Trump to head to China for high-stakes talks with Xi – US politics live

Trump to head to China for high-stakes talks with Xi – US politics live


Trump heads to China for high-stakes talks with Xi

Hello and welcome to our live coverage of US politics.

Donald Trump is heading to Beijing for high-stakes talks with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, as they seek to maintain a tentative trade truce while navigating Iran, Taiwan and dominance over global supply chains.

The Iran conflict could serve as a potential source of tension during talks. The US president has sought help from China, a close ally of Iran and the world’s biggest buyer of Iranian oil, to convince Tehran to reopen the strait of Hormuz and end the war. Trump’s first visit to China in nearly nine years had been delayed in the hopes that the US-Israeli war against Iran would be over, and it comes a week after Beijing flaunted its close ties with Tehran by hosting the Iranian foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi.

Trump to head to China for high-stakes talks with Xi – US politics live
US president Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the G20 leaders summit in Osaka, Japan, in 2019. Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

For China’s assistance, Xi will probably want something in return, and on top of his list is Taiwan, a self-governing island that Beijing claims as part of its territory. Analysts say China wants the US to declare opposition to Taiwanese sovereignty and delay, or ultimately limit, arms sales to the island. Trump said yesterday that Washington’s longstanding support for Taiwan’s defence would be on his agenda for the Beijing summit. “President Xi would like us not to, and I’ll have that discussion,” he told reporters. “That’s one of the many things I’ll be talking about.”

The two leaders’ last meeting in October paused a flurry of tit-for-tat trade tariffs in 2025. In February last year, Trump imposed 20% tariffs on China after accusing it of allowing the influx of the drug fentanyl into the US. China responded in kind, slapping tariffs of 15% on coals and liquefied natural gas imported from the US and 10% on oil and agricultural machines.

Trump is scheduled to land in the Chinese capital tomorrow night for the two-day summit. Alongside bilateral meetings, his schedule includes a tour of the Temple of Heaven, a state dinner on Thursday night and tea between the two leaders on Friday before he departs, according to reports.

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Key events

Richard Luscombe

House Democrats on Tuesday released a new report alleging that a “sweetheart deal” with Florida prosecutors allowed the disgraced late financier Jeffrey Epstein to build a substantial and lucrative international sex trafficking ring.

Robert Garcia, ranking member of the House oversight committee, kicked off a field hearing in Palm Beach – where Epstein procured young girls to provide sexual services to a range of wealthy clients – by presenting the report called “The Price of Non-Prosecution – the evolution of Epstein’s trafficking network from Palm Beach to Paris and beyond”.

It alleges that Epstein and his associates gamed the US immigration system to obtain visas to traffic women into the country from overseas.

The day-long hearing will hear from several survivors of Epstein’s abuse, some of whom were as young as 14 for Epstein’s parties in Palm Beach and elsewhere.

Garcia’s opening remarks focused in part on the deal Epstein was able to strike in 2008 with federal prosecutors in Miami that allowed him to dodge more serious charges and serve only 13 months in prison for a solicitation of prostitution conviction.

“[Our] report uses evidence obtained by our investigation, including and most importantly bank records, that show how [prosecutor] Alex Acosta’s sweetheart deal let Epstein build a global network using enablers to bring in women who he could then exploit and abuse,” Garcia said.

“This report is just the beginning of numerous reports and information that we intend to put out over the course of the months ahead.

“This hearing is about making one thing clear, and that is that no one is above the law. Survivors matter, and this committee will continue to demand transparency.”

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