Whirlpool Corporation Manufacturing Plant
Clyde, Ohio3:31 P.M. EDT
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, everybody. Please. Thank you very much. Itโs a great honor to be here. And thank you, Dan. Iโm thrilled to be in the great state of Ohio. You were very good to me, but Iโve been very good to you. (Applause.) Iโve been very good to you. Weโve been good to each other. With the incredible men and women of Whirlpool, the largest washing machine factory anywhere in the world.
Every day, 20,000 gleaming new machines coming rolling off that beautiful assembly line โ I just got to see it โ and every single one is proudly inscribed with that glorious phrase, โMade in the USA.โ Remember? (Applause.) Made in the USA.
When I was campaigning, I said, โLetโs go. โMade in the USA.โ Put it on your machines. Put it on everything we make.โ Iโm grateful to everyone at Whirlpool for welcoming us today, including Marc Bitzer โ thank you โ Jim Keppler and Sarah Bovim. Thank you very much. Sarah? Whereโs Sarah? Thank you. Thank you very much. Sarah Bovim.
Also with us today is Secretary of Labor Gene Scalia and a warrior โ Iโm sure you never heard of him; heโs a warrior, a great, great wrestling champion and a great guy: Jim Jordan. (Applause.) Jim. He is a warrior. Thanks, Jim. And heโs tough. Iโm not going to wrestle him ever. I promise. And another warrior โ a great fellow who has been right at our side. He works with Jim and I so much and so hard: Bob Latta. Bob. (Applause.) Thank you very much. Thank you, Bob.
Also, Lieutenant Governor Jon Husted. Thank you, Jon. Thank you, Jon. (Applause.) Thank you. State Senate President Larry Obhof. Larry, thank you very much. (Applause.) Thank you, Larry. Thank you, Larry. Clyde Mayor Scott Black and many other distinguished guests. Great people. (Applause.) Great representatives. Thank you, fellas. Thank you very much.
As we celebrate Whirlpoolโs 109-year legacy of American manufacturing excellence, today I want to lay out my vision to bring millions and millions more jobs and thousands more factories back to American shores where they belong. Weโve been doing it long and hard. One of the reasons youโre successful today happens to be a meeting I had probably four years ago with a very good representative of your company, saying what they were doing to you and how badly you were being treated by other countries. And you know what I did. And here we are today, the most successful plant. (Applause.) And weโve done this in a lot of places.
The duty of a President is to put this nationโs own citizens first. Thatโs why my administration swears by two simple but crucial rules: Buy American and Hire American. (Applause.)
And no one knows better than the workers of Whirlpool the high cost of past administrationsโ economic blunders and surrender. On the question of foreign trade, previous leaders were guided by a shameful policy of capitulation, submission, and retreat. For decades, you watched as politicians let foreign nations steal our jobs, loot our factories, and plunder the crown jewels of the U.S. economy. And the word โplunderโ is capitalized.
Washington stood idly by as other countries engaged in unfair trade practices, such as massive subsidies, currency manipulation, and in the case of your industry and your company, the wholesale dumping of foreign-made products sold below cost for the sole purpose of driving you out of business so they could give us product at double, triple, and quadruple the price. But we didnโt let that happen, did we? (Applause.)
For eight years, Whirlpool begged the Obama-Biden administration, who did nothing, to protect American workers from the flagrant dumping of foreign washers, dryers into America. But your cries for help fell on deaf ears. You didnโt see any action. They didnโt act. They didnโt care, and they never will.
For eight long years under Obama-Biden administration, American factory workers received nothing but broken promises and brazen sellouts and lost jobs. The last administration tied America up in one globalist debacle after another. They catered to the special interests while allowing foreign nations to siphon off our wealth, our dignity, our dreams, our money. The suffering of our workers was met with nothing but cruel betrayal and callous indifference.
In 2013, the U.S. International Trade Commission found your competitors from Korea and other countries guilty of dumping washers into the U.S. market and ordered them to pay anti-dumping duties as high as 79 percent. But rather than pay these very high tariffs, LG and Samsung relocated production to another country โ a country called China. Have you ever heard of it? And the last administration did nothing as they kept on dumping washers into the U.S. market with impunity.
The Obama-Biden administration was laughed at. They were a joke. And they were perfectly happy to let China win, your jobs disappear, and your factory to close. And you know what it was like. I came through today, and everybody was out there. Tremendous crowds, waving and cheering. I said, โI must have done it right,โ because you had people that were really โ really something. (Applause.) Because four or five years ago, this place was a disaster.
In 2017, Whirlpool won relief from the ITC once again. Once more, your foreign competitors moved their factories to prevent a level playing field and to avoid liability, shifting production to Th-ailand and to Vietnam โ Thailand and Vietnam, two places that I like their leaders very much. Theyโre very nice to us. Do they take advantage of the United States? Not so much anymore.
But this time, there was one big difference: Instead of an administration that sold out American workers and sold your company out and couldnโt have cared less for you, you finally had a president who stood up for the American worker. On January 23rd, 2018, at my desk in the Oval Office, I proudly signed the order to impose a 50 percent tariff on all foreign-made washing machines. (Applause.)
As a result, Whirlpoolโs nine factories across the United States were soon thriving like never before, investing in new products, new infrastructure, and hundreds of new American jobs. And I just took a tour, and I actually wanted a couple of those machines for myself โ (laughter) โ but I just didnโt know it was going to be appropriate to ask. But they are beautiful. That includes thousands of new jobs across the Ohio supply chain, from right here in Clyde to Findlay, Ottawa, Greenville, and Marion. (Applause.) All over.
Your company became a shining example. From, really, a company that was down and out, it became a shining example of what tough trade policies and smart tariffs can bring to โ jobs and prosperity to communities like this one all over Ohio Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and plenty of other states.
Theyโre all doing well. They were doing great. Then the plague came in, and now theyโre doing great again. We closed it up; we saved millions of lives. But now weโre opening, and it looks like I was right about the โV,โ because youโre seeing the kind of numbers that are coming in, and theyโre coming in strong. Theyโre coming in strong. (Applause.) Should have never happened. Should have never happened. China should have never let it happen.
In defending your jobs here at Whirlpool, I was doing exactly what I promised in June 2016. As a candidate for President, I stood before an audience of hardworking patriots at a metals processing facility outside of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to outline my plan for a new America First trade policy. And it was even a better job than I told you. Iโm one politician that says โIโm going to do this,โ and then we do better. We produced more than I promised.
And, by the way, the wall is being built. Itโs going to be finished very soon. (Applause.) In my speech, I warned that our politicians have aggressively pursued a policy of globalization โ moving our jobs, our wealth, and our factories overseas. I explained that globalization โ these are the globalists. Iโm not liking globalists too much, but they donโt like me too much either. Globalization has made the financial elites, who donate to politicians, very wealthy, but itโs left millions and millions of our workers with nothing but poverty and heartache, and our towns and cities with empty factories and plants.
For years later, weโve made extraordinary progress in reversing the dangerous tide of globalism; over a period of four to five years, this took place. Think of it: four to five years. What weโve done is a miracle, and now itโs getting even better because weโve taken additional steps.
And, you know, when you do these steps, you have to go through statutory procedures. Itโs not like, โBoom, Iโm going to just sign it.โ It has to go out for 90 days of review, then 120 days of review, then more. And we did it as quick as we can. Weโre doing it right now, with the FDA; weโre getting vaccines approved in days that nobody thought possible. It would take years and years, and weโre doing it in months, and weโre doing very well.
Under my administration, weโre fighting for Main Street, not Wall Street. We have rejected globalism and embraced patriotism. In my speech in Pittsburgh, in June of 2016, I made seven big promises to American workers.
Many politicians before me promised change on the campaign trail, only to back down in the face of corporate and international pressure. Like Jerusalem. They all promised Jerusalem โ didnโt they? โ for years and years. I did it; they didnโt do it. They didnโt do it. I did it. (Applause.) Moved the embassy to Jerusalem, making Jerusalem the capital of Israel. They all talked about it. They talked and talked and talked, and then they got into office, and they didnโt do it.
And I understand why: The pressure was enormous. On me, too. I just didnโt take the phone calls. Thatโs true. Leaders would call up from other countries. Iโd say, โI know what theyโre calling about. Iโll call them back in a few days.โ Then I just signed all the papers, got it done, and then I called them back. And they said, โI was calling about Israel and Jerusalem, but youโve already done it.โ I said, โThatโs right.โ And they said, โOh, okay.โ (Laughter.) I said, โHey, I wish you got me a little bit earlier.โ (Laughter and applause.)
But I didnโt back down from my promises, and Iโve kept every single one. First, I promised to withdraw the United States from the last administrationโs disastrous assault on U.S. workers: the Trans-Pacific Partnership. It would have been a disaster. It would have been a disaster, especially for the automobile industry. It would have put it out of business. My first week in office, I kept that promise and canceled that job-killing catastrophe.
Second, I pledged to appoint the toughest and smartest trade negotiators to defend American jobs, and I did with Bob Lighthizer and all of his people. Theyโve been fantastic.
Third, I said I would use every legal tool at my disposal to fight back against unfair trade, and I did. And I found some that nobody even knew about. Some of them were very old. They had a lot of dust on them. Hadnโt been used for decades and decades. But I found them โ things you could never get passed today.
Fourth, I promised to label China a โcurrency manipulator,โ and I did.
Fifth, I said we would bring trade cases against China to crack down on its economic aggression.
Sixth, I committed to impose tariffs on goods to protect American jobs and stop China and many other countriesโ abuses under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 and Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974.
As your President, I have kept every single one of these pledges to the American people and to the American worker, without exception. Every one has been done. (Applause.)
Seventh, one of my biggest promises in that speech was to replace the disaster known as NAFTA โ one of the worst trade deals ever made by any country, let alone ours. Ohio lost almost 40 percent of its manufacturing jobs after NAFTA was signed. Half of all of the automaking jobs across the state were wiped out.
Earlier this year, I finally ended the NAFTA nightmare and signed the brand-new USMCA agreement. Thatโs United States and Mexico and Canada. And all of those bad things that you had to suffer with, youโre not suffering anymore, because now people and companies have an incentive to stay. Theyโre not going to be leaving so fast. (Applause.)
That was the biggest point I made. I want to make sure that these companies arenโt leaving. And the managers walk up, and they say, โIโm sorry, our company is leaving and going to Mexicoโ โ or Canada โ but going, primarily, in that case, to Mexico. Canada takes advantage of us with dairy โ unbelievable advantage โ but not anymore.
But Mexico took a lot of jobs. And I said, โI donโt want companies moving. And if they do moveโฆโ Remember? Youโve heard it. โIf they do move when they make that product, they got to pay a big price to sell it back into our country.โ So they have no more incentive to move.
The USMCA contains powerful new protections for American manufacturers, automakers, farmers, dairy producers, and workers all across Ohio and all of our states.
Those were key promises I made to American workers in 2016; I kept every single one of them. The fake news media back there, they hate to report this. They hate it. (Applause.) Why do they hate it? Because theyโre fake.
Today, to define our path forward, Iโm making our incredible workers six more promises that I will keep over the next four years, and Iโm very proud to make them at your plant and in the state of Ohio.
First and foremost, we will defeat the China virus. Weโre working very, very hard. We call it the โChina virus.โ We call it the โinvisible enemy.โ We call it many different names. Itโs got many different names, but itโs bad. And weโve made tremendous strides.
Weโre attacking the virus from every angle. And through this aggressive strategy, we will win the war, and it will happen sooner than people think.
Weโre developing a bounty of therapies such as remdesivir, dexamethasone, antibody treatments โ the antibody treatments are really working out well, really well โ and many more that have allowed us to reduce mortality by 85 percent since April.
Under Operation Warp Speed, two vaccines are already in the final stage of clinical trials. And weโll have a vaccine very soon โ I hope long before the end of the year. Weโve dramatically increased our domestic production of personal protective equipment, such as N95 respirators, gowns, and gloves. Weโve got factories now all over the United States making these products. And weโve developed the most advanced testing system on Earth to produce our most โ and this is what we have to do: We have to produce not only cleanliness and perfection in every way, but we have to protect our most vulnerable citizens against this horrible virus. And thatโs, generally speaking, the elderly, especially the elderly with problems of the heart โ problems with the heart, and diabetes, in particular. Those two are a basic disaster.
Our strategy shelters those at highest risk while allowing those at lower risk to get safely back to work and to school. Instead of a never-ending blanket lockdown causing severe, long-term public health consequences, weโve targeted and looked at data-driven approaches, and thatโs what weโre doing.
Again, when you close down โ and we had to do it initially because it came and hit us big, hard, and nobody knew what it was, and we saved millions of lives. But today, you just pinpoint it. We know what to do and we know who to protect. As an example, very young children are incredibly powerful. Theyโre much stronger than all of us when it comes to the immune system; itโs an incredible thing to see. But we know who to protect, and we know what to do.
And let me tell you: Lockdowns have big consequences in terms of drugs, in terms of family, in terms of depression and suicide, in terms of so many other problems that are caused and not good for the kids. And they donโt learn the same at a computer as they do when theyโre in a classroom. So there are big, big problems with lockdowns. (Applause.)
But we cannot defeat the virus by fighting against each other. Just canโt. And there are a lot of different theories and a lot of different ways, but if you look at some of the results, youโll see some of these states, governor-run โ some of the states that are open and run very smart are doing very well, and, in fact, better than strong lockdown states.
Now is the time to come together as Americans and to unite against the plague inflicted upon us by China. Together, we will prevail.
My second promise to you is this: We will rise from the current adversity of this horrible, invisible enemy, and we will be more prosperous and resilient than ever before. Weโve done things that we never knew we could do. Weโre building factories now. Weโre building plants. Youโll see whatโs going to be happening with the job numbers very soon. We had two of the best months ever in the history of our country. And weโre going to have many, many very, very successful years โ unless somebody comes along and destroys it by doubling, tripling, and quadrupling your taxes, and quadrupling something else called โregulations.โ It will be ended. It will be depression time.
One of the key lessons weโve learned in this battle against the China virus is that the mighty American economy has a fantastic ability to adapt and repurpose its factories.
Today, using the Defense Production Act, which weโve used often โ remember theyโd always say, โOh, use the Defense Production Act.โ Weโve used it a lot โ more than some companies would like to know. Weโre engaged in the most rapid industrial mobilization, by far, since World War Two.
Over the last six months, weโve witnessed one manufacturing miracle after another. Weโve seen General Motors repurpose an auto parts facility in Kokomo, Indiana โ a great state โ and thereby stand up a ventilator โ we have a ventilator factory, literally in a matter of days. And weโre now producing thousands and thousands of ventilators a week. General Motors has now built and delivered more than 20,000 ventilators.
By next week, our Strategic National Stockpile will be equipped to deploy more than 100,000 ventilators. Theyโre very expensive to build. Theyโre very complex. Very, very complex machines. And theyโre big. And I said that we are now supplying ventilators to many countries of the world. Everybody in our country has it. Not one person โ and we had no ventilators โ who knew about ventilators? We had very few. But not one person who needed a ventilator โ think of this โ who needed a ventilator didnโt get it. Every person that needed a ventilator got it. Who would have thought that was possible?
And you remember, at the very beginning, when you first heard about this whole horrible situation with the China virus, ventilators โ they werenโt around. And now we make them by the thousands.
Working with GM and almost a dozen other companies โ great companies โ my administration has turned America into the ventilator king of the world. The ventilator king. (Applause.) Make them good. And we make them great. Theyโre very good. Highest quality.
Weโre now exporting ventilators to friends and allies, and theyโre really thankful. Theyโre calling, โCan I have ventilators for our country, sir?โ โHow many do you need?โ โCould you send 1,000?โ I said, โThatโs a lot. The answer is yes.โ What weโre doing is incredible. Weโre helping other โ weโre doing more good well โ will with ventilators โ because other things, you can make. Gowns and swabs and things, you can make. Weโre making them, too. But ventilators are tough. Ventilators are just one part of our historic manufacturing ramp-up.
Within seven days of New York City officials asking for assistance last spring, we helped ship a million yards of fabric from North Carolina to New York City for masks and gowns. Weโre making them all over the place. A great company, Honeywell, has opened up N95 respirator factories in Rhode Island and Arizona in record time, and theyโre now churning out tens of millions of masks for our Strategic National Stockpile.
These include manufacturing achievements โ and these are incredible. Theyโll be the foundation of an even brighter future for American industry. What weโve been able to do in a short period of time is, frankly, incredible. Iโm not talking about me; Iโm talking about the people out there. What theyโve done is incredible, including the military and some of the generals and admirals โ the job theyโve done.
My third promise is to build on these gains to turn America into the premier medical manufacturer, pharmacy, and drugstore of the world. (Applause.)
As weโve seen in this pandemic, the United States must produce essential equipment, supplies, and pharmaceuticals for ourselves. We cannot rely on China and other nations across the globe that could one day deny us products in a time of need. We canโt do it. We canโt do it. We have to be smart.
And speaking of pharmaceuticals, we instituted four moves โ rebates, favored nations, and other things โ buying from other nations where they have the product โ the same exact pill, identical; made in the same factory โ for a fraction โ just a small fraction of the cost. We buy from other countries, as opposed to buying through this ridiculous quagmire of political scam that weโve been going through for many years.
And what Iโve done, in terms of favored nations, if โ as an example, Germany has a pill for 10 cents and we have a pill for $2. We institute favored nations on the drug company. We get the pill for the same amount as the lowest pill anywhere in the world. Anywhere in the world. (Applause.) And that could drop your price of pharmaceuticals, of drugs โ prescription drugs โ it could drop your price 50, 60, 70 percent, maybe more than that.
This is something โ now, I have to tell you, I have never seen so many bad commercials about me as in the last three days since I did this. (Laughter.) So, will you remember that when you see this horrible commercial that Iโm a โsocialistโ โ I was called a โsocialistโ for the first time in my entire life. (Laughter.) Actually, what I am doing is Iโm using socialist countries, who are buying our product for far less than weโre allowed to โ Iโm saying, โWell, if youโre going to sell it to this countryโฆโ โ might be socialist โ โโฆfor a lower price, then weโre going to get that same price.โ So, you know.
But I have been called everything in the book. And I say โ I said, the other day, โWhenever you see a drug company advertising that Donald Trump is a bad guy, remember: Your drug prices must be coming down very big. Very big.โ (Applause.) So please remember that.
Please remember that, because I donโt want to get all those negative votes, and then Biden wins, and they try โ the first month, heโll say, โI dropped drug prices 78 percent.โ And he wonโt even know what the hell heโs saying. (Laughter and applause.) I donโt want to be watching that from some beautiful resort someplace in the world. I could have โ oh, I had had such a beautiful life before I did this. But thatโs okay because weโre doing a great job and โ (applause) โ it makes me very happy to see people being properly representative โ represented for a change.
But during the course of the next four years, we will bring our pharmaceutical and medical supply chains home. Weโre going to bring them home where they belong. And weโll end reliance on China, just like we did with the washers and dryers, just like we did with many other things. Weโll be making our product here safely, beautifully, and inexpensively.
Weโre reasserting American economic independence. And Iโve been doing that from the first day I came into office. To this end, a short time ago, I signed the new executive order to ensure that when it comes to essential medicines, we buy American. (Applause.)
The executive order will require that U.S. government agencies purchase all essential medicines that we need from American sources. The executive order will also sweep away unnecessary regulatory barriers to domestic pharmaceutical production and support advanced manufacturing processes that will keep our drug prices low and allow American companies to compete on the world stage. Weโll be able to compete on the world stage, but weโre now going to have the lowest prices, as opposed to, by far, the highest prices.
I have people that I know that go to Canada โ they go to Canada to buy drugs. To buy prescription drugs, they go there because the price is so much lower than the United States. And yet, itโs made by the same company, often in the same plant. Itโs a disgrace. And the politicians allowed this to happen for many, many decades.
You have people called โmiddlemen.โ I donโt know who the middlemen are. I donโt know. They never say โmiddlewomen,โ so theyโre politically not correct. (Laughter.) But Iโve heard the term โmiddlemenโ for a long time. They are so wealthy. They are so wealthy. Nobody has any idea who the hell they are or what they do. They make more money than the drug companies. You know, in all fairness, at least the drug companies have to produce a product, and it has to be good product. But the middlemen โ well, the rebate that Iโm doing cuts out the middlemen, and it reduces costs, and the money goes back to the people purchasing the drugs.
So I have a lot of enemies out there. This may be the last time youโll see me for a while. A lot of very, very rich enemies, but they are not happy with what Iโm doing. But I figure we have one chance to do it, and no other President is going to do what I do. No other President would do a favored nations, a rebate, a buy from other nations at much less cost. Nobody. And there are a lot of unhappy people, and theyโre very rich people, and theyโre very unhappy.
Hereโs my fourth promise to American workers: Beyond our medical supply chains, over the next four years, we will onshore millions of new manufacturing jobs across many other critical sectors that are vital to our national security and prosperity โ from electronics to machine tools, to shipping, aerospace, autos, and, of course, to iron and to steel. And weโll never forget your washers and dryers. Okay?
During eight years of the last administration โ (applause) โ and, by the way, I have to just tell you this little story. A couple of little stories if you donโt mind. Do you mind?
AUDIENCE: No!
THE PRESIDENT: Okay, because thatโs better than the other stuff, right?
No, I was with somebody and they said, โYou know, for a dishwasher, we donโt have enough water, sir.โ I think the โ a lot of people in the audience would understand what Iโm saying. They donโt have enough water because they put restrictors on, so you donโt have any water. And I said, โWhat is that? What is that?โ
In most states โ I mean, outside of desert areas โ we have so much water we donโt know what to do with it, right? A lot of states. Your state does pretty well with the water, right? So they have plenty of water.
So I passed a regulation. I signed a regulation that give the dishwashers much more water. And I was asking today โ and that, by the way, includes your washers. You donโt need too much water in your dryers, but it includes your washers.
And I was just saying to your brilliant people that are doing such a good job running your company, I said, โHow much impact has that had?โ They said, โUnbelievable. Itโs been unbelievable.โ
Because I had people saying theyโd wash their dishes and they would press the button five times. So in the end, theyโre probably wasting more water than if they did it once.
So do you notice โ the people that make the machines, you know what Iโm talking about. We now have the water that you need โ instead of stupid, where you have much less water than you need, and you just keep going over and over again. I had people say theyโd press the button five times. They didnโt have enough water.
And the same thing with sinks, toilets, and showers. You go into a new home, you turn on the faucet; no water comes out. You turn on the shower โ if youโre like me, you canโt wash your beautiful hair properly. (Laughter and applause). You waste 20 minutes longer. โPlease come out.โ The water โ it drips, right? You know what Iโm talking โ they put restrictors on. I got rid of that. I signed it out. Thatโs common sense.
So now, when you actually go into a new home and pay a lot of money, you turn on the faucet, and water actually comes out. Isnโt that nice? That was a regulation that was put in by a lot of people that donโt understand life. Because you end up using the same amount of water; you just let it run three times longer. Itโs crazy.
And one other thing I did: Remember the old lightbulb? The old lightbulb was so great, and they put it out of business. It was much cheaper, and it had much better light. And youโre all good-looking people, but you look better under the old lightbulb than that horrible, new lightbulb. Right? It cost you a fraction of the cost. Didnโt last as long, but thatโs okay. But it cost you a fraction. I reinstituted and opened it up so they can sell both. They can sell the new one if you want it, and they can sell the old one. The old one is doing unbe- โ amazing business. Amazing business.
And, you know, the new one is considered โhazardous waste.โ When you lose it, youโre supposed to take it down to a โ a dump, a specified dump. How many people are going to do that with a lightbulb? โHey, you know, we lost this lightbulb. Letโs travel 28 miles outside of the city to get rid of it.โ (Laughter.) Itโs hazardous waste.
So I put the old bulb back in. And you can use the new one; you can use anything. I guess itโs competition. But I particularly like it because I donโt look so orange, so itโs very nice. (Applause.) Very nice. I donโt want to look โ I donโt like that look. Never liked it. But itโs a tremendous thing, and itโs having tremendous success.
So theyโll, you know, scoff and say, โOh, who cares about that.โ Very big stuff. You know, these are big things. A lot of people have come up, โThank you, sir.โ They had sinks that didnโt give water. They had showers that didnโt give water. The whole thing. And โ and itโs been a great thing. Itโs been very popular. And we might as well tell you about it, because people donโt talk about it. But these are things that no other President would be doing. No other President, frankly, would be even thinking about it.
During eight years of the last administration, America lost 10,000 factories and nearly 200,000 manufacturing jobs โ think of that. In contrast, my administration added over a half a million manufacturing jobs. It was up to actually 701,000 jobs before the plague came in.
And if you remember, President Obama: โYou need a magic wand.โ No, you donโt. We need manufacturing jobs. He said, โYou wonโt have any more manufacturing jobs. You need a magic wand.โ He was wrong about that also.
My fifth promise to American workers is to bring back American jobs in factories using every tool at my disposal, including tariffs โ I love properly-put-on tariffs, because they bring unfair competitors from foreign countries to do whatever you want them to do โ countervailing duties, and new trade deals based on the principle of fairness and reciprocity.
And Iโll be signing something very important. Watch over the next week. I think youโll be very proud of your President. Iโm going to be signing something thatโs very important over the next, probably, week. And itโll have a tremendous impact on fairness and trade.
As part of this commitment, earlier today I signed a proclamation that defends American industry by re-imposing aluminum tariffs on Canada. Canada was taking advantage of us, as usual, and I signed it, and it imposes โ because the aluminum business was being decimated by Canada. Very unfair to our jobs and our great aluminum workers.
Several months ago, my administration agreed to lift those tariffs in return for a promise from the Canadian government that its aluminum industry would not flood our country with exports and kill all our aluminum jobs, which is exactly what they did. Canadian aluminum producers have broken that commitment, and the U.S. Trade Representative, Robert Lighthizer, has advised me that this step to re-impose tariffs is absolutely necessary to defend our aluminum industry.
To be a strong nation, America must be a manufacturing nation and not be led by a bunch of fools. That means protecting our national industrial base. We have to protect our great companies and our great workers.
My sixth and final promise today is to forever uphold the commitment I made from the beginning: I will always put American workers first. Always. Theyโll always be put first. (Applause.)
And I donโt know if youโre union or nonunion โ it doesnโt matter to me โ but I did one hell of a good job for the unions. You know, all the union heads are against me, but all the workers are for me, so something is right. The workers are for me. (Applause.) They usually โ the union heads โ theyโre wined and dined in Washington pretty good by the Democrats.
As part of this commitment, on Monday, I signed an executive order to prevent government agencies, like the Tennessee Valley Authority, from replacing American workers with cheap foreign labor. Thereโs a very big utility run by a man that gets $8 million a year. Would anybody in this room like that job? Eight million. Eight million a year, right? Highest-paid โ heโs really โ he doesnโt work for me; I wouldnโt pay $8 million. If you paid him โ the President gets $400- โ $450,000. I give up my salary. Nobody ever says that. I might as well, every once in a while, say it. I believe Iโm the only President to do that. And Iโm saying, โThatโs not too smart.โ
But the Tennessee Valley Authority pays $8 million a year to the head. And after the Authority laid off 20 percent of its American technology workforce and forced them to train their foreign replacements this week, I told the chairman of the board, โYouโre fired.โ (Applause.) And the firings will continue unless the layoffs are reversed and the American workers are rehired.
And, by the way, as I was leaving for the great state of Ohio โ did you ever watch Biden, where heโs always saying the wrong state? โItโs great to be in Florida. Florida.โ โNo, itโs Ohio.โ Iโve never seen a guy โ I havenโt done that one yet; thatโs a disaster. I always say โ Jim Jordan โ if you do that, itโs over, right? You can be Winston Churchill. The speeches is over; you just walk off the stage.
But he does it all the time. Nobody calls him for it. โI love the state of Iowa.โ โSir, sir, itโs Idaho. Itโs Idaho.โ And the worst is when heโs in, like, Indiana, and he says, โItโs great to be with the people of Florida,โ and you have palm trees all over the place. But he does it all the time. Thereโs something going on.
But over the last four years, weโve made extraordinary strides, and over the next four years together, we will turn the United States into the unrivaled manufacturing superpower of the world. Weโve been through a lot together. (Applause.)
Theyโve done everything possible to get in my way. Theyโve treated us very unfairly, disgracefully, with what theyโve done to us. And despite what theyโve done, no administration in the history of this country has done more in the first three and a half years than we have โ whether itโs rebuilding our military โ (applause) โ all made in the USA; whether itโs the biggest tax cuts in history; whether itโs the biggest regulation cuts in history; ANWR in Alaska, the largest field, perhaps, in the world that Ronald Reagan โ going back even before Ronald Reagan, no President could get it approved. I got it approved, and now itโs potentially one of the greatest sites in the world. Should be the greatest site in the world.
So many different things weโve done. Weโve done so much. What weโve done for our vets โ and youโre a big vet state. Ohio loves its vets and what weโve done for our vets โ (applause) โ Choice and Accountability. We got two things. Theyโve been trying for almost 50 years โ Choice. Veterans Choice. How about that? We got that for you. So if you have to wait on line for two days or two weeks or two months โ and they had to wait two months sometimes. If they had to wait on line, they donโt anymore. They go outside, they get a private doctor, we approve it, we pay the bill. And we take care of our vets like theyโre supposed to be taken care of. Just got a 91 percent approval rating. (Applause.) The VA just got a 91 percent approval rating โ highest ever. The highest itโs ever had.
And Accountability โ we have people that are so โ were so scornful, they had hatred for our vets. They were treating our vets badly. Our vets have to be treated great. But you couldnโt fire them. They could be sadistic, they could be thieves, they could be โ you couldnโt fire them because of civil service unions, et cetera. You know. Couldnโt fire them.
And I got the Accountability โ VA Accountability. Now you look at them, they donโt do a good job for our vets, you say, โJim, youโre fired.โ Boom. โGet out.โ Thatโs the story. (Applause.) We actually terminated over 8,000 people that were not treating our vets well, and they were there for a long time. And it sounds a little bit cold, but the truth is they got to treat our vets well, right? So they have to do it. But we got Accountability and we got VA Choice.
But to achieve the vision that weโve been talking about for so long, we must finish the job and drain the Washington swamp once and for all. And weโre doing it. (Applause.)
For years, left-wing politicians smiled and looked at American workers right in the eye and took advantage of them and lied to them. They took your endorsements, they took your money, and they took your votes, and they did nothing. Then they turned around and inflicted one corrupt betrayal of the American middle class after another, whether it was NAFTA, TPP, the horrible Korea deal, the ridiculous Paris Climate Accord โ howโs it working out for Paris? Not so good. And Chinaโs entry into the World Trade Organization, which is probably the worst of all the deals, if you want to know the truth.
That was where China signed that and they went up like a rocket ship. And they violated the rules like nobody has ever violated them before. In fact, theyโre considered a developing nation. And because theyโre a developing nation, they have advantages. Well, we didnโt accept that. But for years, they accepted that. And, by the way, Joe Biden supported every single one of those horrible, disastrous sellouts.
Under this administration, those days have been over, and weโre not going back. Weโre respected again as a country. You know, weโre respected again. You may not feel it, although I think you do. You may not see it. You donโt read about it from the fake news, but this country is respected again. We donโt let people take advantage of us, including our allies, who took tremendous advantage of us. Tremendous. (Applause.)
Our allies took tremendous advantage of us both militarily, where they donโt pay their bills. We protect them, they donโt pay โ like Germany, weโre reducing the force. They donโt pay. Theyโre delinquent. I say it all the time. Theyโre delinquent. They got to pay.
You know, we protect Germany from Russia, and yet, Germany is paying billions of dollars a year โ billions and billions to Russia for energy. So I say, โWhatโs that all about?โ So we protect, and they pay money, and we protect. So we donโt stand for things like that, but we have many other things. I could stand up here all day long and tell you things that you wouldnโt even believe.
To fully restore American prosperity, we must stop the radical left-wing movement that would destroy our country. They want to impose $3 trillion of new taxes on American families. They want to ban fracking, which will demolish your state. It will demolish Ohio oil and gas jobs. They want to rejoin the disastrous Paris Climate Accord, where youโll pay billions and billions of dollars for the privilege of getting ripped off by other countries; and inflict a socialist takeover of the U.S. economy, known as the horrendous Green New Deal. It was conceived by a young woman, AOC โ AOC plus three, I say.
AOC โ thatโs a real beauty isnโt it? She knows as much about the environment โ do we have any young children here? โ as that young child over there. I think he knows more. (Laughter.) And she certainly knows nothing about the economy. And if they ever had their chance, you would find that out, and it wouldnโt take very long.
You know, Venezuela was a very wealthy country 20 years ago โ one of the wealthiest โ per capita, one of the wealthiest. Tremendous oil reserves, everything. Now they donโt have food. They donโt have water. They donโt have medicine, they donโt have anything. Same thing could happen, same or similar ideology.
They also want to throw open American borders, give free taxpayer-funded healthcare to illegal aliens, defund police, abolish ICE, abolish borders โ no more borders โ and abolish basically the American Dream. This is Joe Biden. And does anybody really think heโs strong enough to stand up to these ruthless, vicious people? You look at โ you look at Portland, you look at whatโs going on in Seattle, these are the people that youโre dealing with. If I didnโt send in the troops, if I didnโt send in the great people from Homeland Security, youโd have courthouses and post offices and everything else burned down, blown up.
And we may send in something else because you know what? Theyโve been riding now for 70 days and the mayor thinks itโs just wonderful, and the governor has no idea what sheโs doing. Iโve never seen people like this.
Remember, in Seattle, where they took over a big chunk of the city? Seattle. And the mayor said, โItโs going to be a Summer of Love.โ And I said, โSheโs just kidding, right? Isnโt she?โ She wasnโt kidding. But we were all set to send in the troops, send in the people that we were going to send in. And what happened is amazing. We told them, and all of a sudden, the police went out and they cleaned it up. But that place would still be occupied if we didnโt get involved.
Same thing with Minneapolis. Minneapolis was a disaster. After five or six days, they were going to lose that whole city. We sent in the National Guard. They took care of things in about one hour. Remember the scene of them walking down the street, firing the tear gas? Now youโre not even allowed โ if youโre looking at the other side, youโre not allowed to use tear gas or pepper spray. You canโt use any of that stuff. They can use Molotov cocktails and horrible things on you, but youโre not allowed to do anything.
So the police didnโt want to have anything to do with the convention in a great state, Wisconsin โ Milwaukee โ for the Democrats. You couldnโt use tear gas. You couldnโt use pepper spray. You couldnโt use anything. Think of how ridiculous this is. And you wonโt be able to use your guns because theyโre going to end your Second Amendment, as sure as youโre sitting there. But the proud people of Ohio will not let that happen. Together, we will preserve, protect, and defend our American way of life.
As long as I am President โ (applause) โ thank you. Thank you. As long as I am President of the United States, I will fight for you with every ounce of energy and strength that I have. I will be your voice. I will defend your jobs. I will stand up to the foreign trade cheaters and violators that hate our country. I will never let you down. I will have your back, 100 percent.
For more than a century, the workers of this company have continued the proud tradition of American greatness embodied by your legendary founder, Lou Upton. Itโs a heritage grounded in the values of hard work and determination, innovation and excellence, faith and family, loyalty and patriotism passed down from one generation to the next. You have an incredible heritage. These are the values that have defined this company and defined our country from the very beginning, and they are the values that will define our future, that will ensure our success, and that will allow America to thrive and win for many generations to come. There is nobody that can defeat us. Nobody.
Now Iโd like to take just a moment to introduce a few of the Whirlpool men and women whose jobs I had the honor of taking decisive action to protect and to save.
Keri Wallace is an operations analyst whose family has 100 years of history at this very plant. Keri, please come forward and say a few words. Please. (Applause.)
Thank you, Keri.
MS. WALLACE: Good afternoon. Manufacturing is the heartbeat of this area. Whirlpool has an enormous impact on the state of Ohio, economically.
My family has probably worked in these walls for four generations, like Mr. President said, for combined over 100 years. I had the opportunity to get some advice from my mother โ advice that was passed down from my grandfather, which I was actually just able to pass down to my nephew: โThere is not another company that would provide financial security and career opportunities in this area like Whirlpool.โ Itโs true; the opportunities here are endless for us.
Whirlpool has rewarded me with a completely new family also. I work with 3,500 proud individuals. Together, we build American-made, quality products here in Clyde. We bleed Whirlpool blue.
Iโm grateful for the support that we received in 2018 from the President. That support gives us the ability to compete and deliver in the marketplace now and for many generations to come. (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: Thank you. Thank you, Keri. Wow. Great job.
Marco Ontiveros is a first-generation American who started at this plant to support his family 17 years ago. Marco rose through leadership to become a production lead. Marco, please come up and say a few words, please. (Applause.)
MR. ONTIVEROS: Thank you, Mr. President. As the President said, I started here about 16, going on 17 years. I was fresh out of high school. I had no idea what I wanted to do with my life. But I knew I had two young children that I had to support, and I had to support fast.
Iโm honored to say that I found that, here at Whirlpool, within these four walls, I have been able to not only provide, but continue to develop myself into a career path that I never wouldโve dreamed of when I was 18 years old coming out of there.
As Ms. Wallace stated, I, too, am very grateful for the tariffs that were put against our foreign competitors in 2018 to take that instability away from our everyday life and provide a longevity of stability and support for these American jobs here in these four walls.
As our President said, I am a first-generation from an immigrant family. My father was an immigrant. He came here to chase the American Dream, and I can say Iโm fortunate enough to find my American Dream within these four walls here at Whirlpool.
Thank you very much. (Applause.)
THE PRESIDENT: Well, thank you both. And, you know, Marco had a beautiful speech written, and he never looked down. You never even looked down at that speech. (Laughter.) Iโm โ Iโm impressed. With both of you, Iโm impressed.
To every worker here at Whirlpool, thank you once again for welcoming us. Itโs an honor to be here. And thank you for your commitment to American manufacturing. Youโre a great company with great, great people.
Together, we will bring back our jobs, we will bring back our factories, and we will bring back our American Dream. God bless you, and God bless America.
Thank you very much.ย Thank you.ย Thank you.ย (Applause.)
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