影响美国政治的商业大佬坚决反对对华贸易战

Koch brothers network breaks with Trump over China trade war

 

影响美国政治的商业大佬发话了:坚决反对对华贸易战_凤凰资讯

来源:环球时报公号  

22018年04月08日 23:46:55 

   据美国媒体报道,美国总统特朗普迄今不愿退出与中国之间的贸易战,但随着反对贸易战的保守派美国亿万富翁科赫兄弟所施加的政治影响,这种局面有可能会改变。

   科赫兄弟

   科赫兄弟是美国共和党著名游说组织“繁荣美国”的主管,而这个组织只是政治影响力与日俱增的科赫帝国的一部分。科赫兄弟称对华商品加征关税只会伤害美国的消费者,并有可能抵消去年12月份通过的共和党减税法案的积极影响。

   “我们自始至终都强调,提征关税和贸易保护主义是一个糟糕的主意。”“繁荣美国”的总裁蒂姆菲利普斯周五在接受采访时说。“这个税无形之中是加在了美国消费者身上,因为他们购买的很多产品的成本会更高,并且在被伤害的国家在采取报复行动时会伤害到美国的产业。”

   “繁荣美国”组织也直接向美国白宫表达了他们的关切。

   据了解,全球最大的私营企业科赫工业公司的掌门人领导人查尔斯科赫和大卫科赫拥有巨大的政治影响力。

   科赫帝国支持的政治派别是特朗普去年签署的税收改革法案中最有力的支持者之一。该组织一直在游说改变税法将导致全国各地的经济增长的观点。

   然而,科赫支持的政治团体担心,贸易战造成的连锁反应可能会抵消税收改革的胜利。

该组织与白宫私下围绕提征关税问题进行了会谈。但迄今为止,双方未能在政府的贸易政策上达成一致。

   “繁荣美国”的总裁蒂姆菲利普斯称,“这是一场旷日持久的对话,我们与白宫的经济政策团队有良好的沟通渠道,他们已经解释了他们这么做的理由,我们表示强烈反对。”

   美国25家大零售商致信特朗普:强烈反对对华“贸易战”

Conservative Koch brothers network breaks with Trump over brewing trade war with China

https://www.cnbc.com/2018/04/06/koch-brothers-network-breaks-with-trump-over-china-trade-war.html

  • The Koch network backed by conservative billionaires Charles and David Koch opposes tariffs.
  • "Our view is we are hopeful the administration will reverse course on these policies because tariffs ultimately hurt more jobs then save and hurt the very people they intend to help," said a spokesman for one of the groups in the network.
  • The Koch groups are worried that tariffs and a trade war with China would offset any potential positive economic gains from the Republican tax cuts.
Charles and David Koch
Miller Hawkins | MSNBC
Charles and David Koch

President Donald Trump is so far unwilling to back down from a trade war with China, but that may change as pressure mounts from the influential political and donor network backed by the conservative billionaire Koch brothers.

Executives at Americans for Prosperity, just one part of the ever-growing Koch influence empire, said that tariffs will only hurt American consumers and possibly cancel out positive effects from the Republican tax cut bill passed in December.

"From the beginning we've said that tariffs and protectionism is a bad idea," Tim Phillips, president of Americans for Prosperity, said in an interview Friday. "It's a tax on American consumers because a lot of the product they're buying will cost more and it hurts American industries when countries retaliate."

 

The group has also expressed its concerns directly with the White House.

Charles and David Koch, the leaders of Koch Industries, one of the largest private corporations in the world, exert vast political power and influence on the right for an array of pet conservative issues, such as tax cuts.

The political wing of the Koch network was one of the most vocal supporters of the tax reform bill Trump signed last year. The group pushed the message that changes to the tax code will lead to economic growth across the country.

On Friday, with the president ratcheting up his trade rhetoric, Americans for Prosperity continued to make the case for the GOP tax cuts. In a recent article titled "5 Things to Look Forward to Under the New Tax Code," the group promoted the notion that the reduced corporate tax rate — which was cut from 35 percent to 21 percent in the tax bill — will not only lead to strong growth, but more investments in the United States.

However, there is concern within Koch-backed groups that the ripple effects from a trade war could cancel out tax reform wins.

"We think when you look at tariffs this is a significant threat that can undermine tax reform and increase costs for people who are only just starting to feel the relief," Americans for Prosperity's top spokesman, Bill Riggs, told CNBC.

The group has privately spoken with the White House about the tariffs. So far, the two sides have failed to see eye to eye on the administration's trade policies.

"It's been an ongoing conversation. We have a good line of communication with the White House's economic policy team. They've explained their reasoning behind it and we just strongly disagree," said Phillips, the Americans for Prosperity president.

Potential conflict for the congressional GOP

With the network taking a stand against the president's efforts to slap tariffs on Chinese imports, Republican leaders in Congress who reaped Koch funds last year could be forced to go after Trump.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., for instance, was one of the top recipients of Koch financial contributions in 2017. His campaign committee, Team Ryan, brought in $495,000 in November from the coffers of Charles Koch and his wife, Elizabeth, during the same month the House of Representatives passed its historic tax reform bill, according to Federal Election Commission filings.

Ryan criticized the president in March when the administration proposed tariffs of 25 percent on steel and 10 percent on aluminum imports. "I disagree with this action and fear its unintended consequences," Ryan said at the time.

In a statement provided to CNBC, Ryan's spokeswoman, AshLee Strong, said Friday that the speaker still intends to work with the administration on future trade initiatives and is hoping for a different approach.

"We continue to work directly with the White House to find a better, more targeted approach," Strong said.

The Kochs also gave more than $406,000 last year to the National Republican Congressional Committee, the campaign fundraising arm for Republicans trying to get elected to the House. They gave a similar amount to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which is dedicated to maintaining a GOP majority in the Senate.

David Koch made his fair share of political investments in 2017, as well, shelling out $100,000 to the joint fundraising committee for Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, among others.

The NRCC declined to comment while the NRSC and a spokesman Hatch did not immediately return CNBC's requests for comment.

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