“Reviving the blue-collar boom that Americans experienced during the first Trump term has been a day one priority for the administration,” the White House told Newsweek, while citing improvements to real wages and manufacturing output in 2025.

The latest Labor Department data puts the issue of employment into sharp relief. September’s delayed jobs report showed an encouraging uptick in overall hiring but no pause in blue-collar employment’s long-term decline.

Of the five industry groups or “supersectors” that could be broadly considered “blue collar”—manufacturing, mining and logging, transportation and warehousing, utilities, and construction—only the latter saw an increase in September. Construction’s 19,000-job gain was also insufficient to offset the monthly loss of 25,300 jobs in transportation or manufacturing shedding a further 6,000.

  • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    No, but Trump very specifically claimed he would get production back to USA.
    Which evidently he hasn’t, but not only that, his policies have been harmful for production in USA.

    North of the border however in Canada, things are going great despite sanctions from USA, and they have a 3.3% growth in industrial production, and 2.2% growth in their economy.