"I
favor doing that. I think we probably need Congress but I would
take executive action as appropriate to be able to move us in
that direction," DeSantis said in an interview with Fox News on
Sunday.
The U.S. Senate voted in 2000 to grant that status to China as
it prepared to join the World Trade Organization. Any step to
remove it would also need congressional approval. The status is
a legal designation in the United States for free trade with a
foreign nation.
U.S.-China relations have been tense for years over national
security issues including Taiwan, U.S. export bans on advanced
technologies, China's state-led industrial policies, human
rights issues, the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic and trade
tariffs.
Washington has been trying to repair ties between the world's
two biggest economies. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said
over the weekend that her meetings with senior Chinese officials
in recent days were "direct" and "productive", helping stabilize
the superpowers' often rocky relationship as her four-day
Beijing trip ended.
China is "the No. 1 geopolitical threat this country faces,"
DeSantis added in the interview.
Former President Donald Trump, who leads the Republican field
currently in the polls with DeSantis a distant second, has said
he would give China a 48-hour deadline to get out of what
sources familiar with the matter say is a Chinese spy facility
on the island of Cuba 90 miles (145 km) off the U.S. coast.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh; Editing by Scott Malone and Andrea
Ricci)
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