Thursday, September 28, 2023

US senator wants JetBlue CEO to answer if Spirit deal will hike air fares


Updated Wed, September 27, 2023 



By David Shepardson

(Reuters) -U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren has asked JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes to answer if the low-cost airline privately forecast its planned $3.8 billion merger with Spirit Airlines will dramatically hike air fares, according to a letter seen by Reuters.

Warren, a Democrat, cited reports that court documents suggested internally JetBlue had estimated fares on Spirit planes "could go up by as much as 40%," following the merger.

Warren said in the previously unreported letter that if accurate the documents "reveal that you have misled the public about the impacts of your merger – and they reveal that the merger will result in higher costs and reduced service for airline passengers."

The documents were filed by lawyers suing to block the merger on behalf of private travelers. The information Warren cited had been redacted, but remained visible on the documents.


JetBlue said the reported claims do "not reflect facts set out in JetBlue documents." The carrier said the 40% figure was plaintiffs' "spin on confidential evidence" and that "the factual evidence ... will demonstrate that JetBlue intends for the merger with Spirit to increase competition and help lower fares across the board."

Warren also asked if JetBlue documents show "Spirit’s exit from a route results in market-wide price increases of all other airlines serving that route by 30%." She also sent a copy of the letter to Spirit CEO Ted Christie.

A judge has set an Oct. 16 non-jury four-week trial in a U.S. Justice Department lawsuit seeking to halt the JetBlue acquisition. The Justice Department challenged the deal, saying it would eliminate competition, lead to higher ticket prices, reduce passenger capacity and shrink consumer choices.Hayes told Reuters in March that JetBlue will still serve Spirit customers buying very low-cost tickets and rejected the idea fares will go up.

"I fully recognize that very price-conscious customer and it's very important that the larger JetBlue continues to cater and provide a service to that customer and we absolutely will," Hayes told Reuters.

(Reporting by David ShepardsonEditing by Chris Reese and David Gregorio)
3 Questions for Michigan Democratic Rep. Debbie Dingell about the UAW strike, Trump and working-class voters

Trump and Biden are vying for blue-collar support in the Upper Midwest.


Alexander Nazaryan
·Senior White House Correspondent
Updated Wed, September 27, 2023


: U.S House of Representatives via Reuters, Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

Rep. Debbie Dingell is a veteran of Michigan politics and, as a leading Democrat in the House of Representatives, she is always concerned that her party is not taking seriously enough Midwestern voters and the issues that matter to them.

On Wednesday, she spoke to Yahoo News in advance of former President Donald Trump’s visit to an automotive parts dealer outside Detroit. Trump’s trip there coincides with the second Republican primary debate; it also comes a day after President Biden joined striking United Auto Workers members on the picket line in a show of solidarity.

President Biden is greeted by Rep. Debbie Dingell, center, Shawn Fain, top left, president of the United Auto Workers, and Rep. Rashida Tlaib, lower left, at the airport in Romulus, Mich., Sept. 26. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters) (Evelyn Hockstein / reuters)
Yahoo News: You famously warned the Democratic candidate in 2016, Hillary Clinton, that she needed to devote more time to the Upper Midwest, and Trump went on to carry many of those key swing states. Are you concerned that this time around, with a reinvigorated Trump, that danger could return?

U.S. President Joe Biden joins striking members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) on the picket line outside the GM's Willow Run Distribution Center, in Belleville, Wayne County, Michigan, U.S., September 26, 2023. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters) (Evelyn Hockstein / reuters)

Dingell: I want to be really clear: Michigan is not a blue state, contrary to what everybody thinks. We are a purple state.


President Trump is very good at understanding people’s concerns and anxieties. He uses wedge issues. This is a man who is all words, no action. He is not going to fight for union workers.

Read more on Yahoo News: In UAW strike, Trump pretends to support workers. He's used to stabbing them in the back. (Opinion), from USA Today
Could President Biden, by accelerating and emphasizing the transition to electrical vehicles, pay a political price, even if that transition is an inevitability?

President Donald Trump, second from right, gets a demonstration of an electric pickup truck on the South Lawn of the White House, Sept. 28, 2020. (Carlos Barria/Reuters) (Carlos Barria / reuters)

We got to do a better job of standing up and talking about why it matters. We have to make sure that the federal dollars that were invested in that transition are getting to the workers. We have to make sure that the workers are being taken care of.

We just have to make sure we are telling our story and not letting fearmongering win.

Words, not actions.

The president knows this.

Read more on Yahoo News: Biden addresses UAW concerns amid EV transition, from Politico
Union leadership supports President Biden. But is the cultural appeal of Trump more persuasive to the rank and file?


Shawn Fain, president of the United Auto Workers, with President Biden and striking autoworkers at the GM Willow Run Distribution Center in Belleville, Mich., on Tuesday. (Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters) (Evelyn Hockstein / reuters)

I don't lie. People know I'm in union halls. We have to communicate with workers. They need to know we're fighting for them.

I don't just go to union halls because suddenly there's a strike and there might be a camera around. I sit with these workers all the time. I want them to know that somebody cares about them. And when they see Joe Biden like they did yesterday, they know that he really does stand with them.

But this isn't going to be a slam dunk.

Read more on Yahoo News: Biden urges striking auto workers to 'stick with it' in picket line visit unparalleled in history, from Associated Press
UAW Fight Against Billions in Buybacks Forces Investor Rethink

Esha Dey
Tue, September 26, 2023 




(Bloomberg) -- Among the sticking points highlighted by United Auto Workers on strike are the billions of dollars Detroit’s legacy carmakers have plunged into stock repurchases.

Now, as the strike extends into its second week, some investors say they’re willing to forgo those coveted share buybacks as the companies face soaring labor costs over the next several years. The UAW is asking General Motors Co., Stellantis NV and Ford Motor Co. for significant pay raises and other concessions in their next four-year contract.

“The companies have room to go higher than their current offer,” said Patrick Kaser, a portfolio manager for Brandywine Global, which has a stake in GM as part of its $54 billion in assets under management as of June 30. “If they pause the buyback because they need to invest in an attractive longer-term plan, that is fine.”

Buybacks are popular with investors and often viewed as signs of management optimism and a healthy balance sheet. They typically result in a short-term boost to the stock price because fewer shares are available in the market.

Labor organizations say companies use buybacks to manipulate stock prices and to reward already wealthy investors, including executives who own shares. Mike Booth, vice president of the UAW, wrote in an op-ed last week that buybacks are “lavishing Wall Street with the results of our labor.”

GM says it has repurchased $14.2 billion in common stock since it returned to the public market in 2010. “We’ve used buybacks and dividends like a great many other companies to return capital to our owners after we’ve invested for growth,” said spokesman Jim Cain.

Stellantis announced in February that it planned to buy back as much as €1.5 billion ($1.6 billion) in shares this year after posting record full-year results. The company said it also would redistribute more than €2 billion to its employees globally.

“Whatever the past, we consider that it is possible to pay fair wages, invest in the future and provide strong returns for shareholders to the extent that the company’s performance is preserved in the interest of all stakeholders,” Stellantis said in a statement. The company declined to elaborate on its buyback strategy.

Ford bought back $3.5 billion in shares from 2012 to 2022, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, though the company — especially the founding Ford family that controls its super-voting shares — prefers to issue dividends. Ford declined to comment.

Read More: Ford Family Awaits Windfall as Carmaker Joins Dividend Revival

“There is probably a happy medium where you maybe can stop share buybacks for some time and share that equity with labor and not just shareholders,” said Brian Mulberry, a client portfolio manager at Zacks Investment Management, which owns Ford shares and manages $15 billion in assets.

Scrapping or cutting the dividend, on the other hand, is a non-starter for shareholders. Ford’s annual dividend yield is about 4.8%.

“I do not see an appetite for decreased dividend yield,” Mulberry said. “If interest rates stay over 5% next year, that dividend yield will be important for investors.”

Reducing dividends to conserve cash could trigger a big slide in the share prices, investors said. Discontinuing payouts altogether would force the stocks out of dividend index funds, pressuring them further.

“A dividend cut will be a very bad sign,” Kaser said. “Stopping or cutting them will really be a statement that the companies don’t have extra cash.”

Historic Strike

On Sept. 15, the UAW began its first-ever walkout at plants operated by all three Detroit carmakers. A week later, the union expanded the strike to 38 more GM and Stellantis plants. Ford was spared an escalation after making progress in the negotiations.

Read More: What’s at Stake as US Autoworkers’ Strike Drags On: QuickTake

A prolonged strike would be expensive and disruptive. It also creates uncertainty, which typically doesn’t sit well with shareholders. GM and Ford lost a combined $20 billion in market value in the two months leading up to the UAW contract expiration.

A 40-day strike against GM in 2019 — the longest since the 1970s — cost the company about $3.6 billion in earnings before interest and taxes, according to RBC Capital Markets. The strike dented revenue at parts suppliers and had a ripple effect on the local economy.

“These labor pressures put legacy US manufacturers at a clear disadvantage. This is why we don’t own them,” said Ivana Delevska, chief investment officer at Spear Invest, which has $10 million in assets under management.

--With assistance from Keith Naughton, David Welch, Gabrielle Coppola and Albertina Torsoli.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
Biden campaign slams Trump’s ‘incoherent’ Michigan speech

Alex Gangitano
Wed, September 27, 2023 

Biden campaign slams Trump’s ‘incoherent’ Michigan speech

President Biden’s reelection campaign called former President Trump’s speech in Michigan “incoherent” and said that workers aren’t buying his attempts to woo them.

“Donald Trump’s low-energy, incoherent ‘speech’ at a non-union factory in Michigan was a pathetic, recycled attempt to feign support for working Americans. Americans have seen him try this before and they aren’t buying it,” Biden campaign spokesman Kevin Munoz said.

Trump gave an address in Michigan as counterprogramming to Wednesday’s GOP debate, where he called out what he views as a flawed and failing auto industry under the Biden administration. He criticized the White House on policies on China and electric vehicles and argued that employees are worse off under Biden.

Trump gave the address in Michigan, ground zero for strikes launched this month by the United Auto Workers (UAW). The former president sees blue-collar voters as a constituency he can win from Biden in a rematch of their 2020 presidential race; Trump won Michigan in 2016 before losing it to Biden in 2020.


The Biden campaign pushed back on Trump’s criticism, saying he left office with fewer jobs than when he entered office and arguing that he sent jobs overseas. Unemployment fell for most of Trump’s presidency before spiking during the pandemic lockdowns that began in March 2020.

“They know who Donald Trump really is: a billionaire charlatan running on empty words, broken promises, and lost jobs. Under Trump, the ultra-wealthy and big corporations got richer, and American families paid the price. He left office with fewer jobs than when he entered. He created incentives for companies to ship manufacturing overseas. And, he let China get ahead in the race to the future,” Munoz said.

The campaign also sent news headlines about billionaires paying less taxes under the Trump administration and about broken promises to Midwest factory workers that companies wouldn’t move jobs overseas.

“We all remember, and Americans won’t forget come November 2024,” Munoz said.

Biden joined the UAW picket line Tuesday, marking a first-of-its kind moment for a sitting president.

The UAW has not yet endorsed Biden in 2024, saying in May that it has concerns over the White House’s focus on EVs — a policy Trump repeatedly hit Biden over as the reason the workers went on strike in the first place.

 The Hill.


Trump goes on incoherent and incorrect rant on electric vehicles as he skips out on second GOP debate

Graeme Massie
Wed, September 27, 2023 

Donald Trump went on an incoherent and inaccurate rant about electric cars as he gave a speech to a non-union auto parts factory in Michigan and avoided the second Republican debate.

The former president visited the 2024 battleground state the day after Joe Biden joined the United Auto Workers union picket line to support striking workers there.

Mr Trump accused the president of a “cruel and ridiculous” policy on electric vehicles that would be the death of the American car industry, despite Tesla being the highest-valued company in the industry,

He told workers at Drake Enterprises, an automotive manufacturing plant in Clinton Township, that EVs were actually bad for the environment.

“People have no idea how bad this is going to be for the environment, you know those batteries when they get rid of them, and lots of bad things happen, and when they dig it out of the ground to make them, is going to very bad for the environment,” he claimed.

“Why aren’t these manufacturers making cars that are going to sell and go on long journeys? They want windmills all over the place. It is like they are told what to do and go against their industries.”

And he warned: “The electric vehicles are going to put you out of business, the things you make in Michigan they don’t need anything of it.”


Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump speaks to guests during a campaign stop at Drake Enterprises, an automotive parts manufacturer, on September 27, 2023 in Clinton Township, Michigan. (Getty Images)

Mr Trump claimed that the Biden administration wanted high gasoline prices to force Americans to buy EVs.

“They want it (high gas prices) so you go all electric so you can drive for 15 minutes before you need to get it charged,” he said.

Then he claimed that EVs, which have ranges of 300 to 500 miles, could only be used on short journeys.

MAGA PROPOGANDA POSTERS

Former U.S. President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally at Drake Enterprises, an automotive parts manufacturer, on September 27, 2023 in Clinton Township, Michigan. (Getty Images)

“These are built specifically for people who want to take extremely short trips…it is crazy, they say the happiest day you buy an electric car is the first 10 mins you drive it then panic sets in and you think where the hell am I going to charge this thing,” he said.

Mr Trump said that he supported anyone who wanted to buy an EV, but that they should not be made mandatory in America.


Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump tours Drake Enterprises, an automotive parts manufacturer, before speaking to guest at a small rally on September 27, 2023 in Clinton Township, Michigan. (Getty Images)

And he quickly returned to his bizarre criticisms of the vehicles.

“Right now electric cars don’t go far enough and they are far too expensive, people are not going to be able to afford them and the cost of operation is also much more.”

Trump rips into Biden as he seeks to woo Michigan autoworkers

Hanna Trudo
Wed, September 27, 2023 



Former President Trump dug into President Biden on Wednesday in a bid to woo autoworkers in Michigan, a state he lost last election, as his GOP rivals gathered across the country for the second presidential primary debate in Simi Valley, Calif.

Trump, speaking in Clinton Township, a suburb of Detroit, wasted no time before bashing the incumbent president on what he views as a flawed and failing auto industry under the Biden administration, criticizing the White House on everything from China and NAFTA to electric vehicles.

“A vote for Crooked Joe means the future of the auto industry will be ‘Made in China,’” Trump said to a lively audience.

Trump was addressing a raucous crowd who cheered as he sought to draw policy contrasts with Biden — whom he hopes to face as the next Republican presidential nominee — while throwing personal jabs at the Democratic president.

“Crooked Joe Biden is back like a wretched old vulture trying to finish off his prey,” Trump said roughly 20 minutes into his speech.

Trump’s event comes after Biden sought this week to court members of the United Auto Workers union, taking the unusual step of joining striking members on the picket line. Biden announced he would head to the battleground state after Trump announced plans to do the same.

In contrast with Biden’s optimistic tone for frustrated workers, Trump painted a grim picture about what their future could look like under another term for Biden, “radical” Democrats, “environmental lunatics,” and “left-wing crazies,” as he referred to his political opponents.

The event kicked off the unofficial start to the 2024 cycle for working class voters in a part of the Midwest that’s critical to assembling a winning coalition.

“The auto industry is being assassinated,” Trump said. “They’re going to be closing up and building those cars in China and other places. It’s a hit job on Michigan.”

Trump spent a portion of his speech outlining the ways in which he believes employees are worse off under Biden as he pivoted to acknowledge the “suffering of the American factory workers.”

“You’re losing your way of life,” he said emphatically, further contending that jobs and whole industries in the United States are being shredded while Biden is serving as commander in chief.

He also said that Biden has made America’s standing on the national stage weaker, promising that the country will have a renewed sense of credibility under a second Trump term.

“The whole world is laughing at us,” he said. “Give me four more years and I will give you an end to this horrible globalism that’s killing our country.”

The former president, who has sustained two impeachments and is currently undergoing multiple indictments as the GOP front-runner, also made several campaign pledges in an attempt to energize voters.

“I will unleash a thing called American energy,” Trump said while outlining more ways that he would distinguish himself from Biden. “I will be your protector, I will be your advocate,” he pledged, adding, “on day one, I will terminate Joe Biden’s electric vehicle mandate” and levy a tariff on goods made outside of the U.S.

He also took a shot at environmental advocates who have had a major influence on Biden’s administration. Biden has worked to address climate change at a larger scale than past presidents and has faced pushback from Republicans and the fossil fuel industry.

“We will drill, baby, drill,” Trump said. “It will have zero environmental difference.”


Trump Brags About Booking Michigan Trip First as He Skips GOP Debate

William Vaillancourt
DAILY BEAST
Wed, September 27, 2023


Rebecca Cook/Reuters

Former President Donald Trump, while speaking at a non-unionized automotive parts supplier in Michigan, criticized President Joe Biden for announcing that he would join United Auto Workers striking on the picket lines days after Trump made his intentions known about traveling to the midwest state.

Biden “came to Michigan to pose for photos at the picket line,” as Trump put it, “but it’s his policies that sent Michigan auto workers to the unemployment line.”

“He only came after I announced that I would be here. You know he announced quite a bit later,” Trump said at Drake Enterprises, about 30 minutes from Detroit.

Biden revealed his plans last Friday—four days after The New York Times reported that his predecessor was planning a trip of his own.

“He spoke for a few seconds,” Trump added dismissively.

Biden Campaign Trolls Trump, Airs Ads on Fox During GOP Debate

Trump spent most of his speech criticizing the U.S. president, instead of his 2024 GOP candidate opponents who took to the stage for the second GOP primary debate in California moments after Trump’s appearance.

The former president had previously confirmed he would skip the event in favor of his Michigan trip, claiming his impressive lead in the polls meant there was no point.

The auto industry, under Biden, was “being assassinated,” Trump claimed, arguing that the advance of electric vehicles will ultimately crush manufacturing in the state.

On Tuesday, Biden became the first sitting president in U.S. history to join a picket line, telling the striking workers, “The middle class built this country. And unions built the middle class. That’s a fact. Let’s keep going. You deserve what you’ve earned, and you’ve earned a hell of a lot more than you get paid now.”

Biden had been invited by UAW President Shawn Fain, whose group had endorsed Biden in the lead-up to the 2020 election but has not yet given its support this time around mainly due to concerns over the president’s electric vehicle initiative.

Yet Fain had even tougher words for Trump in an interview Tuesday.

“I see no point in meeting with him because I don’t think the man has any bit of care about what our workers stand for, what the working class stands for,” Fain said on CNN. “He serves the billionaire class and that’s what’s wrong with this country.”


Skipping GOP debate, Trump instead goes to Michigan to criticize EV mandate

Adam Schrader & Sheri Walsh

Wed, September 27, 2023 

Former President Donald Trump, who skipped the GOP debate, blasted the Biden administration's EV mandate during a speech Wednesday at non-union car parts manufacturer Drake Enterprises in Michigan, calling the mandate a "government assassination of your jobs." The event comes amid the ongoing United Auto Workers strike against Ford Motor Co., Stellantis and General Motors. 
File photo by John Angelillo/UPIMore


Sept. 27 (UPI) -- Former President Donald Trump skipped the second Republican debate in California and spent Wednesday evening in Michigan instead, blasting the Biden administration's EV mandate during a speech at non-union car parts manufacturer Drake Enterprises.

Trump made his trip to Michigan as the United Auto Workers union strike against Ford Motor Co., Stellantis and General Motors rolled into Day 13.

Trump spent much of his hourlong speech targeting President Joe Biden's electric vehicle mandate, calling it "a government assassination of your jobs and of your industry."

He added that "current strikes and contracts will not matter in the future," as Trump claimed "they will be building those cars in China and other places."

"Biden's job-killing EV mandate has dictated that nearly 70% of all cars sold in the United States must be fully electric less than 10 years from now," Trump said as he also focused on EV's short range and the "panic about where to get a charge."

"Electric cars don't go far enough and they're far, far too expensive," Trump said as he called for "a future that protects American labor, not foreign labor."

"I want to salute these truly great Americans who do not get the credit they deserve. Now they want to go all electric and put you all out of business," Trump claimed.

Trump's visit to Drake Enterprises, a Clinton Township, Mich., company that opposes the Biden administration's shift to electric vehicles, was announced in a post to Facebook on Tuesday.

"In 2019, we rolled out an employee engagement program centered on patriotism and support for America," the company said in its post Wednesday. "This program has sought to encourage our workforce to embody the American Dream, whatever that may be for each employee. With that said, we value this opportunity and are honored to provide a platform to one of America's former leaders."

"I side with the autoworkers of America and with those who want to make America great again and I always will," Trump said, adding "I'm thrilled to be back with the workers, the UAW members and proud patriots of the great state of Michigan."

While Trump spent much of his speech taking shots at the Biden administration, he made a passing reference to the GOP debate also underway in California.

"You know we're competing with the job candidates. They're all running for a job. They'll do anything," Trump said, adding "Does anyone see a V.P. in the group? I don't think so."

Trump also spent much of his speech talking about his term as president, what has changed since he left office and what he would do with a second term.

"Now I put everything on the line to fight for you. I've risked it all to defend working class from the corrupt, political class that has spent decades sucking the life, wealth and blood out of this country," Trump said, as he began to outline his "vision for a revival of economic nationalism and our automobile vehicle lifeblood."

"I want a future that protects American labor, not foreign labor. A future that puts American dreams over foreign profits, and a future that raises American wages and strengthens American industry," Trump said, before warning that "Under crooked Joe Biden, instead of economic nationalism, you have ultra left-wing globalism."

Trump's remarks came less than a day after the Trump campaign criticized Biden for joining Detroit-area picket lines in support of the union, calling it in a statement a "PR stunt" to "distract and gaslight the American people."

"Yesterday, Joe Biden came to Michigan to pose for photos at the picket lines," he said as the crowd booed. "He spoke for a few seconds and had absolutely no idea what he was saying," Trump claimed, adding, "He wants electrical vehicle mandates that will spell the death of the U.S. auto industry."

"He's selling you out to China, he's selling you out to the environmental extremists and the radical left people who have no idea how bad this is going to be," as Trump emphasized how bad used car batteries are for the environment.

"A vote for crooked Joe means the future of the auto industry will be made in China. A vote for President Trump means the future for the automobile will be made in America, where it should be," Trump said to loud cheers, before referencing the numerous indictments he faces.

"I am working for you, not for me. I will always have your back," Trump said, as he added, "I could have the softest, nicest life, instead I have to beat these lunatics up all day long. I'd never heard of the word indictment, now I hear it every three days."

Trump also blasted "Biden's war on energy," as he compared gas prices during his administration to higher gas prices now.

"I think they want that. That way you'll go all electric so you can drive for 15 minutes before you have to get a charge."

And Trump discussed trade deals and ending "the disaster known as NAFTA."

"With the USMCA, 75% of every car under that deal must be made in North America," Trump said, adding "and perhaps my greatest unsung achievement, I kept Chinese cars the hell out of America. I imposed a whopping 27.5% tariff and tax on all Chinese automobiles coming into our country," Trump said, adding "and it remains in place to this day."

As Trump worked to make his case for an endorsement, UAW president Shawn Fain called it "pathetic irony" that Trump's rally, purported to be in support of union workers, was held at a non-union business as he blasted the former president for his anti-union record in an interview with CNN.

Fain said Trump blamed members of the powerful union for the 2008 recession and then, in 2019, failed to stand by union members when the UAW issued a strike against General Motors. He said he sees "no point" in meeting with Trump during his visit.

"I don't think the man has any bit of care about what our workers stand for, what the working class stands for. He serves a billionaire class, and that's what's wrong with this country," Fain said.

When asked if that qualified as an endorsement for President Joe Biden in the 2024 presidential election, Fain held back -- indicating his comments simply reflected his personal views of Trump. The UAW did endorse Biden in the 2020 presidential election.


Trump makes play for Michigan’s working-class voters as he skips GOP debate

Kristen Holmes, Alayna Treene and Daniel Strauss,
 CNN
Wed, September 27, 2023 

Matthew Hatcher/AFP/Getty Images

Donald Trump, the front-runner in the GOP presidential primary race, may not have gotten a welcome from union leaders as warm as President Joe Biden did in Michigan when he skipped the second GOP debate and instead addressed current and former union members outside Detroit.

But his decision is laying the groundwork for a 2024 general election battle over the working-class voters who helped propel him to the White House in 2016 but favored Biden in 2020. It’s the clearest signal yet of the campaign’s shifting focus to the general election and specifically a potential Trump vs. Biden rematch.

Trump used his time at Drake Enterprises, a non-union auto parts supplier in Clint Township, to appeal to the group of current and former union workers gathered there. He sought to cast himself as a fighter for union workers, seeking their leaders’ endorsement for president as he delivered a sustained attack on Biden’s electric vehicle policies.

“But your leadership should endorse me, and I will not say a bad thing about them again,” said Trump, who recently criticized the head of United Auto Workers – a key labor union currently on strike.

Ahead of Trump’s visit – which came just one day after Biden was greeted by UAW President Shawn Fain and made the unprecedented move of joining striking autoworkers on the picket line – the president’s campaign rolled out a new ad criticizing Trump’s treatment of autoworkers. Titled “Delivers,” the 30-second contrast spot is the Biden campaign’s first to directly attack the former president.

The United Auto Workers backed Biden in 2020, but it hasn’t made an endorsement yet for 2024. And despite Fain’s criticism of Trump’s planned visit – which was announced before Biden’s – the former president’s team believes he can drive a wedge between union leadership and the rank-and-file workers, many of whom supported him in 2016.

“The reality is that there’s a disconnect between the political leadership of some of the labor unions and the working middle class employees that they purport to represent,” Trump senior campaign adviser Jason Miller told CNN.

Trump allies began floating the idea of a visit shortly after the strike began, while his team was reaching out to Michigan Republicans to gauge interest.
GOP debate counterprogramming

Trump allies were also encouraged by the timing of the speech, which they saw as more effective counterprogramming to the debate than his sit-down interview with Tucker Carlson that aired during the first Republican primary debate in August, two GOP strategists told CNN. “In Detroit, he’ll actually be speaking to voters that he needs to win over,” one of the strategists said.

The former president, in his remarks, briefly referenced the competing second Republican presidential debate, saying, “You know we’re competing with the job candidates; they’re all running for a job. No, they’re all job candidates – they want to be in the – they’ll do anything – secretary of something. They even say VP. I don’t know. Does anybody see any VP in the group? I don’t think so.”

The suburban Macomb County, where Trump spoke, is historically a blue-collar stronghold where the “Reagan Democrat” voter emerged. Trump won it by about 11 percentage points in 2016 and 8 points in 2020. More recently, the county has been something of a battleground. In 2022, Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer won the county by 5 points.

“Macomb County has a big batch of union members and they’re a pro-Trump county, but not by much,” said Barry Goodman, a former Michigan Democratic National Committeeman.

Biden won Michigan union households by 25 points in 2020, according to CNN exit poll data – up from Hillary Clinton’s 13-point advantage among them four years earlier. But Trump’s visit to Macomb, in particular, suggests the former president and his team see some of those voters as up for grabs in 2024.

“The people working on the floor – blue-collar, average guys working hourly for the Big Three – supported Donald Trump because they have traditional values, they own guns, they don’t want their gun rights taken away or restricted. They’re predominantly anti-abortion,” said Brian Pannebecker, a staunch Trump supporter and president of Auto Workers for Trump, who rallied supporters – both union and nonunion workers, including some UAW strikers.

Trump addressed some of those supporters Wednesday, when he spoke to autoworkers, plumbers, electricians, and current and former union members, including some UAW members and their families. He criticized Biden for coming to Michigan “to pose for photos at the picket line” and attacked the president’s policies, which he argued “send Michigan autoworkers to the unemployment line.”

“That’s why I’m here tonight to lay out a vision for a revival of economic nationalism and our automobile manufacturing life blood, which they’re sucking out of our country. I want a future that protects American labor, not foreign labor. A future that puts American dreams over foreign profits,” Trump said.
Trump advisers see opening

The former president’s advisers told CNN they saw an opening with autoworker voters, in particular, because of Biden’s push for electric vehicle production, which Trump has recently begun referring to as an all “electric car hoax,” while also claiming it will move autoworker jobs overseas.

Early in his presidency, Biden announced a target that, by 2030, half of the vehicles sold in the United States would be battery electric, fuel-cell electric or plug-in hybrid, which would be a seismic shift for an auto industry dominated by gas-powered vehicles. Earlier this year, the Environmental Protection Agency released new proposed rules to speed up the process and ensure two-thirds of new cars sold in the US are electric by 2032.

Miller called the movement toward electric vehicles “a direct threat to every UAW worker in Michigan working on gas-powered vehicles.”

The president of Drake Enterprises, the non-union auto parts manufacturer where Trump delivered his speech, echoed this sentiment. “If electric vehicles took over today … we’d pretty much be out of business,” Drake’s Nathan Stemple told Fox News. “If all the trucks and vehicles went electric, we would be scratching for something to do.”

Some members of the UAW have feared Biden’s push for more electric vehicles could threaten its members’ jobs since EVs require fewer people to assemble. Earlier this year, Fain publicly criticized Biden over his administration’s financial support for such a transition. However, on Tuesday Fain told reporters that he believes a move toward electric vehicles does not hurt his union if “companies do the right thing.”

Trump’s rhetoric has little to do with the cause of the ongoing strike, which includes demands for wage hikes and a roll back of previous concessions.

Despite Trump’s history of clashes with unions and his administration’s policies that union leaders have called “pro-business,” the former president has recently tried to cast himself on the side of autoworkers, while not weighing in directly on the strikers’ specific wage concerns.

That hasn’t sat well with union leaders. “Every fiber of our union is being poured into fighting the billionaire class and an economy that enriches people like Donald Trump at the expense of workers,” Fain recently told CNN, responding to Trump’s planned visit.

“We can’t keep electing billionaires and millionaires that don’t have any understanding what it is like to live paycheck to paycheck and struggle to get by and expecting them to solve the problems of the working class,” he said in an emailed statement.

Biden does have the backing of the United Association of Union Plumbers and Pipefitters, whose president pegged Trump as out of touch on the issues important to union workers.

“After four years, one thing was clear: when it comes to the bread and butter issues our members care about – fair wages, safe job sites, and the ability to retire with the dignity we earned – Donald Trump is just another fraud,” UA General President Mark McManus said in a recent statement.

That’s the message Biden’s campaign is leaning into in their new ad, which questions Trump’s support for autoworkers and features footage of him golfing. “Manufacturing is coming back to Michigan because Joe Biden doesn’t just talk, he delivers,” the narrator continues, underscoring the importance of the pivotal battleground for the 2024 race.

This story and headline have been updated with additional details.

CNN’s Jack Forrest, Kate Sullivan and Kim Berryman contributed to this report.


The Automotive Plant Where Trump Is Speaking Sure Has Some Bad Reviews

Alexander Sammon
SALON
Wed, September 27, 2023 

Photo illustration by Slate. Photo by Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images.

In lieu of Wednesday’s Republican debate, and in an attempted answer to President Joe Biden’s Tuesday appearance at the picket line in support of striking United Auto Workers members, Donald Trump is heading to Michigan himself to speak directly to blue-collar Michiganders in the auto industry.

The event will not, despite original reports to the contrary, have Trump speaking to striking union members. Instead, he will speak to nonunion workers at a nonunion parts manufacturer called Drake Enterprises, at the invitation of the company’s management.

“It was complete luck,” said Drake president Nathan Stemple in a Fox News segment misleadingly titled “Biden, Trump to rally auto workers in Michigan as UAW strike expands,” explaining that “some of our colleagues that we do business with reached out to us said that the president was looking for a location to host this event and we were more than willing to do so.”

That’s a far cry from Biden’s personal invitation from UAW president Shawn Fain; Trump will not be speaking to any UAW workers from Drake at all, because, of course, there are none.

He might, however, be speaking to some unhappy workers, at least according to a bunch of reviews of Drake on Indeed, a recruiting site that allow employees and ex-employees to review their workplaces.

“Crabs in a bucket mentality,” wrote someone who identified themselves as a former production worker, in May, in a three-star review (out of five). “Nothing about this job is good longevity wise and McDonald’s pays more.”

“Worse [sic] place to work,” wrote a respondent identifying as a current technician in March, in a two-star sendup. Across 35 total reviews, Drake got its lowest marks for “management”: 2.8 stars out of five.

It’s not much better on Glassdoor, another popular site for workplace reviews. There, the company sports three out of five possible stars, across 12 evaluations, with only 50 percent of employees saying they’d recommend the plant to a friend.

“Beware,” wrote one person identifying as a current employee in a one-star January 2023 review. “Management is clueless. Shop is completely dirty. The truly good people leave after a short time as there is no culture.”

“DON’T WORK HERE,” warned one self-identifying former employee in December 2022. “Dead end,” wrote another.

(One very positive review for Drake on Glassdoor, a five-star endorsement from a self-identified machine operator in January 2023, states: “Drake is one of the best places I have ever worked. It’s a family owned business and the owners actually care about us.” That’s the only positive review dating back two years.)

It’s not that the Indeed and Glassdoor reviews on, say, Stellantis, one of the auto manufacturers with unionized workers that are currently on strike, fare so much better. (We’re talking about jobs after all.) But “fair pay for job” is one of the top comments in the Indeed reviews of Stellantis, across 1,223 survey responses. And that kind of says it all, doesn’t it? The unionized work places can at least boast that the jobs pay mostly fairly—in large part because of the efforts of organized labor.

When asked about the autoworkers strike on Fox, Drake president Stemple lamented the action and offered no support for striking workers. “We’re still producing parts to create inventories and things like that and to keep our people working,” he said.

Trump’s appearance, then, looks a lot less like a rally with labor than it does a captive audience meeting. It certainly won’t succeed in driving a wedge between the Democratic Party and organized labor. Workers at Drake seem to have a very dim opinion of their management, who invited Trump to evangelize, not on behalf of organized labor but on behalf of himself (and presumably, against electric vehicles).

If anything, Trump’s appearance in Michigan puts the UAW strike in even starker relief. As UAW president Fain told CNN, “I find a pathetic irony that Trump is going to hold a rally at a non-union business. … He serves a billionaire class and that’s what’s wrong with this country.”

ONE AUTOWORKER

Few striking autoworkers show up for Trump's speech at a nonunion factory


Henry J. Gomez and Vaughn Hillyard and Dan Gallo and Jake Traylor
Wed, September 27, 2023

Alex Brandon


CLINTON TOWNSHIP, Mich. — Former President Donald Trump called for a “revival” of the economic nationalism that fueled his successful 2016 campaign in a visit here Wednesday aimed at distracting from the second Republican presidential primary debate.

Trump’s speech at a nonunion auto parts company was also geared toward blue-collar workers in the midst of a United Auto Workers strike. President Joe Biden made history Tuesday by joining a picket line outside Detroit, becoming the first sitting president to do so.

Addressing an audience of more than 300 that included only a few of the striking workers, Trump ascribed the auto industry’s problems to foreign trade deals he has long railed against — pacts that Biden and even many Republicans have supported in the past. Trump also frequently complained that Biden and Democrats were pushing electric vehicles to please environmental activists at the expense of an industry still heavily centered on gas-powered cars.

“Joe Biden claims to be the most pro-union president in history,” said Trump, who toured one of the company’s factories before he began his remarks. “His entire career has been an act of economic treason and union destruction.”

He added a direct appeal to UAW officials.

“Hopefully,” he said, “your leaders at the United Auto Workers will endorse Donald Trump.”

The crowd cheered loudly.

Trump’s appearance in this suburb north of Detroit is packed with meaning for a presidential campaign that could very well be a rematch of his 2020 race with Biden.

By avoiding another debate with the GOP candidates looking to snatch the nomination from him, the front-running Trump is signaling he is more focused on a general election battle against Biden. Michigan is part of the swath of industrial and Midwest states that swung to Trump in 2016 and to Biden four years later. And, on a night his rivals tangled at former President Ronald Reagan’s namesake library, Trump was smack dab in Macomb County, legendary in the 1980s for its concentration of fed up blue-collar workers known as “Reagan Democrats.”

Trump won Macomb County in 2016 and 2020, but Biden narrowed the margin a bit, losing by fewer than 40,000 votes. Hillary Clinton lost to Trump by about 48,000 votes four years earlier. The area is a major hub of auto industry activity, from car makers and parts suppliers to dealers.

The audience Wednesday was a mix of workers from the host company, Drake Enterprises, and UAW members and area politicians. Many in the crowd waved “Union Members for Trump” signs printed in the University of Michigan’s blue and gold colors. The audience also included Trump fans with no deeply vested interest in the strike who were there more for Trump than for the autoworkers. J.R. Majewski, a Trump-backing Republican who last year lost a congressional race in Toledo, Ohio, made the 80-mile trip.

Paul Sheridan, who came from nearby Bloomfield Hills to see Trump again, said: “I mean, I’ve seen him speak in person, two or three times.And he’s always very good. And he speaks the truth. He’s funny. And so it’s always great to see him in person.”

But hardly any striking workers were on hand.

“There are a few strikers here, yes,” said Brian Pannebecker, a former local autoworker who organizes an Auto Workers for Trump Facebook page and helped shore up attendees for the event. “I don’t know where they’re at. But there are several — a handful.”


One of the striking UAW members on hand, Scott Malefant, concurred.

“I haven’t seen anybody yet,” Malefant, wearing a Make America Great Again hat, said as he waited for Trump to arrive. “I’m sure there might be a few.”


The event came off like a Trump rally in miniature, far smaller than the arena blowouts he was known for in his first two campaigns but with the same festive atmosphere — a food truck, the usual campaign playlist blaring over the speakers. Trump frequently went off on tangents unrelated to the labor dispute, delighting fans who cheered for him wildly and booed at mentions of Biden’s name.

When he hit on the strike and the auto industry, Trump talked up the “America First” themes familiar to his previous runs. And while he said he has nothing against electric vehicles, he repeatedly asserted that Biden’s push to make more of them would hamstring the U.S. industry.

“The things that you make in Michigan, they don’t need any of it,” Trump said of electric car manufacturers.

Trump also held himself up as a more reliable champion for autoworkers and the industry at large, at times sounding like the president who in 2017 told supporters in Youngstown, Ohio, not to sell their homes, because manufacturing was coming back on his watch. Two years later, General Motors closed a plant in nearby Lordstown. Plants have also closed in Warren, Michigan, and Baltimore. The number of auto manufacturing jobs held relatively even during Trump’s administration, adding about 35,000 jobs from January 2017 to February 2020, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“It’s obvious why Donald Trump is not at the Reagan Library tonight — he’s leading the Republican primary field by 40 points,” said Rich Luchette, a Democratic strategist. “But from a general election standpoint, Trump’s speech at a nonunion shop is a mistake. It will no doubt remind voters of Trump’s abysmal record on labor issues. Trump packed the National Labor Relations Board with anti-union appointees. Trump failed to bring back auto manufacturing jobs.”

Large throngs of Trump supporters and protesters marched near Drake before Trump arrived, waving signs and chanting. American Bridge 21st Century, a progressive super PAC, paid for a plane to circle the area with a banner reading “TRUMP SOLD US OUT.”

Biden’s re-election campaign, meanwhile, promoted a new cable TV and digital ad Wednesday aimed at Michigan voters, specifically in Detroit, Grand Rapids and Lansing.

“He says he stands with autoworkers,” a narrator says of Trump. “But as president, Donald Trump passed tax breaks for his rich friends, while automakers shuttered their plants and Michigan lost manufacturing jobs.”

Biden, the ad asserts, “doesn’t just talk; he delivers.”

Several Trump backers in the crowd Wednesday acknowledged that Biden’s visit to the picket line Tuesday was a smart move.

“I’m not a big fan of him,” Malefant said. “But, you know, any support we can get, we’ll take it.”

Asked whether Trump should have joined a picket line, Malefant countered that he “wouldn’t want to see the guy get booed or anything.”

“I think there’s always going to be a warmer welcome for Democrats when it comes to the unions,” Malefant added. “I mean, a lot of people would boo Biden, but it’s not a popular thing with unions, so we kind of keep our mouths shut.”

Pannebecker, the organizer of the Facebook group, said Biden should not take sides in the dispute.

“I don’t think the president of the United States should be sticking his nose into contract negotiations between businesses, companies and workers,” he said. “President Trump’s here today to talk about what he accomplished during his first term and what he hopes to accomplish during his second term.”

Donald Trump To Visit Nonunion Plant During Autoworker Strike

Liz Skalka
HUFFPOST
Tue, September 26, 2023 


Donald Trump is set to appear at Drake Enterprises, a parts supplier that doesn't appear to have a union relationship.

DETROIT — Former President Donald Trump said he was traveling to Detroit to rally with striking autoworkers, but the location he settled on for his Wednesday event is a nonunion parts supplier whose workers aren’t at all involved with the strike.

United Auto Workers President Shawn Fain pointed that out after President Joe Biden’s stop at a picket line in Belleville, Michigan, on Tuesday.

“I find it odd he’s going to go to a nonunion business to talk to union workers,” Fain told reporters after Biden’s stop. “I don’t think he gets it, but that’s up to people to decide.”

Trump’s 2024 presidential campaign is set to hold its event at Drake Enterprises in Macomb County, a quintessential swing county in the Detroit suburbs that backed Biden in 2020 after Trump won it in 2016. A national UAW spokesperson confirmed that the union does not represent workers at Drake, but the factory could be home to other unions. Drake did not respond to a request for comment.

Trump’s campaign says he’s planning a prime-time speech to an audience of 500 union members, including some autoworkers. The former president has touted his renegotiation of trade relations between the United States, Mexico and Canada as benefiting rank-and-file workers, but union leaders see him as anything but an ally. Trump, and Republicans in general, were mostly silent during the UAW’s 2019 strike against General Motors, and Trump did not visit the picket line. Fain is sharply critical of Trump, calling him an out-of-touch member of the millionaire and billionaire class that workers are fighting against.

“The proof’s in the body of work,” Fain said. “I go back to the economic recession, where he was quoted blaming the union, blaming the UAW for what was wrong with the auto companies. I go back to 2015, when he was running the first time and he was talking about doing a rotation, getting rid of our jobs, moving them somewhere else, where they pay less money.”

The UAW hasn’t moved yet to endorse Biden in the 2024 presidential race — but Fain has made clear that an endorsement for Trump isn’t happening.

Trump’s campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But the former president singled out the union’s leadership in a Saturday post on Truth Social. “If the UAW ‘leadership’ doesn’t ENDORSE me, and if I don’t win the Election, the Autoworkers are ‘toast,’ with our great truckers to follow,” he wrote.

Drake lists Ford, General Motors and other major automakers as clients, which all do business with a vast network of unionized and nonunionized suppliers. Drake’s website says it specializes in making parts for heavy-duty trucks: “Our customers include many major OEM companies in the heavy truck, agriculture and automotive markets.” The company says it has 125 employees.

Drake CEO Nathan Stemple appeared on Fox News on Tuesday to discuss Trump’s upcoming visit. He said the strike has impacted demand for the parts his company manufactures. Stemple also made a dig at Biden when asked about his stop at the picket line.

“I’m not much of a politician. I have three kids and run a manufacturing company, so I don’t have time to get into politics,” he said. “I did look at some past things and President Biden in 2020 said that he was gonna bring 18.6 million jobs for the automotive industry. And I don’t know if that has happened yet, or if he miscalculated his numbers. We all know that’s happened before.” (Biden didn’t actually say he would create 18.6 million automotive jobs.)

Trump’s visit has been billed as an effort to court striking autoworkers who represent part of the working-class coalition that powered his rise in 2016. Meanwhile, Biden’s Tuesday appearance at a General Motors parts supplier in Belleville made him the first president to ever meet with striking workers at a picket line.

Trump is expected to make his remarks at 8 p.m. Wednesday as counterprogramming to the second Republican presidential debate.

Trump in Michigan to compete for union votes as GOP debates in California

Dave Kinchen
Wed, September 27, 2023 at 2:56 PM MDT·4 min read

CLINTON TWP, Mich. (FOX 2) - On Wednesday, Republican hopefuls for President are attending the second debate – except for one. As they gather at the Ronald Reagan Library in California, former President Donald Trump is in the battleground state of Michigan to try to win over blue-collar voters in the middle of the UAW strike.

Trump spoke in Clinton Township in Macomb County at Drake Enterprises. Watch the full speech in the video player above.

The Republican front-runner’s trip comes a day after President Joe Biden became the first sitting president in U.S. history to walk a picket line as he joined United Auto Workers in Detroit. The union is pushing for higher wages, shorter work weeks and assurances from the country’s top automakers that new electric vehicle jobs will be unionized.

The dueling appearances preview what will likely be a chief dynamic of the 2024 general election, which increasingly looks like a rematch between Trump and Biden. Michigan is expected to again be a critical battleground state as both candidates try to paint themselves as champions of the working class.

Trump will not be met with open arms from union leadership, as Biden was. UAW President Shawn Fain spoke with a cable news outlet Tuesday night, calling it "pathetic irony" that Trump would hold a rally for union members at a non-union business.

Trump's visit to Michigan comes at a fluid time in the 2024 general election race. Seen as the front-running for the Republican Party, the former president skipped the first debate to give remarks elsewhere. He's recently posted on his social media that the party should pay less attention to the upcoming primaries and instead focus on the general election.

Michigan is likely going to play a role in the 2024 race for president. Blue collar workers make up a key demographic and voting bloc for both Democrats and Republicans and depending on how it votes could help one candidate win the state.
What is Drake Enterprises?

The supplier builds gear shift levers, engine components, and parts for transmissions in heavy trucks, according to its website. Its clients include brands from all three Detroit automakers as well as several other manufacturers.

It employs 125 workers and in 2019, it expanded its operations when it announced it would open a second manufacturing facility.

On Facebook, it wrote it was excited to host Trump for the rally.

According to the Michigan AFL-CIO, which encompasses several union groups, Drake Enterprises is a non-union manufacturer and supplier
Trump and unions

Among the themes that Trump has railed against and likely will touch on again Wednesday is electric vehicles. Among the biggest policies pushed by the Biden administration is the need to pivot the auto industry toward more battery-powered vehicles.

That has big implications for unions who face an uncertain future as new kinds of vehicles start rolling off the line. This round of negotiations may be the last best chance to secure contracts before the pivot becomes permanent.

Fain has previously said the argument that EVs are bad is an attractive one for some members and warned Biden that he shouldn't forget about that piece of the debate.

According to Axios, Trump secured 43% of the union vote in 2016, helping him tip states like Michigan. Biden reclaimed some of the votes along the way to his 2020 vote. The dueling visits to Michigan underscore just how important those margins are.

But one thing is certain, Trump does not have the favor of Fain, who spoke to CNN's Wolf Blitzer Tuesday night, chastising Trump for the placement of his rally.

"I find the pathetic irony that the former president is going to hold a rally for union members at a non-union business and all you have to do is look at his track record," he said, referring to comments Trump made about workers in 2008 and 2015 and then as president in 2019, the last time that workers went on strike.

"Our workers at GM were on strike for 60 days. For two months, they were on the picket lines. I didn't see him hold a rally, I didn't see him stand on the picket lines. And I sure as hell didn't see him comment on it. He was missing in action," he said. "I see no point in meeting with him because I don't think the man has any bit of care about what our workers stand for, what the working class stands for. He serves the billionaire class and that's what's wrong with this country."

Here's what Biden said during his visit to the picket line

Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.


Trump skips GOP debate to deliver 'economic nationalism' speech at non-union plant

David Knowles
·Senior Editor
Updated Wed, September 27, 2023 

Donald Trump speaking at an automotive parts manufacturer in Clinton Township, Mich., on Wednesday. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)


In an effort to court blue-collar workers, former President Donald Trump traveled to Michigan on Wednesday to deliver a speech aimed at courting the support of autoworkers at a time when their largest union is on strike.

Unlike President Biden, who accepted an invitation by the United Auto Workers to join striking workers on a picket line outside Detroit on Tuesday, Trump spoke at a non-union plant in Clinton Township, but portrayed himself as a champion of union members.

Read more on Yahoo News: ‘UAW boss says Trump works for ‘billionaire class’ ahead of visit,’ from The Hill

“I side with the autoworkers of America,” Trump said. He laid out what he called his “vision of economic nationalism” before a modest crowd, many of whom held up pre-printed signs that read “Union members for Trump.”

On Tuesday, UAW President Shawn Fain blasted Trump’s planned speech at the non-union plant.

“All you have to do is look at his track record,” Fain said. “His track record speaks for itself. In 2008, during the Great Recession, he blamed UAW members, he blamed our contracts for everything that was wrong with these companies — that’s a complete lie.”

Read more on Yahoo News: ‘The automotive plant where Trump is speaking sure has some bad reviews,’ from Salon

In Wednesday’s speech, Trump’s nationalist vision consisted largely of attacks on the electric cars and trucks that the U.S. auto industry has been transitioning to across the country.

“The damn things don’t go far enough and they’re too expensive,” Trump said of EVs.

Trump also spent much of his campaign speech attacking Biden, who he portrayed as having sold out the auto industry to China.

In response to Trump’s remarks, Kevin Munoz, a spokesperson for the Biden-Harris campaign issued a statement.

“Donald Trump’s low-energy, incoherent ‘speech’ at a non-union factory in Michigan was a pathetic, recycled attempt to feign support for working Americans,” he said, adding that it was Trump “who let China get ahead in the race to the future.”

Only once during his remarks did Trump bother to mention his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination, which recent polls show is all but his to claim.

“You know we’re competing with the job candidates. They are all running for a job. No, they’re all job candidates. They’ll do anything, secretary of something. They even say VP, does anybody see any VP in the group? I don’t think so,” Trump said.


ZIONISTS PATROL PRISON CAMP GAZA
Israel strikes militant sites in Gaza as unrest continues, no casualties

Associated Press
Tue, September 26, 2023 


Palestinian protesters burn tires during clashes with Israeli security forces along the frontier with Israel, east of Gaza City, Friday, Sept. 22, 2023. The Israeli military said it struck three posts belonging to Hamas, the Islamic militant group that has controlled Gaza since 2007, following a number of incendiary balloons launched from Gaza into Israel. This is the latest violence to roil the territory as Palestinians stage routine protests by the border fence. 
(AP Photo/Adel Hana)

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli airstrikes hit several targets in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday, the country's military said, after Palestinian protesters flocked for the 12th straight day to the enclave's frontier with Israel — demonstrations that have devolved into violent clashes with Israeli security forces.

There were no reports of casualties in Gaza from the Israeli airstrikes.

The Israeli army said that it used a drone, helicopter and tank to strike multiple posts in northern and southern Gaza belonging to the strip's militant Hamas rulers in response to what it described as “violent riots” at the separation fence between Gaza and Israel. The protests involve Palestinians throwing stones and explosive devices, burning tires and, according to the Israeli military, shooting at Israeli soldiers.

Palestinian health officials reported that Israeli forces shot and wounded 11 protesters during Tuesday's rally.

Hamas, the Islamic militant group that seized control of Gaza in 2007, has said that young Palestinians have organized the protests in response to surging violence in the West Bank and alleged provocations in Jerusalem. In recent days Palestinians have also floated incendiary kites and balloons across the border into southern Israel, setting fire to farmland and unnerving Israeli civilian communities close to Gaza.

The unrest first erupted earlier this month, shortly after Hamas' Finance Ministry announced it was slashing the salaries of civil servants by more than half, deepening a financial crisis in the enclave that has staggered under an Israeli-Egyptian blockade for the past 16 years.

Under arrangements stemming from past cease-fire understandings with Israel, the gas-rich emirate of Qatar pays the salaries of civil servants in the Gaza Strip, provides direct cash transfers to poor families and offers other kinds of humanitarian aid. Qatar’s Foreign Ministry said Saturday that it had begun the distribution of $100 cash transfers to some 100,000 needy families in the impoverished territory.

The sudden violence at the separation fence has stoked fears of a wider escalation between Israel and Hamas, which have fought four wars and engaged in numerous smaller battles since Hamas took over the territory.

But experts said that the violent protests — which have persisted with Hamas' tacit consent for nearly two weeks now — have more to do with Hamas' efforts to manage the territory and halt its spiraling economic crisis than draw Israel into a new round of conflict.

“It's a tactical way of generating attention about their distress,” Ibrahim Dalalsha, director of the Horizon Center, a Palestinian research group based in the West Bank, said of Hamas. “It's not an escalation but ‘warming up' to put pressure on relevant parties that can come up with money to give to the Hamas government.”

Israel, he added, also seeks to contain the exchanges with its precise strikes on apparently abandoned militant outposts — so far avoiding a mishap that could spiral into a conflict that neither side wants.

UN peace envoy, Egypt working to restore calm along Gaza fence

Nidal al-Mughrabi
Wed, September 27, 2023 

Palestinians clash with Israeli soldiers during a protest over the border between Israel and the Gaza Strip

GAZA (Reuters) - International mediators have stepped up efforts to prevent a new round of armed confrontation between Israel and the Islamist Hamas group, which runs Gaza, amid an escalation in violent protests along the border fence.

"The United Nations is talking to and working with all concerned to improve the lives of people in Gaza, particularly the most vulnerable," U.N. Middle East peace envoy Tor Wennesland said on social media platform X on Wednesday, a day after he met Hamas officials in Gaza.

"The situation inside the Strip is dire and we must avoid another conflict that will have grave consequences for all. The people of Gaza have suffered enough and deserve more than a return to calm."

A regional diplomat said Egypt, which brokered numerous truces between Israel and Gaza militants in the past, had also stepped up its efforts to prevent a slide into another war.

Palestinians in Gaza have held protests along the fence for nearly two weeks, breaking from a period of relative calm.

Gazans say they are protesting over issues including the treatment of Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails and Jewish visits to the Al Aqsa mosque compound, a site holy to both Muslims and Jews, who know it as the Temple Mount.

Youths have thrown stones and improvised explosive devices at Israeli troops, who have responded with live fire, killing one Palestinian and wounding dozens of others.

Israeli military spokesperson Daniel Hagari told Israel's Kan Radio the protests would fail to win concessions from Israel.

"The priority is to mount a strong defence and prevent the incidents going beyond the fence. Whoever turns the incident into one of terrorism - gets hit and is killed ... They won't get concessions through terrorism," said Hagari.

Israel had shut crossings and stopped workers from coming into its territory since early last week. Israel said reopening "will be subject to ongoing evaluation on the evolving situation in the region".

ECONOMIC IMPROVEMENTS

A Hamas spokesman had no immediate comment. The group has defended the demonstrations, saying they aimed to protest at Israel's closure and "assaults" against Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem.

Several wars and a 16-year Israeli-led blockade, backed by Egypt, have devastated the economy of Gaza and sent the unemployment rate to around 46% percent, one of the highest in the world.

The regional diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media, said mediators sought more Israeli economic improvements, further ease up on crossings it controlled with Gaza, and an increase in the number of work permits.

In return, he said, Hamas would curb protests and end the use of improvised bombs and incendiary balloons.

He said the protests were not isolated from a financial problem Hamas is facing, worsened by Qatar's slashing of funds.

Qatar has cut a grant it used to offer to support the wages of 40,000 Hamas employees to $5 million from $7 million.

In August, employees received 55% of the wages, not the usual 60%. The group has not paid wages in full for many years.

"Hamas understands that it is not in the interest of anyone in Tel Aviv, Washington, or the region to have wars or engage in open battles with Gaza and therefore, it began to activate tough tools and demonstrations along the border east of Gaza as tools of field pressure on the politicians in Tel Aviv and Washington," said Gaza economist, Mohammad Abu Jayyab.

(Reporting by Nidal Almughrabi; Additional reporting by Dan Williams; Editing by Alison Williams)