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China’s State TV Gives Trump Live Airtime for Trade Deal Signing

The broadcast shifted back to the studio once the U.S. leader began thanking allies in domestic states.

China’s State TV Gives Trump Live Airtime for Trade Deal Signing
U.S. President Donald Trump speaks during a signing ceremony for the U.S.-China “phase-one” trade agreement in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Zach Gibson/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. President Donald Trump’s remarks at the signing of the phase one trade deal were given almost 20 minutes of live airtime on Chinese state television, beaming him across the nation in the middle of the night.

State broadcaster CCTV and its English network CGTN carried a live feed from around 00:45 a.m. Thursday local time, with the former providing a simultaneous translation into Chinese. The broadcast shifted back to the studio once the U.S. leader began thanking domestic allies and discussing local issues such as the impeachment trial, with the anchors taking the opportunity to praise China’s negotiators.

State newspaper People’s Daily sent alerts via its app during the event, pushing the news of Trump and Chinese Vice Premier Liu He sitting down to sign the deal out at around 2 a.m. local time.

Most of the provisions in the document, which pauses the tariff war between the two nations, concern actions that China must take to avoid further penalties and address U.S. concerns over its trading practices. Beijing has worked to present it domestically as an equal treaty.

Shortly after the signing, CCTV published a commentary on its app arguing that the deal has two salient features: balance and equality and being a mutual “win-win”.

Early Thursday morning, the People’s Daily made a similar argument in an article published via WeChat, a social-media platform. The agreement is generally in line with China’s direction of advancing reforms and expanding opening up, and in line with China’s intrinsic needs of high-quality economic growth, it said.

Global Times, a Communist Party tabloid, said in an editorial that both sides “are not so satisfied” with the phase one deal, but the two should cherish “the hard-fought agreement.” It would be “shallow” to debate who won or lost, it said, calling for restraint in “nitpicking of the agreement and bad-mouthing future trade negotiations”.

China Daily, another flagship newspaper, cheered the deal as “a small, but positive step” forward in an editorial Thursday. It highlighted differences that still need to be resolved, cautioning that elation over the signing was quickly tempered by suspicions that it would not take much to scupper the deal.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Miao Han in Beijing at mhan22@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeffrey Black at jblack25@bloomberg.net, Malcolm Scott

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg

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