Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here) An elected official in a republican form of government such as the one that the United States of America has, has the sole primary responsibility of acting on behalf of those who elected him/her/them. That is the promise one(candidate) makes to another(citizen/voter being represented) who gives them power to do so, by consent. That is the elected official's contractual obligation, first and foremost:Acting on behalf of those who elected him/her/them.
To stem future misguided thought...
All governments ought share this same responsibility to it's citizens. All of the world's citizens deserve to have government made up of the best representation:Thoughtful, considered, knowledgable, reasonable, and helpful representation of their best interests.
That said...
The disproportionate demonstrable harm caused to American industry, lives, and livelihoods is clear. These consequences were not inevitable negative affects/effects of necessary 'trade policy' enacted on behalf of the average American. To quite the contrary, they were not necessary at all.
To stem future misguided thought...
Imported goods are not something to be avoided at all costs. They're not 'bad' in and of themselves. It's all about the method of implementation. The complaint I'm levying, that is.
Imported goods were allowed in the American marketplace. Not an issue - in and of itself. Great idea. How it is implemented is what matters most.
Claims of American Corporations not being able to compete with foreign companies are/were very well-grounded. This becomes undeniably obvious to anyone who compares/contrasts the following two scenarios. All else being equal, the one corporation does all it's manufacturing offshore in places where most - if not all - of American regulations are non-existent. This doesn't make regulations bad. They are necessary and were put into place for good reason. They are often and always ought be kept in place - especially and particularly when they work - as a means to ensure that the government does not have to step in on behalf of it's citizens yet again.
So, all else being equal...
Given products of comparable quality, but actual company costs that do not reflect American standards of living(wages, benefits, worker's rights and protections, etc.) the situation is such that if profit and/or competitive drive is/are the primary motive(s), these foreign companies could bankrupt the American companies and not just by having such a better product(although there are many cases). Rather, even in the cases where the quality is on par, by the ability to intentionally sell - to Americans nonetheless - at a retail cost that the American company cannot continue to operate at, the impending ruin of American industry was inevitable.
To compete, many companies downsized, began lean manufacturing practices, reduced worker pay, deferred much of the financial burden of healthcare onto the workers, etc. Suddenly faced with being required to trim costs by significant sums, there were also retirement benefits to uphold, including healthcare of retirees, and needed improvements in technology as well as facilities. These latest considerations were already there, prior to also being forced to compete with another company that plays by rules long since deemed unacceptable and/or illegal in the States.
The fix?
Trade policies were enacted allowing American owned companies to compete by avoiding American regulations, avoiding paying workers by fair American standards, and as an added bonus legally defer paying certain federal income taxes. That was the solution. These allowances were afforded to American corporations as a means to level the playing field(allow them to be more competitive with the aforementioned foreign companies) in the American marketplace.
So, given this we have no choice but to see it for what it was. Policy created impossibility. Rather than correct the problem by demanding equally humane conditions be provided for foreign workers; rather than demanding that foreign governments guarantee the same qualities, standards, and protections for their workers; rather than demanding that those people's lives be improved as a pre-requisite to being able to take part in the American marketplace; rather than doing all these sensible humane things...
We allowed our companies and our corporations to leave American citizens high and dry and treat foreign workers and foreign lands in unacceptable illegal ways if we were talking about how to treat American workers and American lands. Double standard doesn't even begin to describe this greed based hypocritical action.
All the while... there was talk of 'raising standards around the world', being a global citizen, increasing American access to cheaper goods, etc. The blame for large American companies closing was two-fold. First there arose a common belief that imports were better, and that the poor quality of American products was a result - either direct or indirect - of the American worker themselves. They were characterized as being lazy/careless or too expensive for the company to keep and keep the quality up. The cost of American workers was widely believed to be the driving force behind companies beginning to use cheaper(inferior quality) materials.
American workers are more expensive than those foreign workers. That was never in doubt, was it? That is not the only driving force behind the collapse of American Industry. That's not the whole story. Those companies also faced costs of benefits to retirees. Upgrading. Healthcare costs increasing, etc. Normal operating costs.
So we fix the results of policy that allowed such unacceptable practices(ilegal in the States) to create an impossible marketplace for American Industry by virtue of allowing American companies to treat those people, and that land in ways that are unacceptable/illegal in America?
That's the fix?
And then there's the cost of American healthcare, and I'm not just talking about individual consumer price for some policy or another. I'm talking about the pharmaceutical industry. The healthcare costs for companies were influenced/effected here as well.
The tragedy here is that Americans - most anyway - either don't seem to know these things or are comfortable enough to remain compliant.
Trump's not the problem. He is a symptom.