Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Donald Trump and Joe Biden Are Trying to Out-Do Each Other with Anti-Chinese Chauvinism

The two candidates for the presidential elections have more in common than they would like to admit — and not just accusations of sexual assault. They both are calling for a harder line against China.

Nathaniel Flakin

May 29, 2020
Facebook Twitter Share

Donald Trump has a simple explanation for his disastrous response to the coronavirus pandemic: blame China! He has referred to the “Chinese virus” and spread the conspiracy theory that SARS-CoV-2 was created in a lab in Wuhan. Asked by an Asian American reporter about the U.S. government’s failure to provide massive testing, Trump responded: “Don’t ask me. Ask China.”

As the economic crisis deepens, Trump is relying on his tested means to campaign: aggressive patriotism and hostility against foreigners, better known as chauvinism. In a recent campaign ad, he refers to his Democratic opponent Joe Biden as “China’s Puppet.”

Biden has responded by trying to out-do Trump. In his own ad, he accuses Trump of “rolling over for the Chinese” and letting too many travelers from China into the U.S. — even though it is well known that the pandemic came to New York from Europe, not from China.

Both candidates would like to be seen as “tough on China.”

This bi-partisan campaign is effective: according to the Pew Research Center, up to two thirds of people in the U.S. have a negative view on China — the highest number ever recorded. The U.S. establishment has been orchestrating this chauvinist campaign to distract from its own inability to respond to the pandemic. As a result, there has been a major upsurge in racist attacks against people of Asian descent.

The pandemic has exposed all the contradictions that had built up in the global economy since the unresolved crisis of 2008. As capitalism stumbles further and further into a recession, political, economic, and military competition between the great powers will develop. Governments around the world will attempt to whip their citizens into a jingoistic frenzy in the hopes that this will keep them from protesting against the privations caused by the crisis. So what we are seeing now is only the beginning.

You might also be interested in: United States – China: Toward a New Cold War?

The U.S. and China are fighting over Taiwan, 5G technology, and “soft power” around the world. The United States, which has exercised global hegemony since 1945, is a capitalist power in decline; China, which developed as a Stalinist planned economy and restored capitalism in the 1990s, is a capitalist power on the rise. In the entire history of capitalism, the fall of one hegemonic power and the rise of another has never happened peacefully.

There is a broad consensus in the U.S. ruling class — in both Republican and Democratic wings — about the need to confront China. The Obama administration was careful to use friendly language about a “Pivot to Asia,” but increased the U.S. military’s presence in the Pacific. Trump has continued this policy but made much more aggressive speeches — and Biden has now joined him in taking an angrier tone. This rhetorical disagreement inside the ruling class is fundamentally about how best to manage the decline of U.S. hegemony: with poorly conceived military adventures, as launched by George W. Bush, or with careful diplomacy of Obama’s technocrats.

As socialists, we have no sympathy for the bureaucrats and “red princes” who run a so-called “Communist Party” full of billionaires. Our sympathies are with the almost 800 million working people in China — the largest working class in the world. We have no sympathy for rulers who tell us that workers across the Pacific are our enemies. The pandemic makes clear that as working people, we need international solidarity more than ever. Instead of capitalist politicians promising to be “tough on China,” we need to be tough on capitalists in China and the United States.

Facebook Twitter Share

Nathaniel Flakin

Nathaniel is a freelance journalist and historian from Berlin. He is on the editorial board of Left Voice and our German sister site Klasse Gegen Klasse. Nathaniel, also known by the nickname Wladek, has written a biography of Martin Monath, a Trotskyist resistance fighter in France during World War II, which has appeared in German, in English, and in French, and in Spanish. He has also written an anticapitalist guide book called Revolutionary Berlin. He is on the autism spectrum.

Instagram

United States

Image: Joshua Briz/AP

All Eyes on Columbia: We Must Build a National Campaign to Defend the Right to Protest for Palestine

After suspending and evicting students and ordering the repression of a student occupation, Columbia University has become the ground zero for attacks against the pro-Palestine movement. What happens at Columbia in the coming days has implications for our basic democratic rights, such as the right to protest.

Maryam Alaniz

April 19, 2024
NYPD officers load Pro-Palestine protesters at Columbia onto police buses

Student Workers of Columbia Union Call for Solidarity Against Repression and in Defense of the Right to Protest

In response to the suspensions and arrests of students at Columbia, the Student Workers of Columbia is circulating a call for solidarity against the repression. We re-publish their statement here and urge organizations, unions, and intellectuals to sign.

Several police officers surrounded a car caravan

Detroit Police Escalate Repression of Pro-Palestinian Protests

On April 15, Detroit Police cracked down on a pro-Palestine car caravan. This show of force was a message to protestors and an attempt to slow the momentum of the movement by intimidating people off the street and tying them up in court.

Brian H. Silverstein

April 18, 2024

The Movement for Palestine Is Facing Repression. We Need a Campaign to Stop It.

In recent weeks, the movement in solidarity with Palestine has faced a new round of repression across the U.S. We need a united campaign to combat this repression, one that raises strategic debates about the movement’s next steps.

Tristan Taylor

April 17, 2024

MOST RECENT

The New Labor Movement and the Need for Anti-Imperialist and Class Independent Politics

The rise of labor in the US has put the working class at the center of national politics. It deserves class-independent politics free of the capitalist constraints of the Democratic Party.

Tatiana Cozzarelli

April 19, 2024

Palestinian Liberation and Permanent Revolution

The fight against Zionist oppression is at the center of international and domestic politics. The path forward is to fight for a free, socialist, workers’ Palestine, from the river to the sea, where Arabs and Jews can live in peace.

Jimena Vergara

April 19, 2024

Inside Amazon: Exploitation and the Fight Against Capitalist Dystopia

A new book explores "Amazonification," the spread of global logistics chains, and the reconfiguration of the working class in the 21st century

Beyond Reform: The Limits of the New Labor Bureaucracy

Rank and file reform caucuses are pushing the union bureaucracies into struggle, but building real working class power requires more than reform.

James Dennis Hoff

April 19, 2024