Trump’s Foxconn debacle is ‘very damaging — if he can’t bring jobs, what exactly is he doing?’: CNN polling analyst By Brad Reed - Jan 31, 2019
President Donald Trump’s widely touted deal to bring more manufacturing jobs to Wisconsin took a major hit this week after Foxconn announced that is now reconsidering its original plans to manufacture LCD panels in the United States.
In fact, according to a Reuters report, Foxconn has now said that it “intends to hire mostly engineers and researchers rather than the manufacturing workforce the project originally promised.”
CNN polling analyst Harry Enten said on Thursday that there’s simply no way to sugarcoat how bad this is for the president, who had hyped up the deal in 2017 during an event at the White House.
“Donald Trump won the presidency because he broke through that blue wall in the Midwest — Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania,” Enten said. “Donald Trump made promises about bringing back these blue-collar jobs. And if he’s not bringing those back, then those Midwestern states may swing just a little bit more than nationally, and you could get a situation where maybe the Democrat wins by two points in the national vote, but actually wins the electoral college this time.”
The bottom line, said Enten, is that “stuff like this is very damaging to the president” because “he’s the jobs president, and if he can’t bring jobs, what exactly is he doing?”
rawstory.com
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[ If you have a debacle, just lie about it. ]
| Trump tweets that Foxconn debacle is ‘great news’ — even when the headline calls it ‘damage control’  President Donald J. Trump and Vice President Mike Pence delivers remarks during the Jobs Announcement event with Foxconn Wednesday, July 26, 2017, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)
written by Alex Henderson February 1, 2019
Earlier this week, electronics giant Foxconn pulled a major bait-and-switch in Wisconsin. President Donald Trump and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker had claimed that the Foxconn deal would bring thousands…
Earlier this week, electronics giant Foxconn pulled a major bait-and-switch in Wisconsin. President Donald Trump and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker had claimed that the Foxconn deal would bring thousands of new manufacturing jobs to Wisconsin, but Foxconn’s Louis Woo (a special assistant to Foxconn CEO Terry Gou) told Reuters that instead, the new facility would offer mostly white-collar research, tech and engineering jobs.
On Friday, CNBC published an article with the headline, “Foxconn does damage controlover Wisconsin factory” — yet when Trump linked to the article on Twitter, he claimed victory: “Great news on Foxconn in Wisconsin after my conversation with Terry Gou!”
But as journalist Aaron Rupar noted on Twitter, the information in the CNBC article is hardly great news for Wisconsin’s blue-collar workers.
Rupar tweeted, “The headline of the story Trump describes as ‘great news’ is, ‘Foxconn does damage control over Wisconsin factory,’ and the article makes clear the company hasn’t committed to creating a single manufacturing job in Wisconsin.”
When Trump and Walker announced the Foxconn deal in 2017, they insisted it would be a major victory for blue-collar workers in Wisconsin — and billions of dollars in tax incentives were offered to lure Foxconn to that midwestern state. Foxconn, according to this week’s announcements, still plans to do business in Wisconsin. But the electronics giant has made it clear that instead of creating numerous jobs for blue-collar workers in that Rust Belt state, the jobs will be mainly white-collar jobs that typically require a college degree.
MSNBC’s Chris Hayes weighed in on the Foxconn damage control, sarcastically tweeting, “They are also announcing a bridge for sale.”
Wisconsin is an important state for Trump. Although Wisconsin had been considered a solid blue state, Trump pulled off a shocking upset when he won it in 2016. Not since President Ronald Reagan in 1984 had a Republican carried Wisconsin in a presidential election, and a big part of Trump’s Rust Belt strategy — which also brought unexpected wins in Pennsylvania and Michigan — was a heavy emphasis on bringing blue-collar manufacturing jobs back to the United States. And the Foxconn deal was promoted as Trump fulfilling one of his main campaign promises.
On June 29, 2018, Trump boasted on Twitter, “The new plant being built by Foxconn in Wisconsin is incredible. Congratulations to the people of Wisconsin and to Governor Scott Walker @GovWalker and his talented representatives for having pulled it off. Great job!”
It remains to be seen how well Trump will perform in the 2020 election, but one thing’s for sure: He won’t be able to campaign on persuading Foxconn to bring thousands of new factory jobs to Wisconsin.
Trump tweets that Foxconn debacle is ‘great news’ — even when the headline calls it ‘damage control’  President Donald J. Trump and Vice President Mike Pence delivers remarks during the Jobs Announcement event with Foxconn Wednesday, July 26, 2017, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C. (Official White House Photo by Shealah Craighead)
written by Alex Henderson February 1, 2019
Earlier this week, electronics giant Foxconn pulled a major bait-and-switch in Wisconsin. President Donald Trump and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker had claimed that the Foxconn deal would bring thousands…
Earlier this week, electronics giant Foxconn pulled a major bait-and-switch in Wisconsin. President Donald Trump and former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker had claimed that the Foxconn deal would bring thousands of new manufacturing jobs to Wisconsin, but Foxconn’s Louis Woo (a special assistant to Foxconn CEO Terry Gou) told Reuters that instead, the new facility would offer mostly white-collar research, tech and engineering jobs.
On Friday, CNBC published an article with the headline, “Foxconn does damage controlover Wisconsin factory” — yet when Trump linked to the article on Twitter, he claimed victory: “Great news on Foxconn in Wisconsin after my conversation with Terry Gou!”
But as journalist Aaron Rupar noted on Twitter, the information in the CNBC article is hardly great news for Wisconsin’s blue-collar workers.
Rupar tweeted, “The headline of the story Trump describes as ‘great news’ is, ‘Foxconn does damage control over Wisconsin factory,’ and the article makes clear the company hasn’t committed to creating a single manufacturing job in Wisconsin.”
When Trump and Walker announced the Foxconn deal in 2017, they insisted it would be a major victory for blue-collar workers in Wisconsin — and billions of dollars in tax incentives were offered to lure Foxconn to that midwestern state. Foxconn, according to this week’s announcements, still plans to do business in Wisconsin. But the electronics giant has made it clear that instead of creating numerous jobs for blue-collar workers in that Rust Belt state, the jobs will be mainly white-collar jobs that typically require a college degree.
MSNBC’s Chris Hayes weighed in on the Foxconn damage control, sarcastically tweeting, “They are also announcing a bridge for sale.”
Wisconsin is an important state for Trump. Although Wisconsin had been considered a solid blue state, Trump pulled off a shocking upset when he won it in 2016. Not since President Ronald Reagan in 1984 had a Republican carried Wisconsin in a presidential election, and a big part of Trump’s Rust Belt strategy — which also brought unexpected wins in Pennsylvania and Michigan — was a heavy emphasis on bringing blue-collar manufacturing jobs back to the United States. And the Foxconn deal was promoted as Trump fulfilling one of his main campaign promises.
On June 29, 2018, Trump boasted on Twitter, “The new plant being built by Foxconn in Wisconsin is incredible. Congratulations to the people of Wisconsin and to Governor Scott Walker @GovWalker and his talented representatives for having pulled it off. Great job!”
It remains to be seen how well Trump will perform in the 2020 election, but one thing’s for sure: He won’t be able to campaign on persuading Foxconn to bring thousands of new factory jobs to Wisconsin. |
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