Pushback against Trump plays into the hands of the Chinese, Austria minister says
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Davos, SWITZERLAND — Liberal pushback against a likely highly divisive U.S. election will play into the hands of the Chinese, Austria's Minister for Foreign Affairs, Alexander Schallenberg, said Thursday.
Speaking to CNBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Schallenberg said that the upcoming election should not be turned into an "intellectual debate," whereby the democratic process is questioned because of the divisiveness of certain candidates.
"Let's be careful not to embark on an intellectual debate, where we end up saying 'we'd rather not have elections in the U.S.,' because then we're playing into the Chinese's hands," he told CNBC's Silvia Amaro.
"They treat democracy as a weakness, making us slower, making us more cumbersome. And no, democracy is a strength," he added. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in the U.K. wasn't immediately available for comment when contacted by CNBC.
Schallenberg was speaking specifically about likely Republican candidate and former President Donald Trump, whose electoral eligibility has come under fierce debate amid ongoing legal proceedings around his role in the Jan. 6 riot.
However, the foreign minister said he continued to have huge trust in the U.S. constitution and its institutions, and their ability to present votes with two legitimate and electorally representative candidates.
Trump, for his part, was considered highly skeptical of China during his time in office, opting for a protectionist approach. However, many of his policies have been extended by the Biden administration.
Schallenberg was speaking on a panel alongside Mark Malloch Brown, president of the Open Society Foundations, the George