There is a lot of truth in the above and I'm white working class. As an example, manufacturing jobs. I worked in contract manufacturing for over twenty years. I really don't see what government can do to help manufacturing. To my understanding a lot of it is price competition. It's relentless and remorseless. If an American company that markets and sells products can get significantly lower unit costs by having those products manufactured in Mexico or overseas -- and the quality is within standards -- they are going to do so. In large part this was driven by the consumer lobby that demanded lower prices. It's price, price, price. If your product is above market price and there is nothing extraordinary about your product (something that would justify the higher price) a lot of retailers won't even put it on the shelf. I don't see how the federal government can change that. Doing away with regulations won't work. First of all, who wants regulations guaranteeing consumers a safe, sanitary product abolished? There are a few things the regulators could do away with but I don't think they would have any real significant effect on price.
During the debates they could not get Trump to answer the question, "How would you bring manufacturing jobs back to the U.S.A.?" He dodged and evaded and finally answered, "By not letting them leave in the first place." And that's what every candidate says. By streamlining the regulatory process, by giving tax breaks and etc. It has never worked because it is no match for a manufacturer transferring his operation overseas and getting a mammoth reduction in unit costs.
You know what they might try? Outlaw the enormous container ships that bring the stuff back from Asia. Those ships are highly automated. They virtually load and unload themselves. The transportation cost from a Chinese port to a West Coast port is pennies per unit price.
It's an uphill battle and one I don't think this country can win. Unless...the American consumer was willing to pay a premium to buy products that are manufactured here in the U.S. by 100% American labor. That's what it would take. That's what the United Auto Workers tried thirty years ago -- the Buy American! campaign -- and it didn't work then and it won't work now.
This idea Trump has floated about putting big tariffs on products manufactured overseas and exported to the U.S. will result in the American consumer paying much higher prices. High enough that yes, some of the manufacturers might give up and move the manufacturing back to the U.S. But it would be hugely inflationary and probably drive down sales.