A new cold war
What a Biden presidency means for US-China relations
Source:CommonWealth Magazine
After a drawn out vote tabulation, former Vice-President Joe Biden of the Democratic Party received 306 electoral votes to defeat incumbent President Donald Trump, becoming the 46th president of the United States. When Biden assumes office in January 2021, how will he approach the U.S.-China relationship that rapidly deteriorated during Trump’s four years in office?
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What a Biden presidency means for US-China relations
By Shu-ren Koo, Daniel Kao, Yi-wen Lin, Yu-hsin Leeweb only
Although many countries are hopeful for a reset in relations under a Biden administration, the competitive rivalry between the U.S. and China is likely to be continued into the Biden administration.
A survey published by the Pew Research Center in early October found that 73 percent of Americans have an unfavorable view of China, the highest since the center began polling the topic more than a decade ago. In another survey by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, over 54 percent of Americans see China as the country posing the greatest challenge to the U.S.
How will Biden approach the U.S.-China relationship that rapidly deteriorated during Trump’s four years in office?
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Translated by Luke Sabatier
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