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May 2021

The Hill: US should not reopen the Jerusalem consulate

Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced Tuesday that the United States would reopen a consulate in Jerusalem to upgrade its contacts with the Palestinians. Respectfully, that is a huge mistake. A consulate to the Palestinians anywhere is inappropriate; in Jerusalem it also is illegal.

Two preliminary issues need to be addressed and explained. The first is to define what a consulate is. Simply put, it is a satellite office to an embassy located outside the capital city of a country, one that exists almost exclusively to provide visas and passports to people for whom a trip to the embassy is too far a distance. The second issue is why there was a consulate in Jerusalem in the first place. The U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem is an anachronism: It was established by American Christian Zionists in 1844 — 104 years before the establishment of the state of Israel and when Jerusalem was part of the Ottoman Empire — to facilitate the return of Jewish people to Jerusalem. It was not established as a mission to the Palestinians but morphed into that function after the failed Oslo Accords of 1994.

Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo closed the Jerusalem consulate in 2019 for several reasons, one of which is foundational and unrelated to policy. With the opening of the U.S. Embassy in Jerusalem in 2018, there was no basis for a consulate to exist. The Jerusalem embassy provides consular services on a non-discriminatory basis to all Israelis and Palestinians — equal treatment for Jews, Christians and Muslims. The consulate thus became obsolete and a waste of taxpayer dollars. I know of no other country where the United States maintains an embassy and a consulate in the same city.

Some argue for the reopening of the consulate in Jerusalem just for the purpose of engaging in diplomacy with the Palestinians and signaling a willingness by America to recognize, in the future, a Palestinian capital in Jerusalem. That would be illegal and unwise.

It would be illegal because the Jerusalem Embassy Act of 1995, passed overwhelmingly by both the U.S. House and the Senate, provides that “Jerusalem should remain an undivided city.” A U.S. consulate in Jerusalem to a foreign body clearly runs afoul of American law.

It would be unwise for a host of reasons. First, the opening of the consulate would require Israeli approval. But Israel declared sovereignty over all of Jerusalem in 1967 and no Israeli leader — right, center or left — will have the popular approval to endorse such a division of Israel’s capital. The proposed opening thus needlessly puts the United States on a collision course with Israel on one of the Jewish state’s core principals, reflected in its national anthem, “to be a free nation in the land of Zion, Jerusalem.”

It also would be unwise because the location of the consulate in Jerusalem will be perceived as a de facto location of a future embassy. That would be a huge and unwarranted gift to the Palestinian leadership who continue to pay terrorists in violation of American law and universal principles of morality, and who otherwise show none of the attributes necessary for non-threatening peaceful coexistence within the region. It will set forth facts on the ground that will guarantee the failure of future peace negotiations.

It also would be unwise because when the Jerusalem consulate was operating, it was a perpetual cause of friction with the U.S. Embassy to Israel and confusion with respect to American policy. Long before I arrived on the scene, the consulate was a hotbed for some anti-Israel ideologues (certainly not all U.S. foreign service officers but a significant number) who operated within a small bubble in the State Department, unaccountable to the larger foreign policy establishment, and who frequently clashed with embassy personnel. Indeed, the consul general in Jerusalem was selected by a State Department committee and was not subject to Senate confirmation. In contrast, the ambassador to Israel is appointed by the president and subject to Senate confirmation and extensive congressional oversight.

I experienced this friction on numerous occasions. For example, when the Jerusalem consulate staff had responsibility for the West Bank and Gaza, it outlawed embassy personnel from traveling to Jewish communities in the West Bank but permitted travel to Bethlehem and Jericho. It claimed this was a non-ideological decision based solely upon security considerations. That was nonsense; there was no credible position that Bethlehem was safer for U.S. travel than, say, Maale Adumim, a Jerusalem suburb. We fixed that practice when the consulate closed. There also was the time when, just prior to former President Trump’s arrival in Jerusalem in 2017, a consulate officer, frustrated with his engagement with the Shin Bet on how to provide a video feed for the president’s visit to the Western Wall, blurted out that the Shin Bet should stand down because the Wall was “illegally occupied territory.” That eruption led the news the day before President Trump arrived and did great damage to our diplomatic efforts.

Once Secretary Pompeo closed the Jerusalem consulate, the U.S. diplomatic mission in Israel spoke with one voice, consistently and effectively. We opened a Palestinian Affairs Unit comprised of highly skilled American, Israeli and Palestinian personnel who maintained contact with Palestinian civil society and provided valuable insights to decision makers. And we stopped wasting taxpayer dollars on duplicative, unhelpful efforts.

The Palestinian leadership never comes to Jerusalem; its government convenes in Ramallah. If America wants to signal increased engagement with the Palestinians, perhaps something short of a consulate located in Ramallah might be appropriate. Anything more would constitute an act in violation of law and a step backwards in the quest for regional peace.

Read this article on The Hill.

All Israel News: ‘Violence in Israel is the price of Biden’s weakness,’ former VP Mike Pence writes in scathing op-ed

With more than 3,700 rockets fired at Israel over the past ten days, former Vice President Mike Pence has issued a scathing assessment of President Joe Biden’s foreign policy in the Middle East, and it can be summed up in one word: Weakness.

“Instead of seeking peace through strength, he has invited violence through weakness,” Pence wrote in a column published in National Review on May 17.

“The Trump-Pence administration opened the door to a future of peace in the Middle East founded on our strong and unwavering commitment to the state of Israel. But now Israel is enduring the worst outbreak of violence in at least seven years – a direct result of the weakness shown by the Biden administration from its first day in office.”

In the article, Pence extolled Trump’s strategic, bold and pioneering approach to the Middle East, including an unapologetic defense of Israel and the successful brokering of four Arab-Israeli peace treaties, which he argued was distinctly different from the eight years of chaos and violence in the region under former President Barack Obama with then-Vice President Biden.

“Many Americans witnessing the recent bloodshed in Israel are perplexed by how quickly violence erupted after years of calm,” Pence noted. “The answer is that President Biden and congressional Democrats have abandoned unambiguous support for our ally Israel, emboldened our enemies, and turned their back on the policy that yielded historic peace deals in the Middle East.”

“We withdrew from the dangerous Iran nuclear deal brokered by the Obama-Biden administration, which put the world’s leading state sponsor of terror on the path to nuclear weapons while sending pallets of cash to the mullahs in Iran. We acknowledged Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights and the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria. And President Trump kept the promise made by countless Republican and Democrat politicians by actually following through in moving the American embassy to Jerusalem, the capital of the State of Israel.”

Pence argued that “Biden has sent the world a profoundly different message. Instead of seeking peace through strength, he has invited violence through weakness.”

“President Biden has emboldened anti-Semitic terrorist groups such as Hamas by shunning Israeli leaders and restoring more than $200 million in aid to the Palestinians that had been canceled by the Trump-Pence administration. He unilaterally took the Iranian-backed Houthis off the list of designated terrorist organizations. And worst of all, he has announced his intention to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal, destabilizing the entire region. When asked, Biden’s press secretary couldn’t even say whether Israel remains an ‘important ally’ of the United States.”

Pence concluded his column by urging Americans to “pray for the peace of Jerusalem and stand without apology for our most cherished ally, Israel, until the violence is quelled and Israel’s security is restored.”

Read this article on All Israel News.

CBN News: Why Former VP Mike Pence Blames Biden for Israel-Hamas Crisis

Former Vice President Mike Pence is blaming President Biden for the current conflict in the Middle East.

In an op-ed for the conservative outlet National Review, Pence highlights progress made during the time he was vice president toward Middle East peace while slamming Biden’s agenda.

“Israel is enduring the worst outbreak of violence in at least seven years,” he wrote. “A direct result of the weakness shown by the Biden administration from its first day in office. Many Americans witnessing the recent bloodshed in Israel are perplexed by how quickly violence erupted after years of calm.”

He added, “The answer is that President Biden and congressional Democrats have abandoned unambiguous support for our ally Israel, emboldened our enemies, and turned their back on the policy that yielded historic peace deals in the Middle East.”

The former vice president also pointed to the peace deals the Trump administration negotiated in the Middle East.

Last September, Israel signed peace deals to “change the course of history” with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, which were brokered by Trump.

“These groundbreaking peace accords happened not in spite of America’s support for Israel, but because of it. Other nations knew where America stood with absolute certainty,” Pence noted. “They knew America would respond forcefully if our citizens or allies were threatened. As a result, they responded rationally by pursuing peace and harmony.”

Pence condemned Biden for restoring over $200 million in aid to the Palestinians and taking the Iran-backed Houthis off the designated terror group list while simultaneously trying to rejoin the nuclear deal with the radical regime in Iran.

“President Biden has emboldened anti-Semitic terrorist groups such as Hamas by shunning Israeli leaders and restoring more than $200 million in aid to the Palestinians that had been canceled by the Trump-Pence administration,” the former vice president wrote. “He unilaterally took the Iranian-backed Houthis off the list of designated terrorist organizations. And worst of all, he has announced his intention to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal, destabilizing the entire region.”

Then Pence addressed the issue with Hamas, stressing why he strongly opposes any comparison between Israel and the terrorist group.

“Every tepid statement uttered by the Biden-Harris administration is built on a false equivalency between Israel and Hamas,” he wrote. “One is a sovereign nation with a legitimate government and a trusted ally. The other is an internationally recognized terrorist organization that has fired more than 3,000 rockets at Jewish families and businesses in the past week. There is no moral equivalency between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas.”

Pence concluded his article by urging everyone to pray for peace and unity.

“Americans should pray for the peace of Jerusalem and stand without apology for our most cherished ally, Israel until the violence is quelled and Israel’s security is restored,” he said.

Read this article on CBN News.

Daily Mail: Pence blasts Biden for being weak on defending Israel

Former Vice President Mike Pence assigned blame to President Joe Biden for the current conflict between Israel and Hamas, saying that ‘weakness arouses evil.’

On Tuesday, Pence – a likely Republican 2024 presidential candidate – was out with a new video message and an op-ed for National Review touting the Trump-Pence administration’s ‘unrivaled’ commitment to Israel.

‘But from the moment President Biden took office, all that changed, and the results have reignited violence,’ Pence said in the video, adding that Biden has lost ‘four years of progress toward peace.’

Instead of seeking peace through strength, President Biden has offered weakness and ambivalence and, tragically, our friends in Israel are paying a terrible price,’ Pence also said.

Pence said the Biden administration was making a ‘false equivalency’ between Isreal and Hamas.

‘One is a sovereign nation with a legitimate government, and a trusted ally. The other, an internationally recognized terrorist organization that has now fired more than 3,000 rockets at Jewish families and business in the past week alone,’ Pence said. ‘There is no moral equivalency between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas.’

Pence outlined a number of Biden policies he believed contributed to the fresh conflict.

He blasted Biden for restoring U.S. funding to the Palestinian Authority and indicating a willingness to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal, which former President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. out of in 2018.

That deal had been negotiated by President Barack Obama’s administration, while Biden was serving as vice president.

He promoted the last administration’s decision to move the U.S. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, and pointed to the Abraham Accords, peace deals between Israel and United Arab Emirates and also Bahrain, which were negotiated during Trump’s term in office.

Pence hit Biden and Congressional Democrats – some of whom have been extremely critical of Israel’s response to Hamas’ rocket attacks – saying they ‘abandoned unambiguous support for our ally Israel, emboldened our enemies, and turned their back on the policy that yielded historic peace deals in the Middle East.’

‘Apparently, Biden learned nothing from the tragic foreign-policy blunders made during his time as vice president. President Obama’s thin “red line” in Syria, his decision to “lead from behind” in Libya, and his slipshod withdrawal from Iraq each created power vacuums that were quickly filled by America’s enemies,’ Pence wrote in National Review.

‘Now Biden is repeating those grave errors by creating a power vacuum of his own. He has replaced strength with weakness, moral clarity with confusion, and loyalty with betrayal,’ Pence continued. ‘Biden’s void, too, is being filled by America’s enemies – and Israelis are paying the price in blood.’

‘Americans should pray for the peace of Jerusalem and stand without apology for our most cherished ally, Israel, until the violence is quelled and Israel’s security is restored,’ the former vice president added.

During the Trump years, the now former president put his son-in-law Jared Kushner in charge of coming up with a peace deal between the Israelis and the Palestinians.

It was rejected, in part, because it was too biased in favor of Israel.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki pointed to Kushner’s plan when asked Tuesday if the Biden administration believed the thinking behind the Abraham Accords should be reconsidered.

‘I would say that we are not following the same tactics of the prior administration. We – the president has reinstated humanitarian assistance and security assistance to the Palestinians. That’s something that was stopped back in 2018 and we felt was not a constructive action by the prior administration,’ Psaki said.

‘Aside from putting forward a peace proposal that was dead on arrival, we don’t think they did anything constructive, really, to bring an end to the longstanding conflict in the Middle East,’ the press secretary added.

Read this article on Daily Mail.

Breitbart: Mike Pence Blames Joe Biden’s Weakness for Attacks on Israel

Former Vice President Mike Pence released a video statement Tuesday, from Advancing American Freedom, his new policy and advocacy organization, blaming President Joe Biden and his administration for the Israel and Gaza conflict due to his lack of strength.

Pence started by reaffirming “Israel is America’s most cherished ally,” and he believes this wholeheartedly. During Pence’s time as the vice president under President Donald Trump, he was honored to visit Israel and meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu and see the western wall. Pence said under the Trump-Pence administration, the United States and Israel witnessed “four years of progress toward peace.” He said the “Trump-Pence administration‘s commitment to Israel was unrivaled,” and they “made that clear to the world through our actions.”

He explained that Israel has been seeing unprovoked violence for more than a week from the terrorist group Hamas, asserting that this was able to happen from the weakness Biden shows while in office. Pence said, “Biden has replaced strength with weakness, moral clarity with confusion, and loyalty with betrayal.”

During the Trump-Pence administration, Pence said, they “brokered historic peace deals in the Middle East, we withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal, and it was three years ago last week that our administration kept a decades-old promise.” Pence expressed since Biden took office in January, all that has changed.

With Biden being inaugurated, he continued to say, violence reignited and his “weakness arouses evil” instead of “seeking peace through strength.” Pence said “our friends in Israel are paying a terrible price.” Biden has even hurt Israel by “restoring funding to the Palestinian Authority,” and Biden further endangered Israel with his announcement to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal.

Pence explained the difference between Israel and Hamas, saying, “One is a sovereign nation with a legitimate government and a trusted ally, the other is an internationally recognized terrorist organization.” Since the start of this conflict, the terrorist group in Gaza has “now fired more than 3,000 rockets at Jewish families and businesses in the past week alone.”

Pence said Biden, along with every other leader the United States, should uphold “Israel’s right to self-defense and condemn the terrorists of Hamas,” including condemning any type of supporters and apologists.

Pence ended his statement by saying, in the “midst of these unprovoked attacks” on Israel, “let’s pray for the peace of Jerusalem and if the world knows nothing else, let the world know this, America stands with Israel.”

Read this article on Breitbart.

Vice President Mike Pence: America Stands with Israel

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Daily Caller: Biden’s ‘Weakness’ Caused Israel-Palestine Violence, Mike Pence Says

President Joe Biden’s “weakness” caused the escalation in violence between Israel and Hamas, former Vice President Mike Pence argued in a Monday op-ed.

Pence’s opinion piece in National Review is his most aggressive push back into politics since leaving the White House in January. Pence attacks Biden for giving in to anti-Israel factions within the Democratic Party, factions which have been particularly vocal since violence first began to escalate at the beginning of May.

“President Biden and congressional Democrats have abandoned unambiguous support for our ally Israel, emboldened our enemies, and turned their back on the policy that yielded historic peace deals in the Middle East,” Pence wrote, going on to tout his and former President Donald Trump’s defense of Israel and successes in the Middle East, particularly the Abraham Accords.

“President Biden has sent the world a profoundly different message,” he added. “Instead of seeking peace through strength, he has invited violence through weakness.”

Pence’s op-ed published hours after Biden held a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, during which he called for a ceasefire. Netanyahu has rejected a ceasefire so far, arguing that Hamas and other terrorist groups are still operating. White House says Biden assured Netanyahu that the U.S. stands with Israel in the conflict, however.

“The President reiterated his firm support for Israel’s right to defend itself against indiscriminate rocket attacks,” the White House said in a summary of the call. “The President welcomed efforts to address intercommunal violence and to bring calm to Jerusalem. He encouraged Israel to make every effort to ensure the protection of innocent civilians.”

“The two leaders discussed progress in Israel’s military operations against Hamas and other terrorist groups in Gaza. The President expressed his support for a ceasefire and discussed U.S. engagement with Egypt and other partners towards that end. The two leaders agreed that they and their teams would remain in close touch,” the White House added.

Read this article on The Daily Caller.

NBC News: Pence slams Biden for ‘weakness’ in handling of Israel-Hamas conflict

Former Vice President Mike Pence sharply criticized President Joe Biden in an op-ed Monday, calling the administration weak for its stance on the recent violent clashes between Israel and Palestinians.

“The Trump-Pence administration opened the door to a future of peace in the Middle East founded on our strong and unwavering commitment to the state of Israel,” Pence wrote in National Review. “But now Israel is enduring the worst outbreak of violence in at least seven years — a direct result of the weakness shown by the Biden administration from its first day in office.”

It is Pence’s sharpest criticism of the administration, particularly in the foreign policy arena, as former President Donald Trump continues to spread falsehoods about his 2020 election loss.

Biden spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday but did not make a direct call for an immediate end to violence as the deadly conflict entered a second week. The White House said Biden “expressed his support for a cease-fire and discussed U.S. engagement with Egypt and other partners towards that end.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday that Israel has “a special responsibility to protect civilians in the course of its self-defense.” However, U.S. officials have not called on their Israeli counterparts to alter or halt their response to Palestinian rocket fire. Israel has been America’s closest Middle East ally and the largest single recipient of U.S. military aid.

Pence several times touted the foreign policy achievements of the “Trump-Pence administration,” a phrase not often used while he was in office.

“Under the Trump-Pence administration, we made it crystal clear to the world that America stands with Israel,” Pence wrote. “But now, President Biden has sent the world a profoundly different message. Instead of seeking peace through strength, he has invited violence through weakness.”

In September, Israel signed deals to normalize ties with the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, which were brokered by the Trump administration.

The agreements — called the Abraham Accords — were signed by Netanyahu; the UAE’s foreign minister, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan; and Bahrain Foreign Minister Abdullatif al-Zayani. The bilateral agreements are full of pledges to advance diplomacy, mutual cooperation and work toward regional peace. Israel’s deal with the UAE is more comprehensive, outlining 15 areas of mutual interest, including finance, trade, aviation, energy, health, agriculture and water.

But critics have argued that they do not fully address the decades of conflict between Israel and the Palestinians. Pence called on Biden to support Israel, but there is growing pressure from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party for an approach that recognizes Palestinian rights.

“There is no moral equivalency between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas,” Pence wrote. “President Biden and every American leader should uphold Israel’s right to self-defense and condemn the terrorists of Hamas — as well as their supporters and apologists — in the strongest possible terms.”

Read this article on NBC News.

Violence in Israel Is the Price of Biden’s Weakness

The Trump-Pence administration opened the door to a future of peace in the Middle East founded on our strong and unwavering commitment to the state of Israel. But now Israel is enduring the worst outbreak of violence in at least seven years — a direct result of the weakness shown by the Biden administration from its first day in office.

Many Americans witnessing the recent bloodshed in Israel are perplexed by how quickly violence erupted after years of calm. The answer is that President Biden and congressional Democrats have abandoned unambiguous support for our ally Israel, emboldened our enemies, and turned their back on the policy that yielded historic peace deals in the Middle East.

Under the Trump-Pence administration, we made it crystal clear to the world that America stands with Israel. We withdrew from the dangerous Iran nuclear deal brokered by the Obama-Biden administration, which put the world’s leading state sponsor of terror on the path to nuclear weapons while sending pallets of cash to the mullahs in Iran. We acknowledged Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights and the Jewish communities in Judea and Samaria. And President Trump kept the promise made by countless Republican and Democrat politicians by actually following through in moving the American embassy to Jerusalem, the capital of the state of Israel.

Every step of the way, Democrats and self-proclaimed foreign-policy “experts” derided our administration’s approach and issued dire warnings that blood would soon flow in the streets of Israeli cities. As usual, they were wrong.

In fact, last year, our administration brokered the Abraham Accords, a series of historic peace agreements between Israel and Arab-Muslim countries — the most significant breakthrough for peace in decades.

These groundbreaking peace accords happened not in spite of America’s support for Israel, but because of it. Other nations knew where America stood with absolute certainty. They knew America would respond forcefully if our citizens or allies were threatened. As a result, they responded rationally by pursuing peace and harmony.

But now, President Biden has sent the world a profoundly different message. Instead of seeking peace through strength, he has invited violence through weakness.

President Biden has emboldened anti-Semitic terrorist groups such as Hamas by shunning Israeli leaders and restoring more than $200 million in aid to the Palestinians that had been canceled by the Trump-Pence administration. He unilaterally took the Iranian-backed Houthis off the list of designated terrorist organizations. And worst of all, he has announced his intention to rejoin the Iran nuclear deal, destabilizing the entire region.

When asked, Biden’s press secretary couldn’t even say whether Israel remains an “important ally” of the United States.

Every tepid statement uttered by the Biden-Harris administration is built on a false equivalency between Israel and Hamas. One is a sovereign nation with a legitimate government, and a trusted ally. The other is an internationally recognized terrorist organization that has fired more than 3,000 rockets at Jewish families and businesses in the past week. There is no moral equivalency between Israel and the terrorist group Hamas. President Biden and every American leader should uphold Israel’s right to self-defense and condemn the terrorists of Hamas — as well as their supporters and apologists — in the strongest possible terms.

Apparently, Biden learned nothing from the tragic foreign-policy blunders made during his time as vice president. President Obama’s thin “red line” in Syria, his decision to “lead from behind” in Libya, and his slipshod withdrawal from Iraq each created power vacuums that were quickly filled by America’s enemies.

Now Biden is repeating those grave errors by creating a power vacuum of his own. He has replaced strength with weakness, moral clarity with confusion, and loyalty with betrayal. Biden’s void, too, is being filled by America’s enemies — and Israelis are paying the price in blood.

Americans should pray for the peace of Jerusalem and stand without apology for our most cherished ally, Israel, until the violence is quelled and Israel’s security is restored.

Read this article on National Review.

Biden’s China-first tax plan – Americans come last in president’s jobs plan

Americans have never looked forward to Tax Day – but if President Biden and congressional Democrats get their way, the economic struggles of a punitive tax system are sure to make it worse.

Under the Trump-Pence administration, we proved that low taxes are the key to creating prosperity for Americans of every background and income group.

In 2017, we passed the historic Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, which delivered more than $3.2 trillion in tax relief to American families and businesses.

Within months, our economy took off like a rocket. America gained more than 7 million new jobs, unemployment plummeted to the lowest rate in 50 years, and more than 10 million people were lifted off of welfare – the largest reduction in poverty in modern history.

In addition to delivering significant relief for middle-class taxpayers, we also cut the business tax rate from one of the highest in the developed world to one of the lowest.

Cutting taxes on American employers was a central part of our efforts to bring jobs and factories back home to the United States – and it worked. After losing 60,000 factories under the previous two administrations, America gained 12,000 new factories, because employers were no longer driven away by an exorbitant tax burden.

Now, President Biden is threatening to bring back the anemic job growth, stagnant wages and rampant offshoring that defined his term as vice president.

As part of his American Jobs Plan, Biden is proposing a massive tax hike on employers that will once again put American workers at a major disadvantage with their competitors in foreign countries. Biden’s tax hike will give the United States a business tax rate that is substantially higher than even Communist China.

The result will be an economic catastrophe. The post-pandemic recovery could come to a screeching halt, devastating Americans longing for a return to normal after a year of economic hardship.

Job growth will trickle to a standstill. Capital investments will be canceled. Fewer products will be Made in the USA. Manufacturers will pack up and head overseas, leaving a hole in the heart of blue-collar communities.

The robust wage gains that workers have enjoyed in recent years will vanish into thin air, along with the hopes and dreams of millions of middle-class families. Our jobs, factories and prosperity will steadily drift out to sea in search of foreign shores.

Worse yet, China stands to become one of the biggest beneficiaries of the Biden tax hikes.  

After four years of America First tax and trade policy, our foreign competitors would gladly welcome the self-imposed competitive disadvantage. China stands to gain thousands of jobs as employers flee the crushing tax and regulatory burden of Joe Biden’s America.

The idea that a communist nation would be more hospitable to free enterprise than the United States is a cruel irony that our forebears never could have imagined – and yet it is precisely the future that awaits if President Biden and Democrats succeed.

Congress must spare our nation from this self-inflicted economic wound and soundly reject the Democrats’ so-called American Jobs Plan. Keep taxes low so the tide can keep rising all across America, and truly lift all boats.

Read this article on Fox News.