Just who is the real blue-collar candidate for president?

Something people learned from the debate in Cleveland last Tuesday is that when President Trump wasn’t interrupting, Joe Biden makes up numbers on the fly. There was a lot of fibbing going on. Consider this exchange between the two candidates:

Biden: “[Trump] comes in on a booming economy. He blew it. He blew it.”

Trump: “It wasn’t booming.”

Chris Wallace: “Sir, wait. Is it fair to say he blew it when there was record low unemployment before COVID?”

Biden: “Yeah. Yeah. Because what he did, even before COVID, manufacturing went in the hole. Manufacturing went in the hole.”

He went on to say that President Barack Obama created manufacturing jobs but that they fell under Trump.

The claim that Trump “blew it” when he became president is something else, given that the unemployment rate, the poverty rate, the interest rate, and the inflation rate hit all-time lows in 2019, according to the Census Bureau and the Department of Labor. Employment, wages, median incomes, and wealth hit an all-time high. Median households saw a $6,400 gain in real income in three years under Trump, almost twice the growth made in eight years under Obama and Biden. As one who served as an economic adviser for Trump, I can say definitively that these were precisely the results from our tax cuts, deregulation efforts, and pro-America energy policies. They worked like a charm.

One of our proudest results was the surge in blue-collar employment under Trump.

Here are the numbers for the eight years of Obama’s presidency and the first three years under Trump (pre-pandemic):

Manufacturing

Obama:192,000

Trump: 475,000

Mining

Obama: 112,000

Trump: 63,000

Construction

Obama: 280,000

Trump: 746,000

Yes, under the pandemic’s early months, when government-imposed shutdowns ground industrial production to a virtual halt, the factories were bolted shut. That would have happened if Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, Mother Theresa, or Hillary Clinton were president during this public health crisis. The issue is what happened with blue-collar jobs before the pandemic and since the economy started to reopen.

Since the shutdowns ended, blue-collar jobs have surged back. Several hundred thousand manufacturing jobs have come back, and many factories and construction sites now have “For Hire” signs in the windows.

Biden is right that we still need to get hundreds of thousands of these high-paying blue-collar jobs back in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and New Jersey, among others. Trump wants to do that by continuing to cut taxes and promote energy production. Biden wants to do it by raising taxes by $4 trillion. Voters will have to decide which approach will work better.

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