President Trump is heading to Beijing this week for what's shaping up to be the most consequential U.S.-China summit in a generation — with tariffs, Taiwan, TikTok, and fentanyl all on the agenda at the same time. The adults, as they say, are working.
But sure, tell me more about the protest march you're organizing outside a Whole Foods in Portland.
The trip, previewed across multiple outlets on May 11, puts Donald Trump face-to-face with Chinese President Xi Jinping at a moment when every major flashpoint between the two superpowers is live simultaneously. We're not talking about one touchy subject over tea and handshakes. We're talking about the entire buffet of geopolitical tension served on one table, in one room, in Beijing.
Tariffs — the ones Democrats swore would collapse the economy — are front and center. Trump's trade war framework remains the backbone of the U.S. approach to China, and this summit is where the next chapter gets written. Taiwan, which China has never stopped eyeing like a cat watching a goldfish, will be discussed directly. The TikTok situation — still unresolved after Congress passed legislation requiring a sale or ban — is reportedly on the docket. And fentanyl, the poison that has killed more than 100,000 Americans annually in recent years, with precursor chemicals overwhelmingly traced back to Chinese suppliers, rounds out the agenda.
That's four loaded guns on one conference table. And Trump walked in voluntarily.
The media, predictably, is treating this trip like a five-alarm fire. Not because of the substance — they couldn't care less about fentanyl supply chains or semiconductor policy — but because Trump is the one doing it. According to WLT Report, the summit is being described as the most loaded U.S.-China meeting in a generation. And for once, the breathless coverage might actually be underselling it.
Here's what drives the left absolutely insane: Trump doesn't go to these things to "engage in dialogue" or "strengthen multilateral frameworks" or whatever word-salad phrase the State Department usually cooks up. He goes to cut deals. He goes to look the other guy in the eye and say what he wants. That's terrifying to people who've spent their entire careers perfecting the art of accomplishing nothing at international summits.
Remember when Joe Biden met with Xi in San Francisco back in November 2023 and the big headline was that Xi agreed pandas could come back to American zoos? Pandas. That was the deliverable. Meanwhile fentanyl kept flowing, Taiwan kept getting buzzed by Chinese jets, and TikTok kept harvesting the data of 170 million American users. But hey — we got pandas.
Trump isn't going for pandas.
The Democrats' response has been predictably unserious. Instead of acknowledging that maybe — just maybe — having a president willing to fly into the dragon's den and negotiate on every front simultaneously is a good thing, they've defaulted to the usual script. "Reckless." "Dangerous." "Playing into Xi's hands." The same people who couldn't negotiate a lunch order at the UN are suddenly experts on Chinese diplomacy.
We elected a president who does things. Goes places. Has conversations with people who run countries instead of sending a deputy assistant undersecretary with a briefing binder and a prayer. And the fact that every single major U.S.-China issue is on the table at once isn't a problem — it's the point. You don't solve a four-front crisis by addressing one front at a time over the course of eight years.
You walk into the room and put all of it on the table.
That's what Trump is doing this week in Beijing. Meanwhile, the resistance is updating their Instagram stories.







