Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Grothman’s jobs claim undershoot­s mark

Rep should have said ‘manufactur­ing jobs’

- D.L. Davis

President Donald Trump fulfilled one of his campaign promises in January when he signed a revised North American Free Trade Agreement into law.

The revised deal, known as the USMCA — United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement — is a replacemen­t for NAFTA, which Trump described as “one of the worst trade deals” in history.

In the weeks leading up to the signing of the new agreement, lawmakers from both sides of the aisle weighed in, including U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman, RWis., who expressed his support on Twitter.

“In #WI, over 44,000 jobs depend on trade with Mexico and Canada,” Grothman, of Glenbeulah, said in a Jan. 16 tweet.

The tweet also featured a graphic, attributed to the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers, which read: “In Wisconsin 44,361 jobs depend on manufactur­ing exports to Canada and Mexico.” Is Grothman’s jobs claim correct? Well, yes and no. It depends if you think it’s accurate to say the Milwaukee Bucks have won more than 10 games this year … when at the All-Star break they had won 46.

Let’s take a look.

According to the Wisconsin Economic Developmen­t Corp., Wisconsin’s top two export markets for 2019 were Canada ($6.7 billion) and Mexico ($3.3 billion). Those far outpace China, which held down the No. 3 spot at $1.4 billion.

The top Wisconsin export products in 2019 were industrial machinery ($5.6 billion), electric machinery ($2.4 billion) and medical and scientific instrument­s ($2 billion).

When asked for backup for the claim, Grothman staff member Timothy Svoboda pointed to the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers graphic as well as the group’s website, which includes the 44,361 number.

The wrinkle: Grothman’s claim spoke of jobs in general that depend on trade with Canada and Mexico, not just manufactur­ing jobs which — obviously — is a smaller segment.

As such, he vastly undershoot­s his

target. Grothman’s omission of the word “manufactur­ing” is an example of how a word omission can significantly change the veracity of a statement.

In a phone call with PolitiFact Wisconsin, Grothman acknowledg­ed the mix-up.

In a Jan. 29 news release after Trump signed the trade deal, he offered a more accurate total, saying under the deal “the 231,000 Wisconsin jobs and nearly $11 billion worth of Wisconsin exports supported by trade with Canada and Mexico will be provided a better playing field.”

Our ruling

In a tweet, Grothman said that in Wisconsin “over 44,000 jobs depend on trade with Mexico and Canada.”

He actually undershoot­s the mark, since the 44,000 applies only to manufactur­ing jobs. The real total of jobs tied to Canada and Mexico trade is 231,000.

To be sure, 231,000 jobs is more than the 44,000 jobs claimed in the tweet. But it could also give the impression that only 44,000 jobs depend on trade with Canada and Mexico — a figure that is off the mark by an estimated 187,000 jobs, or 80.9%

PolitiFact’s definition of Half True is a statement that is partially accurate or leaves out important details or takes things out of context. That fits here.

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