China has
launched an intense lobbying effort in Washington to kill legislation that
would punish it for its currency system, in the latest display of its more
sophisticated approach to influence U.S. policy.
A 12-member
"Congressional Liaison Team" inside the Chinese embassy has been
meeting with aides to key lawmakers, making phone calls to congressional
offices and speaking to the White House on the issue, according to Chinese and
U.S. officials.
The Chinese embassy has also
been paying a blue chip Washington law firm $35,000 a month to lobby Congress
on its behalf and to provide China with a greater understanding of
congressional politics.
The effort reflects how
sophisticated China's lobbying in Washington has become. Just 10 years ago
China routinely ignored Congress, with some of its officials believing the
Senate and House of Representatives were mere mouthpieces for the executive
branch.
And Beijing's rare attempts to
influence U.S. politics were clumsy and ill-informed, officials say.
Chinese officials have been
warning Congress and the White House that passage of the currency bill, which advocates retaliatory
tariffs on Chinese exports if the yuan remains artificially low against the
dollar, could trigger a damaging trade war.
The Senate on Tuesday passed
the bill by a 63-35 vote. Its fate in the House of Representatives looks more
uncertain.
"China's position on this
issue is very clear," a Chinese embassy official told Reuters. "So
congressional staff at the embassy have not only been reaching out to the
Congress, but have also been talking to all branches of the U.S. government,
including the administration."
The official, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, said embassy staff had been holding meetings on Capitol
Hill with key aides, and "I know there have been communications with the
White House." The official did not know which White House officials, or
lawmakers, had been approached.
"We have been explaining
to them our position and hoping they can convince the majority of senators and
representatives to take rational steps by not politicizing this issue,"
the official said.
Orrin Hatch, a Republican
senator who voted against the legislation, said it was important to listen to
the Chinese.
"I think we have to give
consideration to people who are leaders in their country. I don't know how much
influence they would have, but they certainly ought to be given consideration.
I always do," Hatch said outside the Senate.
He described the Chinese
representatives who came to Capitol Hill as "very concerned" about
the currency legislation.
"I did see some in the
hallway, and all they did was encourage me with what I was doing," he
said. Hatch had proposed an amendment requiring the administration to engage in
multilateral negotiations with China, but it was not brought to a vote in the
Democratic-controlled Senate.
President Barack Obama
declined to support the legislation last week, but he did accuse China of
"gaming the system".
Keeping the yuan artificially
low boosts Chinese exports because it makes its products cheaper on world markets.
Supporters of the legislation
-- a coalition of Democrats and Republicans -- say a rise in the yuan would
make U.S. exports more competitive, creating American jobs. Opponents say a
trade war would hurt an already anemic U.S. economy.
LOBBYING FIRM
China began to realize the
importance of lobbying after being repeatedly outfoxed on Capitol Hill by
Taiwan, which had a sophisticated and effective operation to influence
legislation.
In 2005, the Chinese embassy
retained Patton Boggs, one of the top lobbying shops in Washington. The
relationship continues with the embassy paying a monthly retainer of $35,000,
according to disclosure forms lodged under the Foreign Agents Registration Act.
According to the FARA filings,
the Chinese embassy paid Patton Boggs $104,090 on May 5, 2011, and $105,000 on
May 13 -- enough to cover six months' retainer fees. A Patton Boggs official
declined to comment on the firm's work for the Chinese embassy.
"They have built up a
very nuanced understanding of how Congress works," a former U.S. official
with extensive experience of dealing with the Chinese told Reuters. "They
have much more comprehensive understanding of what role Congress plays in these
debates."
The official said that on the
currency legislation, Chinese embassy staff "have been engaging with the
Hill, and I do know that this is an important issue to the Chinese and they
have been putting resources into it."
A congressional aide said in
recent years the Chinese lobbying effort has become more sophisticated. They no
longer complain about every bill that affects them. "They now realize some
of the bills are not going anywhere," the aide said.
These days, the aide said,
Chinese diplomats visit Capitol Hill and "they come here and sit down and
talk to you, but it's like any other country."
(Reporting by Tim Reid and
Susan Cornwell; Editing by Deborah
Charles and Paul
Simao)
Source : Reuters
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