Tuesday, February 4, 2020

In Michigan, President Trump and autoworkers celebrate the end of NAFTA


1600 Daily
The White House • January 30, 2020
In Michigan, President Trump and autoworkers celebrate the end of NAFTA

President Trump flew to Michigan today, where he joined workers to celebrate the signing of his new U.S.–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA) and the end of NAFTA.
 
Dana Incorporated, where the President spoke, perfectly captures America’s blue-collar spirit. Based near Detroit, the company employs more than 1,500 workers that help assemble some of the toughest vehicles in the world. Dana Inc., for example, helped invent the iconic U.S. Army Jeep in 1941.
 
This factory is the site of "116 years of brilliant American craftsmanship,” President Trump said. It’s businesses like Dana Inc. that will benefit tremendously from USMCA.
 
"We just ended a nightmare known as NAFTA. They took our jobs for a long time,” the President said. USMCA is the fairest, most balanced, and beneficial trade agreement we have ever signed into law, he added.
 
All told, some 60,000 U.S. plants and factories closed up shop in the 16 years before President Trump’s election. For years, politician after politician promised to fix NAFTA—only to reverse course once they got into office. While they did nothing, an astonishing one-quarter of our country’s manufacturing jobs moved elsewhere.
 
Michigan knows that story all too well. Once the global hub for the auto industry, the state lost nearly half those jobs under NAFTA, and roughly 200,000 manufacturing jobs in total. With USMCA, old loopholes that pushed car-part manufacturing overseas are gone: Now, at least 75 percent of every vehicle must be made in North America.  
 
Over the next five years alone, USMCA is projected to boost purchases of U.S.-made auto parts by $23 billion annually while supporting $34 billion in new automotive manufacturing investments. That will help create 100,000 new jobs in this industry alone.
 
The bottom line, says President Trump: “We are bringing your jobs back home to America—and back home to Michigan.”
 
THE FACTS: How ending NAFTA delivers a historic win for American workers

5 of Democrats’ biggest impeachment whoppers

The first partisan impeachment in U.S. history hasn’t been short on distractions, misleading statements, and even outright lies. The full list grows each day, but here are just a few standouts from the impeachment highlight reel:
The falsehoods started from day one: Even now, Adam Schiff continues to lie about his team’s involvement with the “whistleblower.” His staff coordinated with the person before the complaint was ever even filed. That makes Rep. Schiff a fact witness to the case—not a neutral “investigator.”  
 
Many Democrats have misled the public about their true motives: They’ve long wanted to impeach President Trump for solely political purposes. Here’s just one who slipped up and admitted it on camera.
 
Many times throughout this process, Schiff has misrepresented “evidence,” trying to pass off opinions and conjecture as actual proof.
 
Desperate times call for desperate measures: That was clear when Schiff recited a totally made-up version of President Trump’s phone call with President Zelenskyy.
 
Democrats lied about the urgency of impeachment, following the fastest impeachment in history with the longest delay in passing it to the Senate.  
 MORE: It is absolutely legitimate to ask questions about this.

Photo of the Day

President Trump boards Air Force One at Joint Base Andrews | January 30, 2020


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