US lawmaker Ro Khanna defends calling witness ‘racist’ in explosive China committee clash US Representative Ro Khanna defended calling witness Michael Lucci 'racist' during a House Select Committee on China hearing, after Lucci suggested denaturalizing Chinese-Americans born in the US via birthright citizenship. Khanna condemned the remarks as 'absurd' and said they crossed a line from criticizing China's government to targeting Chinese-Americans. ExclusiveUS lawmaker Ro Khanna defends calling witness ‘racist’ in explosive China committee clash Californian congressman says ‘denaturalise’ comments by Michael Lucci, founder of State Armor, are ‘absurd’ Nayan Seth /author/nayan-seth in Washington US House Select Committee on China https://www.scmp.com/topics/house-select-committee-chinese-communist-party-us?module=inline&pgtype=article , has defended calling a witness “racist” during testimony last week over comments on Chinese-Americans who obtain US citizenship through birthright. economic espionage and subnational influence https://www.scmp.com/news/us/article/3358403/us-hearing-warns-chinese-economic-espionage-now-targets-ai?module=inline&pgtype=article , where Khanna confronted Michael Lucci, founder of the Texas-based State Armor non-profit organisation, over a controversial social media post published in April. attempted bombing at MacDill Air Force Base https://www.scmp.com/news/world/united-states-canada/article/3349057/bomb-allegedly-left-us-base-alen-zheng-was-built-inside-2-pepsi-bottles?module=inline&pgtype=article in Florida and the other suspected of being an accessory. He argued that the accused pair had obtained US citizenship through birthright citizenship and said they were “not loyal to the USA”. Expanding beyond that case, Lucci said about 1.5 million people were “essentially born in Saipan and raised in Communist China” through birth tourism. “Denaturalise them all,” he said. Speaking on Monday on the sidelines of a think tank event in Washington, Khanna, the Democratic representative from California, told the South China Morning Post: “It’s the most absurd thing I’ve ever heard.” Khanna said there was “no thin line” between criticising the actions of China’s Communist Party and targeting Chinese-Americans. “If you’re born in the United States, you can’t be denaturalised. You can’t just say, ‘OK, if you’re Chinese-American, we’re going to start denaturalising you’. It was a terrible, terrible comment,” he said.