U.S. President Donald Trump has said that he would speak to Chinese leader Xi Jinping about releasing Hong Kong pro-democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai during his upcoming visit to China.
“Hong Kong was not as easy. But I will be bringing him up,” Trump told radio host Hugh Hewitt when asked whether he would raise Lai’s case directly with Xi when they sit down in Beijing next week.
The president mentioned that he had previously discussed Lai’s case with Xi during their October 2025 meeting in South Korea.
“I brought him up,” Trump said in the interview, which aired on May 4. “There’s a little bitterness, I would say, with him and Jimmy Lai. ”
Trump has said that he will visit China from May 14 to 15, though Beijing has yet to confirm the dates.
Lai’s children have called Trump’s visit a crucial opportunity for their 78-year-old father’s freedom, as the former publisher’s health has deteriorated after prolonged solitary confinement.
Speaking to reporters after Lai’s verdict, Trump said he felt “so badly” and had asked Xi to consider freeing the former media entrepreneur.
Hong Kong and Beijing have pushed back against such criticism, characterizing it as interference in internal affairs. In a statement on May 1, Hong Kong authorities defended the punishment of Lai, accusing him of using journalism “as a guise to commit acts that brought harm to our country and Hong Kong.”
In Washington, the House Select Committee on the CCP on May 5 thanked Trump for confronting Xi directly about “the unjust imprisonment” of Lai and advocating for his release.
“Jimmy Lai has been a tireless advocate for democracy and has led the people of Hong Kong in their fight for freedom and liberty,” the committee said in a post on X.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who co-led the efforts with Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), voiced support for the president’s decision.
“President Trump is exactly right,” Cruz said on X on May 4. “It’s well past time to end the appeasement, stare down the Chinese Communist Party, and demand Jimmy Lai’s release.”






