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Newsom California Initiative Accused of Links to Chinese Influence Network

Newsom California Initiative Accused of Links to Chinese Influence Network

Miami Herald10 hours ago

An initiative supported by California Governor Gavin Newsom is part of a broader attempt by the Chinese Communist Party to build networks of influence in the biggest U.S. state, according to a new report from an advocacy group that it critical of Beijing's human rights record in Hong Kong.
Newsom's office did not respond to Newsweek requests for comment. A California business association that has supported the initiative said it was purely economic and not political. China's consulate in San Francisco defended it as an example of mutually beneficial cooperation.
The Washington, D.C.-based Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation (CFHK) said it had investigated a "Bay to Bay" initiative aiming to link San Franscisco's Bay Area to the burgeoning Greater Bay Area in southern China - a project presented by Chinese officials as an opportunity for business and to address climate change.
"In these subnational engagements, the U.S. state and local officials are dealing with an apparatus orchestrated and led by China's central government and designed to benefit the CCP," according to the report, Hong Kong's Greater Bay Area and the CCP's Strategy to Influence U.S. State and Local Officials, published on Wednesday by the Washington, D.C.-based Committee for Freedom in Hong Kong Foundation (CFHK), an advocacy group for freedom and for political prisoners in Hong Kong.
Such efforts could be "incompatible with US interests and values," said the author, Shannon Van Sant, CFHK's Strategy and Public Affairs Advisor, who cited the positions of those who had taken part in meetings from the Chinese side as well as Chinese state media accounts of meetings, Chinese government and U.S. business websites and other documents, including photographs.
The initiative was similar to China's Belt and Road Initiative, or to its global network of "sister city" relationships that seeks to develop closer relationships with local officials - but that carried political risks as the ties also transmitted central government policy and influence and interference, said Van Sant. On the Chinese side there were plans to extend it to New York and Vancouver, she said.
The Bay to Bay initiative was supported by San Francisco's Bay Area Council, a business association focused on developing the local economy.
Reached by telephone, John Grubb, Chief Operating Officer of the Bay Area Council, told Newsweek that the council was a business group and not a political organization. Nevertheless it was aware of political risks: "So our work, everything, is always 'eyes wide open'."
"We're Team players here. We're part of the U.S. team," Grubb said.
"Our engagement was that this is an economic strategy, okay, in between these regions with China, to try to better integrate. And that's been our conversation. It hasn't been about other political or ideological aspects of that," Grubb said.
A spokesperson for the Chinese consulate general in San Francisco told Newsweek: "The people of China and California share a long-standing tradition of friendship. Based on the principles of mutual respect, peaceful coexistence, and win-win cooperation, the two sides have had cooperation that delivers tangible benefits to both peoples and injects vitality into China-US relations."
It said the Bay Area Council had for years created economic opportunities and that cooperation between China and California helped both to achieve climate goals.
"We firmly oppose any attempt to distort and undermine China-US subnational cooperation through ideological prejudice and a Cold War mentality," it said.
A first "U.S.-China Bay to Bay Dialogue" was held in Berkeley in May 2024, signifying an upgrade for the effort which has been underway for several years, the CFHK report said. The dialogue took place side by side with a U.S.-China climate event.
In attendance was Governor Newsom, according to several accounts that carried photographs of the meeting. Newsom's office did not respond to a request for comment on his presence.
China's Greater Bay Area project was conceived by Duan Peijun, a professor of philosophy and strategy at the Central Party School in Beijing, the CCP's ideological and governance training center, Van Sant said. It is a national development strategy that is integrating Hong Kong, Shenzhen and more than half a dozen major cities in the province of Guangdong economically, technologically, and via infrastructure.
China sent a 100-person delegation to the Berkeley dialogue including Yang Wanming, the president of a key political influence organization of the United Front, the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries (CPAFFC), and the Guangdong Province Governor Wang Weizhong, according to China Daily.
Also in attendance: officials from the Beijing's powerful National Development and Reform Commission, and Hong Kong Financial Secretary Paul Chan. The meeting followed a visit to China in October 2023 by Governor Newsom where he met Chinese leader Xi Jinping and signed five Memoranda of Understanding at the city, province and central government levels.
"California is not even doing the bare minimum to protect their people and assets from the CCP, even though California is China's top state target," said Michael Lucci of State Armor, a Texas-based group spearheading what it calls a pushback to Chinese Communist Party interests in some state capitols.
Texas had enacted 14 bills this year to counter China, and New York is advancing legislation to stop buying compromised Chinese technology, among other efforts, Lucci said.
"Under Gavin Newsom, they are actually building deeper ties with CCP actors," Lucci said.
In 2022, President Biden's National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC), part of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, said that subnational influencing by the Chinese Communist Party was a risk to the United States.
Such relationships often yielded business benefits, but as tensions between Beijing and Washington have grown, "the government of the People's Republic of China (PRC) under President Xi Jinping has increasingly sought to exploit these China-U.S. subnational relationships to influence U.S. policies and advance PRC geopolitical interests," the NCSC said.
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Fox News

time41 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Newsom's office ripped for mocking Sec. McMahon's trans athlete warning with WWE bodyslam clip

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California violated Title IX over trans athletes, Trump administration says
California violated Title IX over trans athletes, Trump administration says

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California violated Title IX over trans athletes, Trump administration says

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US textile makers, feeling forgotten by Trump, hope boom days are ahead
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Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

US textile makers, feeling forgotten by Trump, hope boom days are ahead

GAFFNEY, S.C. -- As the pandemic raged in 2020, White House trade adviser Peter Navarro called Andy Warlick, the CEO of Parkdale Mills, a textile manufacturer with a large factory in South Carolina, with an urgent request. The United States needed millions of masks, and he wanted Parkdale to find a way to make them. 'I figure if you can make a bra, half a bra is a face mask,' Navarro told Warlick, according to Warlick's recounting. The company quickly made a plan to produce 600 million surgical masks for medical workers around the country. The feat was hailed as an example of why a robust domestic textile supply chain is a matter of national security. But these days, the industry sees itself as an afterthought in President Donald Trump's second term, with a trade agenda that prioritizes protecting sectors like steel, aluminum, semiconductors and pharmaceuticals. 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Those comments drew sharp backlash from the American textile industry, which has withered in the face of rapid globalization and has sought greater trade protection from cheap Chinese fabric imports. 'It is concerning to hear that our industry, that pivoted to making lifesaving personal protective equipment during COVID, are not considered a strategic priority,' said Kim Glas, president of the National Council of Textile Organizations. Fraying from globalization America's textile industry has experienced a drastic decline in the past 30 years in the face of the offshoring of garment production to Asia, Mexico and South America, and the rapid pace of automation. The sector, which employed about 1.5 million workers in the 1990s, now employs about 470,000. The industry points to China's state-sponsored subsidies and intellectual property theft as a key reason the U.S. textile industry fell behind. Textile manufacturers also blame trade liberalization policies such as the admission of China to the World Trade Organization and the normalization of trade relations with Vietnam in 2001 as factors that hampered the domestic industry. The United States is the world's second-largest exporter of textiles. But China -- the world's largest textiles exporter -- sells six times the amount of fibers, yarns and fabrics to customers globally. Over the past two years, 28 American textile plants have shuttered across the country, with several of them in the Carolinas. The United States trade representative attributes this to China's nonmarket practices that allow Chinese textile manufacturers to charge artificially low prices. Most of the textiles made in the United States are shipped to countries such as Mexico, Honduras and the Dominican Republic, where the fabric is cut and sewn into apparel and then sent back to the United States to retailers. Textile manufacturers have been generally supportive of the Trump administration's trade agenda. But they have asked the administration to exempt textiles from the 10% universal tariff that has been applied to products coming from Central America. They also want even higher tariffs on Chinese fabric imports. Booming backlash Much of the U.S. textile industry is concentrated in the South, and the most vocal response to Bessent's comments came from the treasury secretary's home state, South Carolina. In May, a group of more than 30 textile manufacturers from the state sent Bessent a letter expressing dismay that he appeared to view the industry as 'outdated and diminished.' They invited him to tour their high-tech facilities that used advanced robotics and artificial intelligence to mill cotton and perform quality control. At a congressional hearing last month, Bessent was pressed on his comments by Rep. William R. Timmons IV, R-S.C. The treasury secretary then clarified his comments, saying: 'Through good tariff policy, we can make sure these existing businesses can grow and thrive, especially in the high end. And again, anyone who has survived has done it through innovation, hard work.' The Treasury Department declined to make Bessent available for an interview. The Treasury secretary has yet to respond to the letters or invitations to visit the textile plants in South Carolina. A spokesperson for Bessent said he intended to travel to the state at some point. He is expected to meet with representatives from the textile industry in Washington next month. A modernized South Carolina sector Parkdale's factory in Gaffney produces 1.7 million miles of yarn every day. Parts of the operation are run by fully automated robotic carts that are adorned with blue lights and zip across the factory floor moving bundles of cotton. The bundles are delivered to machines that spin them into the materials that eventually go into products such as Hanes underwear and cotton swabs. 'This is where I think he got misaligned a little bit,' Warlick said of Bessent, who grew up near Myrtle Beach and recently sold his home in Charleston for $18.25 million. 'This is not the textile industry of your father or your grandfather.' The company, which has its headquarters in North Carolina, is one of the world's largest producers of spun yarn and the largest consumer of cotton in the United States. It is working hard to develop innovations, including a way to make polyester fiber biodegradable, but has had to close several U.S. plants in recent years because of rising energy costs and competition from foreign companies. At Greenwood Mills, in central South Carolina, cotton from across the Southeast is spun into yarn that is turned into rugged fabrics used in U.S. military uniforms, workwear and automotive upholstery. Jay Self, the president of the company, which was founded in 1889, said the pandemic experience was a reminder that the American textile industry should not be ceded to China and allowed to go extinct. 'My company, as well as others, pivoted and retooled to meet the needs of this country,' said Self, whose fabrics end up in clothing sold by Dickies and Carhartt. 'We're not just a textile company. We're a U.S. manufacturing company. Manufacturing jobs build this town that I live in.' Self said that the Trump administration's tariffs had generally been beneficial so far but that more needed to be done to ensure that the Western Hemisphere textile supply chain could compete with Asia. Survival of the fittest T-Shirts Despite the technological advancements of the U.S. textile industry, the low cost of labor in Asia means that the apparel supply chain is likely to remain global -- at least until cutting and sewing can be automated. It appears unlikely, however, that the Trump administration will be investing in such technology. Speaking to reporters in New Jersey last month, Trump said his focus was on domestic production of computers, tanks and microchips. 'The textiles, you know I'm not looking to make T-shirts, to be honest. I'm not looking to make socks,' Trump said. 'We can do that very well in other locations.' The apparel industry tends to agree. Stephen Lamar, president of the American Apparel and Footwear Association, argues that many of Trump's blanket tariffs on imports should be scaled back because it is unrealistic to expect American manufacturers to make shirts and shoes at a competitive price domestically. 'We're not going to be able to bring the apparel and footwear industries back to the United States at scale,' Lamar said. 'A lot of people talk about how they want more 'Made in U.S.A.' apparel, but they're not willing to pay the prices for apparel that is made in U.S.A.' A protectionism puzzle Policymakers face difficult political choices as they prop up sectors like steel and aluminum while industries such as textiles languish. South Carolina's governor, Henry McMaster, said in a statement that while he believed that the Trump administration was not overlooking the textile industry, many sectors were driving the future of the state's economy. 'Thanks to the administration's tireless efforts, we are creating more high-paying jobs than ever before and building South Carolina's economy of the future -- which ranges from airplanes to automobiles to high-tech textile manufacturing,' McMaster said. And Navarro suggested that American textile manufacturers could boom again. In an interview, he argued that new technology could help reduce labor costs and help the industry evolve and modernize. 'Thinking about textiles in the rearview mirror as a high labor content kind of sweatshop endeavor really ignores the advances we've had in manufacturing,' Navarro said. 'A lot of textiles can benefit from high technology, just like automobiles and rockets.' This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Copyright 2025

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