
© Reuters/Tyrone SiuJoe Biden onscreen in Hong Kong
China congratulated Joe Biden on Friday for winning the presidential election, after days of silence on the matter.
While President Trump has not formally conceded, the Associated Press currently projects that Biden will win at least 290 electoral votes.
U.S.-China relations have deteriorated dramatically during Trump's term in office, especially during the coronavirus pandemic, which U.S. officials have blamed on China's failure to control the initial outbreak in Wuhan.
"We express our congratulations to Mr. Biden and Ms. Harris," Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin
said at a press conference on Friday.
"We respect the choice of the American people."While Chinese officials remained relatively silent on Biden's victory, government propaganda outlet
People's Daily has mocked Trump for losing. It is not yet clear what relationship the incoming Biden administration will have with China.
In an article for
Foreign Affairs in March, Biden called
"to build a united front of U.S. allies and partners to confront China's abusive behaviors and human rights violations, even as we seek to cooperate with Beijing on issues where our interests converge, such as climate change, nonproliferation, and global health security."
And during a primary campaign stop in Iowa, he dismissed the notion that China poses a threat to U.S. interests.
"China is going to eat our lunch? Come on, man. They're not bad folks, folks. But guess what? They're not competition for us,"
Biden said in May.
Biden's win comes following renewed scrutiny of the business dealings between his son Hunter and the China Energy Fund Committee, a now-defunct energy conglomerate.
As a lawyer, Hunter Biden represented former CEFC official Patrick Ho after the U.S. Justice Department charged Ho with money laundering. Ho, who spent three years in jail, was also under investigation by the FBI as a suspected Chinese spy, according to a FISA warrant obtained by the
Daily Caller.
About the Author:
Zachary Evans is a news writer for National Review Online. He is a veteran of the Israeli Defense Forces and a trained violist.
Comment: Zuckerberg
pronounces a winner and gains a political commodity.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has reportedly called the 2020 US presidential election for Democrat Joe Biden, soothing employees' minds while engaging in the sort of meddling his platform purports to fight.
Apparently disregarding Facebook's public-facing image as a fierce opponent of election meddling by entities not legitimately involved in the political process, Zuckerberg dived into the fray during a Thursday company-wide town hall, according to an audio of the meeting first obtained by Buzzfeed and later confirmed by CNBC.
"I believe the outcome of the election is now clear and Joe Biden is going to be our next president. It's important that people have confidence that the election was fundamentally fair, and that goes for the tens of millions of people that voted for Trump."
The billionaire has not made any public statements regarding the election outcome - which remains disputed by incumbent President Donald Trump and his administration as several states face lawsuits and recounts - though his wife Priscilla Chan and Facebook's COO Sheryl Sandberg have congratulated Biden and vice president-elect Kamala Harris. However, Zuckerberg allegedly complained about Trump's refusal to lie down and accept defeat, even attempting to bat away suggestions that the president could still pull an eleventh-hour victory out of his hat during the town hall.
"I think it's quite unhelpful that people out there are raising expectations that there is going to be a different outcome than from what was projected," he lamented, echoing the narrative that has emanated from the media establishment over the past week even as he acknowledged that "recounts and legal challenges" are the Trump campaign's "right and something you see in a lot of elections" but that Trump's insistence on sharing what he deemed disinformation was "a challenge."
Zuckerberg acknowledged Biden and his staffers "dislike [him] and Facebook," but praised the social media behemoth's fact-checking partners for "debunking" more false claims on Election Day than on any other date since 2016. Half of American Facebook users saw "reliable voting information" at least 13 times during their visits to the platform, he said.
While the overwhelming majority of Facebook employees who donated to a political candidate during the 2020 campaign season - 91.68 percent - gave to Biden, not all workers went along with Zuckerberg's declaration of victory. According to Buzzfeed, a "small number of employees" took issue with their overlord calling Biden the "president-elect," and at least one denounced the election as unfair, echoing a claim the Trump campaign had signal-boosted that dead people had voted.
Buzzfeed and several of its ideological compatriots were up in arms over Zuckerberg's apparent refusal to deplatform former Trump strategist Steve Bannon, whose video calling for Covid-19 czar Anthony Fauci and FBI head Chris Wray's "heads on a pike" was removed from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube last week.
"While the offenses here, I think, came close to crossing that line, they clearly did not cross that line," Zuckerberg told restive employees during Thursday's meeting, explaining "we have strict rules around how many times you need to violate certain policies before we will deactivate you."
Biden, for his part, has in the past referred to Facebook as "a real problem," while his staffer Bill Russo accused the social media behemoth of "shredding the fabric of our democracy in the days after" last week's vote.
Comment: Zuckerberg pronounces a winner and gains a political commodity.