
Donald
Trump's most provocative foreign policy move since winning the
presidency played out against the backdrop of a quintessential
Washington activity: lobbying.
Bob
Dole, the 1996 Republican presidential nominee and a former Senate
majority leader, lobbied Trump and his team for months on Taiwan leading
up to a controversial phone call between the President-elect and the leader of the island, according to documents.
Dole worked with the Trump campaign on
participation in a US delegation to Taiwan, coordinated a Taiwanese
delegation to attend the GOP convention in July, pushed for language in
the GOP platform, set up a briefing for a Trump campaign policy
director, set up a meeting between top Trump adviser and now-Attorney
General nominee Sen. Jeff Sessions and a Taiwanese ambassador, and
arranged a meeting between the Trump transition team and Taiwanese
staff, a late November disclosure filing from Dole firm Alston & Bird shows.
Over
the last year, Alston & Bird has been paid $200,000 to lobby for
the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United
States, and is on retainer for at least $20,000 per month this year, according to the disclosure forms.
The office serves the function of a Taiwanese embassy in the US, which
it does not have as it is not recognized as a country independent from
China.
The documents were first reported by The New York Times and Politico.
Dole's office declined to comment to CNN on his relationship to the
Trump transition and his lobbying for Taiwan, as did Trump's.
Over the weekend, Dole told
The Times that he played a role in setting up the controversial call
between Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen and Trump. The conversation,
diverging from a "one China" policy observed for decades by past
Republican and Democratic administrations, ruffled feathers in Beijing.
"It's
fair to say that we had some influence," Dole said. "When you represent
a client and they make requests, you're supposed to respond."
Trump
was shunned by much of the national security and foreign policy
establishment during the campaign -- many scholars at think tanks and
past officials even signed anti-Trump letters -- leaving strategists
like Dole who embraced Trump early with an apparently stronger hand in
his policy.
Dole endorsed Trump
soon after he cleared the primary field, calling on the GOP to unite
behind the Republican candidate even as others continued to oppose
Trump's nomination through the convention in July. Dole was the only
recent former GOP presidential candidate to do so.
Trump
spent most of his campaign railing against special interests and
pledging to "drain the swamp" in Washington, though his transition team
counts plenty of former lobbyists in its ranks.
When
Vice President-elect Mike Pence took over as chairman of the
transition, he had any current lobbyists either leave the team or
terminate their lobbying registrations.
The
conversation with the Taiwanese President set off a firestorm over the
weekend. China lodged a complaint with the US over the call, urging the
American government to maintain the "one China" policy. Beijing sees
Taiwan as a renegade province, and the US has acknowledged that China
claims Taiwan as a part of its country since 1979.
Trump's
team has not made clear whether the call was an intentional shot across
the bow with China. They have maintained that Trump was accepting the
congratulatory call of a foreign leader like he has with others around
the world. But he has also followed up with tweets swiping at China and has taken a hard line against the country's trade and monetary practices.
Dole's
outreach on Taiwan's behalf has not been limited to Trump. He has
communicated with numerous current and former administration officials
and members to connect them with Taiwanese representatives and
interests, the documents show.
But his most extensive outreach in recent months has been with the Trump campaign, fulfilling a 2014 pledge
from Alston & Bird to TECRO to help advance their interests with
2016 Republican presidential candidates and party officials. In that
letter from Alston & Bird to TECRO, a contract for 2014 filed with
the government, the firm said it would receive a $20,000 per month
retainer from the Taiwanese office plus additional costs for their work.
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