“We literally sold our middle class out to China so that rich people could make money selling you cheap garbage from China,” Ohio GOP Senate candidate Bernie Moreno said in an ad released last summer. It was meant as a condemnation of wealthy elites’ ties to China, but in retrospect, it sounds more like an admission.
Moreno, a multimillionaire who made his fortune in part as an owner of car dealerships, has repeatedly claimed he refused to sell a Chinese-made General Motors SUV, the Envision, as part of his principled defense of the U.S. auto industry.
But that wasn’t exactly true — and Moreno is facing backlash for it. Labor leaders in Ohio, including those who support Democratic Sen. Sherrod Brown’s re-election bid, are teeing off on Moreno for lying about selling the model. A spokesperson for Moreno told Spectrum News, “In response to the closure of the Lordstown Plant here in Ohio [in March 2019], Bernie made a decision to stop any new inventory of Envision’s from being sold at his dealership. After he sold off the inventory he already had on the lot, he refused to take orders for more Envisions. There is zero contradiction here.”
To be clear: China is a major player in the global economy, so it’s incredibly common for any business to have some sort of connection to the country. But right-wingers have been rabid in pushing conspiratorial rhetoric and accusations that such connections represent some nefarious national security threat. And that could come back to bite them at the polls this fall.
Moreno isn’t the only one being taken to task for his hypocrisy. He’s one of multiple wealthy Senate candidates backed by Republicans who, despite the party’s vehement anti-China rhetoric, has made a killing doing business with the country.
As David Corn reported for Mother Jones, Florida Sen. Rick Scott has demanded that the United States “stop buying [Chinese] stuff” and “stop investing in China,” and he’s explained his stance by saying “you don’t do business with your enemies.”








