration slapped import taxes on hundreds of billions of dollars of Chinese goods.
So far, they're still in place.
What has China done in these last few years that would merit our changing this tariff structure?
What's the status of that trade war?
And as Americans gather to commemorate Juneteenth today, also known as this country's second Independence Day,
there are a lot of people outside black communities who are unaware of what this federal holiday celebrates.
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today. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is in China and just met with China's President Xi
Jinping. Blinken's trip is the first such visit in five years and comes at a low point in the
relationship, the lowest in decades actually. The U.S. says he's in China to open lines of communication between the two global powers.
Is that happening?
Joining us to discuss is NPR international correspondent Emily Feng, who's covering these talks.
Hi, Emily.
Hey, Leila.
So what do we know about Blinken's meeting with China's leader, Xi Jinping, right now?
Yep. Among the issues the U.S. at Blinken wants to raise in a meeting like this
include restarting high-level
military communications between the two countries. The U.S. also wants China to control the export
of fentanyl-related chemicals from China. And also the two countries want to maintain peace in Taiwan,
this island China claims as its own, but which does have close ties to the U.S.
And China has an interest in improving relations as well, because Xi Jinping is expected to go to
San Francisco in November for an Asia-Pacific leaders meeting. And he wants to make sure he's good with
the U.S. by then. He wants the U.S. side to be ready to welcome him when he gets to California.
So is this a sign that the acrimony we've seen in the U.S.-China relationship will decrease?
It's a potential start. The U.S. State Department has been really careful to set
low expectations for this trip. And there's still a lot of substantive issues the U.S. State Department has been really careful to set low expectations for this trip.
And there's still a lot of substantive issues the U.S. and China disagree on, many of which came up today in Blinken's meetings with China's top diplomat Wang Yi, for example.
But at least the fact that these two people in these two countries are meeting is a sign that they can talk about their differences.
And I spoke to Ryan Haas, a former National Security Council staffer on China during the Obama administration, about this.
The trip is the initial stage of an exploratory process to try to determine if there is mutual intent to moderate the relationship. But it's going to be hard because neither leader wants to be seen as caving to the other side or accommodating the other side's demands or wishes.
So this week is a start to high-level exchanges on the diplomatic level,
and both countries are hoping this paves the way for more meetings. The U.S. and China have agreed to schedule more flights between the two countries already, and China's foreign
minister, Qin Gong, said yesterday when he was meeting Blinken that he plans to visit the U.S.
sometime. What about all the issues the U.S. and China
disagree on? There are so many. There's still tariffs on U.S. and Chinese goods,
export controls to China, human rights concerns, and those are just a few.
Yep. And those are not going to go away. I spoke to Zhu Feng, an international relations professor
at Nanjing University in China about this. And he says despite the talks this weekend,
he's pessimistic about overall relations.
He's saying right now the most important thing is that the U.S. has locked onto China as its
biggest strategic rival. And this is the consensus of the entire American strategic policy
establishment. And so Professor Zhu says there cannot be any substantial movement on the current
suppression of China. Those are the words he used. Remember, Blinken was actually supposed to go to
China in February, but that visit got canceled after a Chinese spy balloon was discovered flying
over Montana. And it was canceled in part because public opinion in the U.S. is increasingly negative
about China. So both U.S. and China are constrained by that. U.S. Congress is particularly hawkish on
China on both sides of the aisle. And the things that China wants, the things that they mentioned
today, the lifting of trade tariffs, access to U.S. semiconductor technology, those are just
things the majority of U.S. policymakers are going to push back hard against.
NPR international correspondent Emily Fang. Thank you, Emily.
Thanks, Leila.
There are big issues between
Washington and Beijing on trade. Yeah, when he was president, Donald Trump launched a trade war
with China, eventually slapping tariffs on more than $300 billion worth of imports. In two and a
half years into the Biden presidency, those tariffs are under review but have not yet changed. NPR
White House correspondent Asma Khalid talks to both Trump
and Biden's top trade officials about this, and she joins us now. Good morning.
Good morning, Leila.
So Asma, let's go back in time first. Why were these tariffs put on China to begin with?
Well, for years, businesses had been complaining that China was not playing fairly, that they
subsidized their companies, they didn't respect intellectual property rights, and even forced
American companies in some cases to turn over their tech secrets.
And so Donald Trump came in and basically turned the traditional free trade norm on its head.
His top trade person during this time period was a man named Bob Lighthizer. And we spoke
on the phone the other day. He told me that the U.S. relationship with China,
he believed, had to fundamentally change. We can't keep transferring hundreds of billions of dollars every year to somebody who's trying to harm us and take our jobs and
steal our technology and threaten our military and the like. So the Trump administration turned
to tariffs, which I will say at the time was extremely controversial. A 25% tariff on Chinese
imports, lots of everyday items that Americans rely on from China
were taxed. I mean, you think underwear, coats, utensils. There were also tariffs on a bunch of
obscure parts that are used by American manufacturers. And again, I will say, you know,
to be clear, many critics will say these are taxes and these are taxes that are paid by American
businesses and American consumers, not the Chinese. Now, I remember all the warnings about how this
would affect prices and competition.
And when Biden took over, what did he do with them?
Yeah, I mean, to your point, there was a lot of criticism.
I will say Democrats piled on Trump.
They said that he was haphazard in the way that he launched this fight with China.
I will say one of the things that intrigues me really about Joe Biden is that he talks
a lot about making things in America.
I'm sure you've heard him highlight the subsidies that his government is offering to lure factories back from overseas.
But he's not out there talking about these tariffs, and yet he has kept them in place.
His team is currently reviewing them. And I asked Biden's top trade official, Catherine Tai,
what is going on with this review? Are you going to lift any of the tariffs? And she said something
that I thought was rather telling. One key question that's really important for us to consider is what has China done in these last few years that would merit our changing this tariff structure?
She told me there are real issues with the way that China trades and those issues have not gone away. She also said that overall, she's looking at how the U.S. can break what she called
an addiction to just chasing the lowest price for everything, no matter the cost.
I should add that tariff review I mentioned is expected to wrap up later this year.
But of course, then we head into a presidential election year, and these tariffs were Donald
Trump's signature policy, and he is the current Republican frontrunner.
Asma, what about the businesses that pay these tariffs? What are they saying about the review?
Well, there are definitely U.S. companies that appreciate these tariffs, and I interviewed some,
but there are also business owners who are really frustrated with the climate. They had hoped that
Joe Biden and his team would have changed some aspects of the tariff policy by now.
I went out to Minnesota to a company called Misco. They make sound speakers and a lot of their parts come from China. The company's CEO, Dan Diggory, told me he feels like a pawn
in this big geopolitical game. And he thinks any conversation about rescinding these tariffs
will be seen as being weak on China. And so as the presidential election cycle heats up,
he is not optimistic that things will change. AndPR White House correspondent Asma Khalid. Thanks.
My pleasure. For more on all of this reporting that Asma just brought to us on how U.S. tariffs
affect American consumers and the relationship between the United States and China, you can
listen to today's NPR Politics Podcast. Americans are celebrating Juneteenth today.
It's the newest federal holiday on the calendar and is also known as this country's second Independence Day.
But outside the Black community, many Americans are still learning about its meanings and origins.
NPR's Alana Weiss joins us now to discuss this. Good morning.
Good morning.
Okay, give us a bit of background for people who don't know about Juneteenth.
Of course.
So basically, Juneteenth is the day that celebrates some of the final days of slavery in the U.S.
So two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation, a lot
of people, particularly west of the Mississippi, were still being held in enslavement.
So on June 19th in 1865, Union troops rode into Galveston,
Texas to inform slaveholders and enslaved people that the institution of slavery was ending.
They were also there to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation, basically to make sure that these
slaveholders actually were paying their newfound labor. These informally enslaved people were told to stay on their plantations
and instead work for wages rather than be used as free labor. I spoke to Leslie Wilson,
who's a history professor at Montclair State in New Jersey. He put it this way.
We are not celebrating the history of Juneteenth. We are celebrating the symbolism of Juneteenth. And so I would say that the symbolism of Juneteenth is the
transition from slavery to freedom or the transition from enslavement to freedom.
Now, this was a hard-won battle, really. Hundreds of years of people sort of wanting
it to be recognized federally.
What can you tell us more about the public's awareness of this holiday outside the communities that were pushing for its recognition?
Awareness of the holiday really took off outside of Black communities in 2021.
That year, Biden signed a bill making it into an official federal holiday.
So it's the newest federal holiday and the first to be added
to the calendar since MLK Day in the 80s. Last year, a Gallup poll said that about 60% of
Americans knew at least a little something about Juneteenth. But a year before, that number was at
just 37%, who said they were familiar with Juneteenth. So you really see how awareness
and focus on the day has gone up in recent years. Okay, let's get to the fun part.
What are some ways people celebrate this holiday?
So Black Americans often come together for food, music, retelling stories of the past.
And since the holiday is in the summer, it often coincides with a lot of family reunions.
So it's a good time for people to spend time together, hanging out and just reminiscing about the past.
Many people also use the day as a day of service, figuring out ways to give back to the community, uplift Black people and Black businesses.
And it's also a time where people learn about Black history, right?
Which is American history, but it's often overlooked in classrooms.
That leaves it up to families and individuals to learn about Black history for themselves. This weekend on the National Mall, I spoke to Precious Williams.
She's Black and a Dallas native, and she always knew about Juneteenth, but it was something she learned about at home, never in school. As a Black person, it means a lot to me,
you know, to celebrate everybody who was free because it's like so many people don't know.
Everybody should know about Juneteenth because it's a part of our history.
NPR's Alana Weiss on the symbolism and the history of Juneteenth,
American history and symbolism.
Thank you.
Thank you.
And that's a first for Monday, June 19th.
I'm Layla Faldin.
And I'm A. Martinez.
A first is produced by David West, Milton Givada, and Lindsay Totti.
Our editors are Michael Sullivan, Roberto Rampton, Ahmad Omar, and Alice Wolfley.
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