Donald Trump’s Huawei crackdown could hit Trump country hardest
- Small, rural US wireless providers fear the president's approach could result in big costs
This story is published in a content partnership with POLITICO. It was originally reported by John Hendel on politico.com on May 24, 2019.
The fallout from US President Donald Trump's Huawei crackdown may fall hardest on his rural base, already suffering from his earlier aggressive trade moves.
The US Commerce Department’s decision last week to put the Chinese telecoms giant on a trade blacklist is causing panic among small wireless providers, many of them in Trump-friendly parts of the country, which have Huawei equipment in their networks.
And they warn they will face big costs, potentially hundreds of millions of dollars, if they have to rip out and replace it.
Amid industry lobbying, the administration gave US companies a 90-day reprieve for doing some types of business with Huawei, but a full ban looms as a possibility.
That could add to the harm that the blowback from Trump’s trade war has already inflicted in big swaths of Trump country – for instance, China’s retaliatory tariffs on US exports like soybeans and pork.