"No longer are we going to allow other countries to break the rules, to steal our jobs and drain our wealth," Trump said yesterday at a White House event that spilled from the East Room to the South Lawn.
Shortly after Trump's remarks, the US trade representative released an 18-page report about its goals for updating the decades-old North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico.
Facing an investigation into his campaign's ties with Russia and a tax and health care agenda struggling to make headway as quickly as promised, Trump is turning his focus to trade this week. Administration officials are to meet Wednesday with economic officials from China, a nation the president has accused of dumping steel on the global market to hurt US steelmakers.
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The president took his time checking out products from all over the country: Trump donned a cowboy hat from Texas. He swung a baseball bat from Louisiana. And he even climbed into the cab of a Wisconsin-built fire truck and pretended to be a firefighter, saying, "Where's the fire? Where's the fire? Put it out fast!"
The new NAFTA objectives, a requirement to begin talks on updating the agreement in the next 30 days, contain the first specifics for a Trump administration that has made bold promises on trade.
The president said he only seeks a level playing field for US companies and workers, but "if the playing field was slanted a little bit toward us, I would accept that, also."
But the president has a conflicted relationship with global trade. His namesake clothing business depended on the work of low-wage workers living overseas, as does the fashion line of his daughter and White House aide, Ivanka Trump.