Study: Opioid Deaths Rise in Towns Where U.S. Auto Plants Have Closed
Opioid deaths sharply rise in American communities where multinational automakers have closed their United States plants, the latest medical study confirms.

Opioid deaths sharply rise in American communities where multinational automakers have closed their United States plants, the latest medical study confirms.

Multinational automaker General Motors (GM) is planning to hire about 1,100 American workers in Lordstown, Ohio, for an upcoming electric vehicle battery plant while laying off more than 800 of its workers in Detroit, Michigan.

The GM strike, slumping oil prices, and sluggish global demand pulled down industrial output more than expected.

Left-wing documentary filmmaker and activist Michael Moore is calling for a boycott of General Motors, Fiat Chrysler, and Toyota after the automakers expressed support for President Donald Trump’s position on California’s odious fuel standards.

A 25-year union worker with Ford Motor Company says President Donald Trump is “the only person defending” American auto workers while 2020 Democrats propose an environmental agenda that will “destroy union jobs” for the middle class.

The United Auto Workers announced Friday that the union has ended its strike against General Motors after its members ratified the deal reached last week with the automaker.

White House National Economic Council Larry Kudlow said, “The statements coming out of Beijing have been a little more positive, it seems like the mood music has improved.”

Former McDonald’s CEO Ed Rensi says the Democrat Party and their 2020 presidential candidates have become the party of communism rather than union workers.

Automaker General Motors (GM) prematurely cut off American union workers’ healthcare benefits amid strikes against the multinational corporation.

If Democrats like Sanders and Warren can demonstrate that they’re truly sincere in helping the working class and not just using workers for props—well, who knows what could happen in 2020.

The strike by workers at General Motors plants across the country is the clearest demonstration of a shift in the U.S. economy that began nearly two years ago.

Union auto workers voted, by a large majority, to authorize strikes while the United Auto Workers (UAW) union negotiates contracts with General Motors, Ford Motor Company, and Fiat Chrysler.

President Donald Trump scolded General Motors on Friday for shifting car production to China, despite getting a taxpayer bailout.

The idling of GM’s transmission plant in Warren, Michigan, is expected to cost about 16,000 jobs in the state over the next two years, analysis finds, as hundreds of laid-off American workers have already been uprooted

Some in Detroit even give Donald Trump credit. The question is whether this recovery can last long enough to expand beyond the downtown area.

Multinational automaker General Motors (GM) has started closure of its Warren, Michigan, transmission plant, which has been up and running for 78 years, resulting in the immediate layoff of about 335 American workers.

Ford Motor Company is set to hire hundreds of American workers at one of its Chicago, Illinois-based auto manufacturing plants, executives announced this week.

While General Motors (GM) is set to expand its manufacturing in China and South Korea, CEO Mary Barra is asking that the most recently laid-off American workers stay loyal to the multinational automaker.

Trump said GM made a “bad investment” when it decided to gut its American manufacturing base to move auto plants to the communist country.

Warren will test whether she can win Democratic support for a Trump-lite economic policy derided as the “economics of nostalgia.”

Middle-class Americans whose livelihoods have been thrown off course after being laid off by General Motors (GM) in Lordstown, Ohio, are fed up with the country’s political and business ruling class in Washington, DC.

General Motors (GM) is exposing their “distinct lack of patriotism” by outsourcing manufacturing to South Korea while planning to close an additional three American plants this year after closing the Lordstown, Ohio plant months ago, America First Policies senior policy advisor Curtis Ellis says.

General Motors (GM) executives announced this week that two of their vehicles will be produced in South Korea as American workers in Lordstown, Ohio are left jobless after their GM plant closure and other Americans’ jobs at the corporation hang in the balance.

General Motors (GM) CEO Mary Barra is planning to sell the Lordstown, Ohio assembly plant to an electric automaker after laying off about 1,600 American workers this year at the factory.

General Motors’ (GM) decision to close the Lordstown, Ohio, assembly plant this year is leaving the small community of Americans in disarray and more disaffected than ever before.

General Motors (GM) CEO Mary Barra took a less than half a percent pay cut last year despite implementing a plan to lay off thousands of American workers, including closing four manufacturing plants in the United States.

Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) is challenging President Donald Trump to do more to prevent multinational corporations from outsourcing and offshoring American jobs and sending them abroad.

Economic populist sentiment is continuing to rise across the United States, a new poll finds, revealing that about 2-in-3 swing voters say the country’s economic system mostly benefits the well-connected, powerful, and rich.

Following former President Obama’s billion-dollar American taxpayer bailout of multinational automaker General Motors (GM), then-Vice President Joe Biden cozied up to CEO Mary Barra who has since laid off thousands of American workers and outsourced their jobs to Mexico and China.

Democratic socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) — one of the leading Democrat candidates for president in 2020 — blasted the outsourcing of American jobs by multinational corporations and challenged President Donald Trump to take action against General Motors (GM).

American workers in Lordstown, Ohio, are continuing to be laid off in supporting industries after multinational corporation General Motors (GM) closed its plant in the area this year.

Executives at General Motors (GM) closed the Lordstown, Ohio, assembly plant last month — resulting in the immediate layoff of about 1,600 American workers — despite major concessions from the United Auto Workers (UAW), new details reveal.

Multinational automaker General Motors (GM) removed its made-in-Mexico red Chevrolet Blazer SUV from a display at Detroit, Michigan’s Comerica Park this week after backlash from American workers.

President Donald Trump took his fight with GM and an auto union to a rally stage in Michigan Thursday night, declaring, “get the damn plants open. Everyone else is coming in.”

Executives from the country’s largest tech conglomerates, the big business lobby, and multinational corporations are demanding Congress pass the latest Democrat plan giving amnesty to millions of illegal aliens.

Ford Motor Company executives have announced a new investment in American workers and the state of Michigan with plans to invest $900 million in the United States, set to create 900 U.S. jobs.

During a rally in Lima, Ohio on Wednesday, President Trump called on the United Auto Workers (UAW) and General Motors (GM) to work together immediately to reopen the corporation’s Lordstown, Ohio assembly plant.

President Trump says he wants to make deals with the “hard working” American workers that make up unions, rather than the “not honest” union leaders whom he said are beholden to the Democrat Party establishment.

“I think that Twitter is a way that we can get out the word when we have a corrupt media. And it is corrupt and it’s fake,” Trump said.

America First Policies Senior Policy Adviser Curtis Ellis says President Trump should impose a 25 percent tariff on auto imports to save American auto manufacturing from China’s efforts to dominate the industry.
