Biden to Approach China Relationship With ‘Patience,’ White House Says

Jen Psaki, White House press secretary, speaks during a news conference on Jan. 25. (Kevin Dietsch/Bloomberg News)
Jen Psaki, White House press secretary, speaks during a news conference on Jan. 25. (Kevin Dietsch/Bloomberg News)

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President Joe Biden’s administration is approaching its relationship with Beijing with “patience” and plans to review hard-line policies that were a hallmark of Donald Trump’s presidency, Press Secretary Jen Psaki said.

The Biden administration plans an interagency review of measures including trade tariffs and the delisting of certain Chinese companies that were enacted by Trump, Psaki said.

“We’re starting from an approach of patience as it relates to our relationship with China,” Psaki said.



“So that means we’re going to have consultations with our allies, we’re going to have consultations with Democrats and Republicans, and we’re going to allow the interagency process to work its way through to review and assess how we should move forward with our relationship,” she added.

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Her comments suggest that the Biden administration may be open to altering Trump’s actions. Biden himself has given no hint of a change in approach, telling The New York Times last month that he won’t make any immediate moves on Trump’s tariffs on $350 billion worth of Chinese imports.

China’s three biggest telecommunications firms — China Mobile Ltd., China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd. and China Telecom Corp. — have requested a review of the New York Stock Exchange’s decision to delist their shares to comply with Trump’s November executive order. The companies announced the move just hours after Biden was sworn in.

The Biden administration is looking at “a range of regulatory actions and a range of relationships with companies, as it relates to Chinese investments, and other issues as well,” Psaki said.

RELATED: Joe Biden Says He Won't Immediately Lift China Tariffs

The former administration had been ramping up its attacks on China over several months, imposing sanctions over human-rights abuses and the crackdown on Hong Kong. The U.S. also had sought to curtail economic links and deny Chinese firms access to American capital.

The wording of Trump’s November order caused confusion at the NYSE, prompting the exchange to reverse its response and the administration to clarify its requirements.

The order bans trading in certain securities starting Jan. 11. If Biden leaves the measure unchanged, U.S. investment firms and pension funds would be required to sell their holdings in companies linked to the Chinese military by Nov. 11.

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