President Donald Trump, Wisconsin’s former Republican Gov. Scott Walker, and former House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) spent a lot of time at press events and photo-ops last year touting the 13,000 manufacturing jobs Foxconn was supposedly going to create in the U.S., but—as with many of his job claims—the president’s soaring promises are looking increasingly hollow.
As Reuters reported on Wednesday, the Taiwanese tech firm—which Walker lured to Wisconsin with over $4 billion in taxpayer subsidies—is now saying “it intends to hire mostly engineers and researchers rather than the manufacturing workforce the project originally promised.”
In an exclusive interview with Reuters, Louis Woo, a special assistant to Foxconn chairman Terry Gou, said the company is completely walking back its plan to build $10 billion factory in Wisconsin.
“In
SHOCKER—Foxconn was a MAJOR CON by Trump & Scott Walker. I'd like to hear a presidential candidate start pushing jail time for corporate welfare thievery https://t.co/eHYuqC1vbe
— Jordan (@JordanChariton) January 30, 2019
As Reuters notes,
Trump bragged about his deal with Foxconn to bring jobs to Wisconsin. So far 178 people were hired—but the company is on track to score over $4 billion in incentives.
— Swing Left (@swingleft) January 30, 2019
That's $22M per job. #WhatADeal https://t.co/FGfZ9L3IHD
foxconn was supposed to employ 5,200 ppl by end of 2020; now looking closer to 1,000. “In Wisconsin we’re not building a factory. You can’t use a factory to view our Wisconsin investment," said CEO's asst.
— Sarah Holder (@ptsarahdactyl) January 30, 2019
….yes wisconsin paid $4 BILLION for thishttps://t.co/79WwUUZCab
“Foxconn took Wisconsin for a ride. Other states, beware the allure of the mega deal,” wrote Reid Wilson, reporter for The Hill.
News that FoxConn is slowly reversing its promises of manufacturing investment and job-creation will come as no surprise to progressive analysts and corporate welfare critics, who have argued all along that the sweetheart deal Walker and Wisconsin Republicans cut with FoxConn in 2017 was an “absolute fraud.”
“I remain skeptical that the Foxconn project will ever play out as advertised,” Greg LeRoy, executive director of Good Jobs First, told Bloomberg last week.
Following Reuters‘ report on Foxconn’s moves to renege on its previous job pledges, critics pointed to footage of Trump participating in a “groundbreaking” ceremony with Walker, Ryan, and Foxconn’s chairman at the site of the company’s planned facility last June, where he touted the 13,000 manufacturing positions the tech firm vowed to create.
“I’m thrilled to be here in the Badger State with the hardworking
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