https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2019/06/elaine-chao-china-trip-foremost
The transportation
secretary thought it’d be cool to bring family members to government
meetings in which they had a financial interest.
In a normal presidential administration—hell, in a
normal professional setting of any kind—it would be considered
inappropriate to bring one‘s family members to official work meetings
and/or on business trips. But of course, the Trump administration is not
normal. Rather, it‘s a family affair, the primary goal of which is to
enrich Donald Trump and the people who surround him—who, among others, include his not-very-bright son-in-law. That M.O. starts at the top with the grifter-in-chief, but it also extends to dozens of current and former cabinet members who’ve seen no issue with taking their wives on taxpayer-funded European vacations, using a government plane to get a better shot of the solar eclipse, plunking down $31,000 on dining-room sets, and allegedly planning
work travel based on a “desire to visit particular cities or
countries.” So it’s not entirely surprising that Transportation
Secretary Elaine Chao thought it would be no big deal
to bring her relatives—who happen to have major business interests in
Beijing—to meetings with government officials during a visit to China in
the fall of 2017, but unfortunately for Chao, not everyone in government has adopted Team Trump’s way of thinking.The New York Times reports
that in October 2017, an alarmed official at the American Embassy in
Beijing wrote an urgent email seeking advice concerning “a series of
unorthodox requests” made by Chao‘s office related to her first visit to
China as a Trump cabinet member. According to the Times, Chao—who is married to Senate leader Mitch McConnell—wanted
federal officials to “coordinate travel arrangements for at least one
family member and include relatives in meetings with government
officials.” Such requests would be wildly inappropriate for any
secretary’s relatives, but were even more so given the Chao family’s
business: her father, James Chao, founded Foremost Group, a shipping, trading, and finance company now run by Elaine’s sister Angela Chao. While the company is based in New York, its fleet is, per the Times,
“overwhelmingly focused on China,” with roughly 72% of the raw
materials it has shipped since early 2018 going to China, cargo that
“helps feed” Beijing’s “industrial machine, which manufactures steel
products that are a point of dispute in the deepening trade war between”
China and the U.S. The company reportedly constructs almost all its
vessels in state-owned shipyards in China, some with loans from the
Chinese government.
No comments :
Post a Comment
ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL NOT BE POSTED!
please use either your real name or a pseudonym.