Romney: When he took office, he labeled China a currency manipulator and imposed heavy taxes on its goods article cover image
News/Community Wire/Archive/Oct 11, 2012
Legacy archive / noindex

Romney: When he took office, he labeled China a currency manipulator and imposed heavy taxes on its goods

Republished with permission

Romney: When he took office, he labeled China a currency manipulator and imposed heavy taxes on its goods. The countdown to the US election has entered four weeks. Romney went to Ohio, a key swing state, on the 10th...

Local families

The U.S. election is 27 days away. Romney, whose popularity has begun to surpass Obama's, went to Ohio, a key swing state, to campaign on the 10th and accepted questions from the public on the spot. Some people asked about China On the topic, Romney said that China has become the world's largest manufacturing country and is preparing to surpass the United States to become the largest economy. However, China continues to prevent the United States from competing fairly with it. Therefore, on the first day of taking office, he will not only label China as a currency manipulator, but will also impose heavy taxes on Chinese goods.

U.S. Presidential Candidate Romney: “On day one, I will label China a currency manipulator as allowed by U.S. regulations and laws, and I will order heavy taxes because they steal our technology, counterfeit our products, and deliberately depress the I will compete with China for the price of their goods.”

However, the New York Times reported on its front page that day that although Romney had left Bain, the investment firm he founded, for nearly ten years, he continued to invest in China through Bain without interruption.

Ohio is a battleground in every presidential election. Romney, who previously lagged behind Obama in local support, is now showing signs of tying up with Obama in the polls. Therefore, in order to win votes from this industrial state, the two may continue to play the China card. Phoenix TV comprehensive report

Sources and usage

This piece is republished or synchronized with permission and keeps a link back to the original source.

Editorial tags

Community WireArchiveRepublished with permission