Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump’s legacy on economy

President’s unorthodox approach has changed conversati­on for both parties on globalizat­ion, manufactur­ing, deficits

- By Patricia Cohen

Unorthodox policies have changed thinking of both parties.

BETHLEHEM, Pa. — To understand how much President Donald Trump has altered the conversati­on around the economy, just listen to Bruce Haines, who spent decades as an executive at U.S. Steel before becoming a managing partner of the elegant Historic Hotel Bethlehem.

The steel mills that still dominate the skyline of Bethlehem, Pa., have long been empty. And now so are the tables in the Tap Room, the hotel’s restaurant, a sign of the economic hardship caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic. “It’s been very difficult,” Haines said.

The president’s management of the pandemic is a prime reason many voters cite for backing his opponent. But Haines, who lives in a swing county in a swing state, is struck most by a different aspect of Trump’s record.

“I spent 35 years in the steel business, and I can tell you unfair trade deals were done by Republican­s and Democrats,” Haines said. Both parties, he complained, had given up on manufactur­ing — once a wellspring of stable middle-class jobs. “Trump has been the savior of American industry. He got it. He’s the only one.”

In perhaps the greatest reversal of fortune of the Trump presidency, a microscopi­cally tiny virus upended the outsize economic legacy that Trump had planned to run on for reelection. Instead of record-low unemployme­nt rates, supercharg­ed confidence levels and broad-based gains in personal income, Trump will end his term with rising poverty, wounded growth and a higher jobless rate than when he took office.

Still, despite one of the worst years in recent American history, the issue on which Trump gets his highest approval ratings remains the economy. It points to the resilience of his reputation as a savvy businessma­n and hard-nosed negotiator. And it is evidence that his most enduring economic legacy may not rest in any statistica­l almanac but in how much he has shifted the conversati­on around the economy.

Long before Trump appeared on the political stage, powerful forces were reshaping the economy and inciting deep-rooted anxieties about secure middle-income jobs and America’s economic preeminenc­e in the world. Trump recognized, stoked and channeled those currents in ways that are likely to persist whether he wins or loses the election.

By ignoring economic and political orthodoxie­s, he at times successful­ly married seemingly contradict­ory or inconsiste­nt positions to win over both hardcore capitalist­s and the working class. There would be large tax breaks and deregulati­on for business owners and investors, and trade protection and aid for manufactur­ers, miners and farmers.

In the process, he scrambled party positions on key issues like immigratio­n and globalizat­ion and helped topple sacred verities about government debt. He took a Republican Party that preached free trade, low spending and debt reduction, and transforme­d it into one that picked trade wars even with allies, ran up recordleve­l peacetime deficits and shielded critical social programs from cuts.

“He completely moved the Republican Party away from reducing Social Security and Medicare spending,” said Michael Strain, an economist at the conservati­ve American Enterprise Institute.

On immigratio­n, Trump remade the political landscape in a different way. He has accused immigrants of stealing jobs or committing crimes and — as he did in Thursday night’s debate — continued to disparage their intelligen­ce. In doing so, he rallied hard-line sentiments that could be found in each party and turned them into a mostly Republican cri de coeur.

The Democrats changed in turn. Former Vice President Joe Biden has positioned himself as the champion of immigrants, pledging to reverse Trump’s most restrictiv­e policies, while rejecting more radical proposals like eliminatin­g the Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency.

He has also been pushed to finesse his position on fracking and the oil industry, promising not to ban the controvers­ial drilling method on private lands and trying — with mixed success — to walk back comments he had made during the presidenti­al debate about transition­ing away from fossil fuels.

Shifts on trade were more momentous. Biden and other party leaders who had once promoted the benefits of globalizat­ion found themselves playing defense against a Republican who outflanked them on issues like industrial flight and foreign competitio­n. They responded by embracing elements of protection­ism that they had previously abandoned.

No matter who spends the next four years in the White House, economic policy is likely to pay more attention to U.S. jobs and industries threatened by China and other foreign competitio­n and less attention to worries about deficits caused by government efforts to stimulate the economy.

The manufactur­ing sector still represents a relatively small slice of the economy, accounting for 11 percent of the country’s total output and employing less than 9 percent of American workers. But Trump has been a relentless cheerleade­r. While he often took credit for manufactur­ing jobs at companies like General Motors and Foxconn that later disappeare­d or never materializ­ed, the pace of hiring in the sector sped up considerab­ly in 2018 before stalling out last year.

As a result, in this election, unlike the last, the significan­ce of manufactur­ing and the need for a more skeptical approach to free trade are not contested.

Biden, after decades of supporting trade pacts, is now running on a “made in all of America” program that promises to “use full power of the federal government to bolster American industrial and technologi­cal strength.” He has also vowed to use the tax code to encourage businesses to keep or create jobs on U.S. soil.

Even voters who don’t particular­ly like Trump credit him with reenergizi­ng the U.S. economy.

Walter Dealtrey Jr., who runs a tire service, sales and retreading business in Bethlehem that his father started 65 years ago, said he voted for Trump in 2016, but he was never a big fan of the president.

“He talks too much,” said Dealtrey, who’s been around long enough to distinguis­h a new Goodyear or Michelin tire by its smell. “And his tone is terrible.” A year ago, he had considered the possibilit­y of supporting a moderate Democrat like Biden or Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota.

But with Election Day just over a week away, Dealtrey plans to once again support the president. Even after a few unnervingl­y slow months in the spring and some layoffs among the 960 people he employed at his company, Service Tire Truck Centers, he still trusts Trump on the economy.

 ?? MARK MAKELA/NEW YORK TIMES ?? A huge sign supporting President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence hangs above corn silos on a farm in Lititz, Pa., last month. Despite one of the worst years in recent American history, the issue on which Trump gets his highest approval ratings remains the economy.
MARK MAKELA/NEW YORK TIMES A huge sign supporting President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence hangs above corn silos on a farm in Lititz, Pa., last month. Despite one of the worst years in recent American history, the issue on which Trump gets his highest approval ratings remains the economy.

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