Austin American-Statesman

» Trump buoyed at Boeing

- Glenn Thrush ©2017 The New York Times

President Donald Trump, seeking to reset his stumbling presidency, hit the road for a photo op and returned to the simple economic message that got him elected, telling aircraft factory work- ers Friday that “we’re here to celebrate jobs.”

The president toured a sprawling Boeing complex here, right next to the air- port, en route to a week- end in Florida that includes a stay at his resort in Mara-Lago and a Saturday rally in Melbourne. Both are the kind of campaign-style events Trump has often turned to for a political and personal jolt in times of turmoil.

“We’re going to fight for every last American job,” said Trump, adding that his “focus” was on jobs.

He spoke after slowly walk- ing in front of a new Boeing 787-10 Dreamliner at a slickly produced event that erased the lines between corporate and political branding.

“God bless Boeing,” Trump said after offering a similar benedictio­n for the nation.

Swerving from the script on the teleprompt­er, he joked with Boeing’s chief executive, Dennis Muilen- burg, about continuing negotiatio­ns over the cost of building a new fleet of Air Force One jets (the current models are more than three decades old).

“What can look so beautiful at 30? An airplane,” he said, as the audience guffawed.

Trump, fresh off his raucous news conference in the East Room of the White House on Thursday, seemed thrilled to escape the marble political prison of the executive complex — and to break free from a narrative of chaos and infighting that has characteri­zed his presidenti­al debut.

He left Washington after a week of humbling setbacks that included the forced with- drawal of his choice for labor secretary and the dismissal of Michael Flynn, his national security adviser, in the wake of reports that Flynn misled investigat­ors and Vice Pres- ident Mike Pence about his conversati­ons with Russia’s ambassador to Washington.

Trump’s appearance at the manufactur­ing complex, in a state he won by 15 points in November, vividly illustrate­d the second side of his splitscree­n presidency. It was a discipline­d drumbeat of events, including meetings with labor and business lead- ers intended to demonstrat­e his commitment to ensuring working-class economic secu- rity. It was that pledge that moved skeptical swing-state voters to his cause.

“There’s the palace intrigue story about them not being very well coordinate­d, that the White House isn’t ready for prime time, that he’s still setting things up,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., a frequent Trump critic. “There’s a lot of cracks in the armor. And then you have the whole Flynn situation.

“But you have a very discipline­d president when it comes to economic messag- ing,” said Graham, who was in Washington on Friday with the Senate in session. “How can that be? I just think he’s more comfortabl­e talking about how we are going to make America a better place for jobs than he is at articulati­ng foreign policy.”

Trump could not have chosen a more impressive backdrop to emphasize his commitment to preserving jobs. His advance staff spent about a week prepping for his visit to the facility, a sixstory factory hangar.

The visit came two days after Boeing workers in the state rejected an attempt by the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers to unionize the production line.

South Carolina is a right-towork state, with a low level of union participat­ion. Since it began production in South Carolina in 2009, Boeing has hired 7,500 employees spread around several facilities, investing more than $2 billion in land and infrastruc­ture, while spending about $355 million each year on local suppliers and vendors, according to the company.

But Trump also kept up his pressure on Boeing, which he has criticized for what he suggested was an overpriced Air Force One replacemen­t. On Friday, he repeated that “the price is too high” but also noted that “we’re negotiatin­g.” Referring to one of Boeing’s major competitor­s, he also said: “We love Lockheed. Great partner.”

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