Let me tell you a funny story about Taiwan.
OK, maybe it’s not so funny. The Chinese certainly wouldn’t think it is — but I chuckled when I recently realized what I had innocently gotten myself in the middle of.
Here it is: A couple of months ago, I suggested that Taiwan contact then-candidate Donald Trump to say hello. In fact, it was when everyone else in the media world was predicting — without a doubt in their minds — that Hillary Clinton would run away with the election.
As you know — and if you don’t, I’m happy to tell you again — I’m the only journalist in America who thought that Trump not only had a chance to win but also that he would win. I wrote that in many columns.
I’m also the guy who went out on the thinnest of limbs and said Trump would be a formidable competitor when he announced his candidacy in 2015. While late-night TV hosts were busy making fun of him, I was taking him seriously.
That takes me back to my Taiwan story.
Back in mid-September, the Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA) was holding the Taiwan Excellence Product Showcase 2016 Media Luncheon in Manhattan. (The group obviously is not very good at coming up with catchy names, but I didn’t hold it against them.)
Anyway, that country was showing off its products and had invited a bunch of journalists to attend the showcase at the Time Warner Center at Columbus Circle as well as the lunch at a hotel on Central Park South.
I couldn’t attend, didn’t want to or — unlikely — wasn’t hungry that day. I probably thought it was one of those long, drawn-out lunches and I didn’t have the time. So, instead, I suggested a meeting with one of the country’s representatives.
The group was amenable. So, right before the lunch was to take place, I met with Francis Kuo-Hsin Liang, the chairman of TAITRA, at his suite in the JW Marriott Essex House. It was the two of us sitting across from each other at a small table, with his entourage of about a half dozen people backed against the walls and not saying a thing even when I addressed them.