Arcadia's mayor charged with working for China. Her city now fears the backlash
Briefly

Arcadia's mayor charged with working for China. Her city now fears the backlash
"Authorities said Arcadia's mayor, Eileen Wang, was acting as an illegal foreign agent of China, a situation that has brought both shock and concern. Officials were quick to denounce supposed efforts by the People's Republic of China to influence U.S. policy, noting that Wang's alleged involvement occurred before she was elected to public office."
"Wang, a U.S. citizen, stepped down from her post on the Arcadia City Council on Monday after entering into a plea agreement with prosecutors over charges that she acted under China's control to promote propaganda in the U.S. between 2020 and 2022. The federal case outlines an alleged scheme in which the Chinese used Wang to burnish their country's image."
"Experts said it is part of a larger effort by the government to recruit allies in local governments across the United States. In Arcadia and other heavily Asian cities in the San Gabriel Valley, the charges have brought questions about what exactly China is doing, along with alarm about a potential backlash in the United States."
""Whenever something like this happens, it causes concerns within the Chinese American community as to whether or not we're going to become scapegoats," said Joaquin Lim, who served for 17 years on the Walnut City Council. There is no evidence presented so far of a larger conspiracy among local officials, and some residents fear new anti-Asian sentiment."
Generations of Chinese immigrants helped transform Arcadia in the San Gabriel Valley into a high-end, luxury-oriented suburb. Federal prosecutors alleged that Arcadia’s mayor, Eileen Wang, acted as an illegal foreign agent of China, crossing into illegal conduct. Wang, a U.S. citizen, entered a plea agreement and stepped down from her city council role. Prosecutors alleged that between 2020 and 2022 she promoted propaganda in the United States under China’s control. The case describes a scheme to improve China’s image by using a local elected official. Experts said the conduct fits a broader effort to recruit allies in local governments across the United States. Residents expressed concern about scapegoating and possible anti-Asian sentiment, while officials noted the alleged misconduct occurred before Wang took office.
Read at Los Angeles Times
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]