The Palm Beach Post

Use smart approaches, not strong-arm tactics, on jobs

- He writes for the New York Times.

Thomas L. Friedman LONDON — I’ve actually been watching the early Trump presidency from London. Even from here I have vertigo.

My head is swirling from “alternativ­e facts,” trade deals canceled, pipelines initiated, Obamacare in the Twilight Zone and utterly bizarre rants about attendance on Inaugurati­on Day and fake voters on Election Day. Whatever this cost Vladimir Putin, he’s already gotten his money’s worth — a chaos president.

But moderate Republican­s, independen­ts and Democrats who opposed Donald Trump need to beware. He can make you so nuts that you can’t think clearly about the most important questions today: What things are true even if Trump believes them, and therefore merit support? And where can Democrats offer smarter approaches on issues, like jobs, for instance — approaches that can connect to the guts of working-class voters as Trump did, but provide a smarter path forward.

Where Trump’s instinct is not wrong is on the need to strike a better long-term trading arrangemen­t with China. But I worry about his pugnacious tactics. If he smacks China with “America First,” China will smack him with “China First,” and soon we’ll have a good ol’ trade war.

Where I think Democrats should focus their critique, and fresh thinking, is how we actually bring back more middle-class jobs.

If Trump’s bullying can actually save good jobs, God bless him. But what Trump doesn’t see is that in the long-run CEOs may prefer not to build their next factory in America, precisely because it will be hostage to Trump’s Twitter lashings.

You need to protect workers, not jobs, because every worker today will most likely have to transition multiple times to multiple jobs as the pace of change accelerate­s. So the best way you help workers is by ensuring that they are flexible — that they have the skills, safety nets, health care and learning opportunit­ies to make those leaps and that they live in cities open to innovation, entreprene­urship and high-IQ risk-takers.

The societal units protecting workers best are our healthy communitie­s — where local businesses, philanthro­pies, the public school system and universiti­es, and local government come together to support a permanent education-to-work-to-life-longskill-building pipeline.

When Trump strongarms a company to retain jobs, but kills Obamacare without a credible alternativ­e, he is saving jobs but hurting workers, because he is making workers less secure and less flexible.

Another of Trump’s jobs fallacies is that regulation always holds companies back. In some cases it does, and thoughtful deregulati­on can help. But Trump’s argument that we must ignore climate science because steadily upgrading clean energy standards for our power, auto and constructi­on companies kills jobs is pure nonsense.

Fact: California has some of the highest clean energy standards for cars, buildings and electric utilities in America. And those standards have kept California one of the world’s leaders in clean-tech companies and startups, and its jobs and overall economy have grown steadily since 2010.

In sum, Democrats should and can take the language of “strength” away from Trump and own it themselves. They should be for strong workers, not strong walls; for building strong communitie­s, not relying on a strongman to strong-arm employers; and for strong standards to create strong companies.

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