Han Zheng, Chinese President Xi Jinping’s envoy at Trump’s Inauguration, discussed fentanyl, trade, and technology with Vance and Musk.
US Vice President-elect J.D. Vance met with Chinese Vice President Han Zheng. The parties discussed several topics, CNN reports. According to a representative of the transition, they discussed a wide range of issues,
Han Zheng, who serves as an envoy for Chinese President Xi Jinping at the inauguration, “discussed a range of topics including fentanyl, balancing trade, and regional stability” with J.D. Vance, according to the Trump transition team.
Chinese Vice-President Han Zheng has held talks with the US vice-president-elect J.D. Vance and tech billionaire Elon Musk at separate meetings in Washington ahead of Donald Trump's inauguration, with both sides reaffirming their commitment to a "long and fruitful" relationship.
Han Zheng is in Washington D.C. as one of the many foreign leaders expected to attend Trump's inauguration Monday afternoon.
Excerpt: A Chinese presidential envoy has met with Vance and Musk to hold discussions on the eve of Donald Trump’s inauguration. China’s Vice President Han Zheng met with US Vice
“discussed a range of topics including fentanyl, balancing trade and regional stability” with J.D. Vance, according to the Trump transition team. Han stressed the “extensive common interests ...
“discussed a range of topics including fentanyl, balancing trade and regional stability” with J.D. Vance, according to the Trump transition team. Han stressed the “extensive common interests ...
While Xi will not personally attend the event, he and Trump held a phone call on Friday during which they discussed trade, fentanyl and TikTok.
They’re poisoning the blood of our country.” The stage for Trump’s particularly bloody equation of the border with the fentanyl crisis was set long ago. When he had first tried out the language three months earlier,
Donald J. Trump, the 47th president of the United States, made history by signing a record number of “America First” executive orders and promising to enact more, on the first
US President Donald Trump said he is considering 10 per cent tariffs on imports from China, starting on February 1, as a penalty for the flow of fentanyl, which is responsible for thousands of deaths in the US annually.