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An elected American mayor secretly spread Chinese government propaganda to the very community she was supposed to serve. This case exposes a documented, systematic CCP strategy to seed local American government where no one is watching. The CCP's influence operations don't stop at Washington; Beijing identifies ambitious politicians in Chinese-American communities, provides campaign infrastructure and media networks, and then cultivates them for years as loyal assets.
The vast majority of Chinese Americans are deeply loyal to the United States and have no connection to Beijing's political influence campaigns. In many cases, they are among the primary targets of Chinese Communist Party pressure, surveillance and intimidation efforts aimed at diaspora communities. Combating foreign interference requires precision, ensuring legitimate threats are addressed without stigmatizing millions of law-abiding Chinese Americans or undermining democratic pluralism and civic trust.
The Wang case is the latest episode in a growing wave of neo-McCarthyism targeting Chinese Americans. Chinese American researchers, engineers and scientists have already been falsely investigated or charged for alleged spying, while anti-China hysteria has made Chinese Americans victims of ethnic suspicion. Prosecuting a community figure for sharing online content — conduct predating her office — fits this pattern of guilt-by-association that criminalizes heritage, not genuine espionage.