The Morning Dispatch: Where Is Peng Shuai?

And what does her disappearance mean for the upcoming Olympics?

Happy Friday! President Joe Biden may be pardoning Peanut Butter and Jelly later today, but those turkeys know what they did—and they will answer to their creator.

Quick Hits: Today’s Top Stories

  • The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its score of Democrats’ Build Back Better Act on Thursday, estimating that—before taking the effects of stricter tax enforcement into account—it would add $367 billion to the deficit between 2022 and 2031. In a separate analysis, the CBO estimated that BBB’s additional IRS funding would generate an additional $207 billion in revenue over the same time period, meaning if the CBO projections are accurate, the legislation would ultimately add about $160 billion to the deficit over 10 years.
  • The Justice Department announced Thursday that two Iranian men were charged for their role in a “cyber-enabled campaign to intimidate and influence American voters” ahead of the 2020 election. The indictment alleges the men—who worked for a company known to provide services to the Iranian government—attempted to compromise 11 state voter websites and impersonated the Proud Boys while sending messages to registered Democratic voters threatening physical harm if they did not change their party affiliation and vote for Donald Trump.
  • Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt commuted the death sentence of Julius Jones on Thursday just hours before Jones—who was convicted of first-degree murder in 2002 but maintains his innocence—was set to die by lethal injection. Jones will now serve life in prison without the possibility for parole.
  • President Biden on Thursday signed into law three bipartisan bills aimed at supporting law enforcement and first responders. Shortly after, the Justice Department announced $139 million in grant funding that will allow 183 police departments nationwide to hire more than 1,000 full-time law enforcement officials.
  • Rep. G.K. Butterfield of North Carolina announced Thursday he will not run for reelection next year, expressing frustration with his state’s Republican-led redistricting process.He is now the 16th incumbent House Democrat planning to retire or run for another office.
  • The number of daily new COVID-19 cases in the U.S. has increased 23 percent over the past two weeks while hospitalizations and deaths attributed to the virus have decreased 1 and 13 percent over the same timeframe, respectively.
  • Initial jobless claims decreased by 1,000 week-over-week to 268,000 last week, the Labor Department reported Thursday.

International Concern Grows Over Missing Chinese Tennis Star

Peng Shuai at the 2020 at WTA Shenzhen Open. (Photo by Zhong Zhi/Getty Images.)

On November 2, Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai posted a lengthy statement on social media platform Weibo alleging that former People’s Republic of China Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli—who served on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) Politburo Standing Committee ruling council from 2013 to 2018—forced her to have sex with him about three years ago. She hasn’t been seen in public since.

“I was very scared that afternoon,” Peng—the world’s No. 1-ranked doubles player in 2014—wrote in describing the assault, according to a widely circulated translation of the post. Peng, now 35 years old, said she and the 75-year-old Zhang had a relationship nearly a decade earlier, but that she hadn’t heard from him in years—until he reached out asking to play tennis. “After playing in the morning, you and your wife Kang Jie took me to your house. Then you took me into your room,” she claimed. “I didn’t expect it to be like this, with someone standing outside the door guarding. … Why did you come back to me, take me to your house, and force me to have sex with you?”

China’s Great Firewall quickly got to work. Peng’s allegations—for which she admitted she had no corroborating evidence, only her story—were scrubbed from the Chinese internet within minutes. Searches of the tennis player’s name—and even the word “tennis”—were temporarily blocked. Censors reportedly went so far as to suspend Weibo accounts that referenced the story in private direct messages.

Some Chinese dissidents have theorized that—because the post was allowed to stay up for about 20 minutes rather than being squashed immediately—the allegation is being weaponized for President Xi Jinping’s own internal political purposes ahead of a vote that’s expected to reinstall him for a third term. But most view the scandal for what it is: The highest-profile #MeToo accusation ever leveled against a CCP official.

The Women’s Tennis Association (WTA) has taken notice, with CEO Steve Simon over the weekend calling for a fair and transparent investigation into Peng’s allegation. “If at the end of the day, we don’t see the appropriate results from this, we would be prepared to take that step and not operate our business in China if that’s what it came to,” he told the New York Times. “We’re not going to back off this position. It’s the right place to be.”

In a world where the NBA apologized for “deeply offending” its Chinese fans after a team executive expressed support for Hong Kong and Nike’s CEO refused to weigh in on China’s human rights abuses in a discussion of the company’s “values,” the WTA’s willingness to stand up to the CCP—and risk losing access to one of the world’s most lucrative markets, where it currently holds about 10 tournaments that generate hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue—has been a pleasant surprise to critics of Beijing.

“Standing up to Chairman Xi’s lies isn’t easy, but the Women’s Tennis Association has shown more backbone than most American Fortune 500 companies,” GOP Sen. Ben Sasse told The Dispatch Thursday. “Chairman Xi fears the truth and the truth is exactly what Americans and the entire freedom loving world needs to hammer home.”

Will Peng’s Disappearance Affect the Olympics?

The allegations—and ensuing international pressure—come at a particularly precarious time for Xi and the CCP, as opening ceremonies for the 2022 Olympics are set to kick off in Beijing in just 77 days. On Thursday, President Biden appeared to confirm Josh Rogin’s reporting from earlier this week that the administration plans to diplomatically boycott the games in response to China’s human rights abuses.

“It’s something we’re considering,” he told a reporter before a bilateral meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. If such a diplomatic boycott occurs, neither Biden nor any other government officials will attend the proceedings—but American athletes who have trained their entire lives for this moment will still compete.

The position lines up with what Sen. Mitt Romney—who played a significant role in salvaging the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City—told The Dispatch back in March. “The United States should demonstrate our repudiation of China’s abuses in a way that will hurt the Chinese Communist Party—not American athletes who have trained their entire lives for this competition,” he said. “We can do that by boycotting the Beijing Olympics economically and diplomatically, while letting the games proceed.”

But with the games drawing nearer, pressure is mounting for the United States to skip them altogether—and Peng’s disappearance is adding fuel to the fire. “If the Chinese Communists disappear their own athletes, just think how much less they’ll care for the safety of ours,” Sen. Tom Cotton told The Dispatch Thursday.

Presented Without Comment

Twitter avatar for @brohrbachBen Rohrbach @brohrbach

Kanter takes direct aim at LeBron over his endorsement of Nike and the company’s alleged disregard for Uyghur forced labor in China. https://t.co/wuDLLJG4m9

Enes Kanter @EnesKanter

Money over Morals for the “King” 👑 Sad & disgusting how these athletes pretend they care about social justice They really do “shut up & dribble” when Big Boss 🇨🇳 says so Did you educate yourself about the slave labor that made your shoes or is that not part of your research? https://t.co/YUA8rGYeoZ

Also Presented Without Comment

Toeing the Company Line

  • Fan favorite Will Saletan is back on The Remnant, joining Jonah for a conversation about nationalism, universal principles, and what makes America great. Plus: Is the pandemic over? What does the Virginia result mean for both parties? And can Biden’s presidency recover after a disastrous few months?
  • On Thursday’s Advisory Opinions, David and Sarah talk with Neil Weare of Equally American about the Insular Cases and the unique legal history of American territories.
  • On the site today, Danielle Pletka looks into the complex ways that China disguises purchases of artificial intelligence, military technology, energy supplies and other sensitive goods from the West.

Reporting by Declan Garvey (@declanpgarvey), Andrew Egger (@EggerDC), Charlotte Lawson (@lawsonreports), Audrey Fahlberg (@AudreyFahlberg), Ryan Brown (@RyanP_Brown), Harvest Prude (@HarvestPrude), and Steve Hayes (@stephenfhayes).

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