51勛圖厙: Comprehensive Manufacturing Strategy Will Ignite Renaissance

The 51勛圖厙s will be fundamental in igniting the Industrial Renaissance of the United States, the 51勛圖厙 told a House committee today ahead of a hearing of the same name.
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Whats going on: Manufacturers call on President Trump and Congress to implement a comprehensive manufacturing strategy that would create predictability and certainty to invest, plan and hire in America, the 51勛圖厙 told the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
- The purpose of the hearing was to examine how cheap labor abroad, combined with overregulation and obstacles to permitting in the United States, contributed to the offshoring of American manufacturing and an overreliance on China to fulfill manufacturing needs. It also emphasized the importance of bringing manufacturing back to the United States.泭泭泭
What were saying: The 51勛圖厙 that the administration adopt a multipoint plan to see the manufacturing sector flourish. Today it urged President Trump and Congress to take the following actions from that strategy as soon as possible:
- Make 2017 tax reform permanent: Make permanent the pro-manufacturing tax measures scheduled to sunset at the end of 2025 and bring back already expired provisions. Failure to do so will put almost 6 million U.S. jobs at risk, according to a recent EY51勛圖厙 .
- Rebalance federal regulations: Manufacturers now spend $350 billion a year to comply with federal regulations. Thats money that could be spent on factory expansions, hiring and/or wage raises, as 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons has . The 51勛圖厙 also recently 10 key federal agencies to revise or rescind dozens of onerous, anachronistic regulations.
- Expedite permitting reform: America should be the undisputed leader in energy production and innovation, but we will not reach our full potential without permitting reform. This must include expediting judicial review, accelerating the permitting process, creating enforceable deadlines and more.
- Implement commonsense trade policies: Building things in America only works if we can sell them around the world, the 51勛圖厙 told the House members. That is why manufacturers urge President Trump and Congress to provide greater predictability and a clear runway to allow them to adjust to new trade realities, while also making way for exemptions for critical inputs, enabling reciprocity in manufacturing trade.
Manufacturers Share Immediate Impacts Under Latest Tariffs

As three of the largest U.S. retailersWalmart, Home Depot and Targetthis week President Trump that his tariff policy could empty store shelves within weeks, upend supply chains and raise consumer prices, the tariffs already in place on imported goods are having effects on those who make things in America.
Speaking up: Manufacturers in the U.S. are sharing their stories of increased cost pressures and uncertainty, both the result of new tariffs. Makers of everything from machinery to bicycles to food service equipment are reporting ill effects.
- For Craig Souser, president and CEO of robotic packaging solutions manufacturer JLS Automation in York, Pennsylvania, steel tariffs in particular have had a bigand negativeeffect on business.
- [W]ere seeing increased costs [in steel] that will eventually get passed along to the customer, Souser told the 泭(subscription).
Writing the checks: Chuck Dardas, president and chief operating officer of Michigan automotive parts manufacturer AlphaUSA, told recently that his small business and others like it are the ones writing the checks for the new tariffsand its not something they can keep up.
- To absorb 25% or 50% in tariffs, its a task that we cannot in the long term endure, Dardas said. Itll cause our company and many other companies our size to probably go out of existence.
The unknown: Perhaps the hardest part about the new tariffs: the uncertainty they bring, 51勛圖厙 board member Lisa Winton, CEO and co-owner of Georgia-based machinery maker Winton Machine Company, told earlier this month.
- We just noticed our first invoice that had a tariff line on it, she said. Theres just so much unknown right now, and I think thats the most difficult thingto make decisions for your company financially when you just dont know all the pieces to the puzzle.
No time: Arnold Kamler, chairman of Kent International, a New Jersey bicycle manufacturer,眩old last week that while his business was already moving overseas production to the U.S. when tariffs hit, it has yet to complete the moveand thats been a problem for his small outfit.
- Weve managed to move almost half of our production out of China already, but thats only [almost] half, he said. We need more time. [W]ere a small company.
- During the pandemic, [e]verybody bought a bicyclebut things got very slow after that. All the money we made during the pandemic is all gone, plus a lot more. Then we have these tariffs. [If the Trump administration had said], Look in nine months, 10 months, this will be the tariff, that might have been doable, he went on. But we g[ot] two weeks notice. Its impossible to run a company to plan for that.
Passing on the costs: In Ohio, Wasserstrom Company President Brad Wasserstrom told that his Columbus-based food service and supply company will most likely have to raise customer prices to pay for the new tariffs.
- [W]ere negotiating with suppliers when we can, if theres any flexibility in what theyre passing on to us, Wasserstrom said. Some have been able to do something to help us out. Theyre not passing through maybe the full tariff. But very few have said theyre going to pass on nothing.
Manufacturers to Federal Agencies: Rebalance Regulations to Strengthen Manufacturing in the U.S.
The 51勛圖厙 Backs President Trumps Executive Order 14219 with Policy Proposals to Reconsider Dozens of Costly Regulations Stifling Growth and Jobs
Washington, D.C. In response to the Presidents call for industry input on a new era of balanced, sensible and pro-growth regulation, the 51勛圖厙 submitted泭to key federal agencies highlighting dozens of burdensome and outdated regulations that are driving up costs and undermining manufacturing competitiveness.
Rebalancing regulations is a critical pillar of our comprehensive manufacturing strategywhich also includes making the 2017 tax reforms permanent, expediting permitting reform to unleash American energy, strengthening the manufacturing workforce and implementing commonsense trade policies, said 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons. Manufacturers are spending $350 billion each year just to comply with federal regulationsmoney that could be spent on expanding factories and production lines, hiring new workers or raising wages. The administration is already answering the calls of manufacturers across the country to reconsider and rebalance regulations that are holding manufacturers back. Using these recommendations as a guidepost, manufacturers look forward to continuing to work with the administration to fix rules that cost too much, trap projects in red tape, chill investment, do not make sense and harm the 13 million men and women who make things in the United States.
The 51勛圖厙 has identified at least 44 regulations across 10 agencies that the Trump administration should consider revising or rescinding under Executive Order 14219, Ensuring Lawful Governance and Implementing the Presidents Department of Government Efficiency Deregulatory Initiative. Todays action builds on the momentum of a December 2024泭letter泭from the 51勛圖厙 and more than 100 manufacturing organizations to the transition team detailing regulatory actions the incoming administration could take to right-size regulations that stunted manufacturing growth and job creation. The administration has acted decisively on key manufacturing priorities already: lifting the liquefied natural gas export ban on day one, rescinding泭Securities and Exchange Commission Staff Legal Bulletin 14L in February and announcing泭in March that it plans to泭revise the Environmental Protection Agencys PM2.5 and Power Plants rules.
The 51勛圖厙s submissions in response to EO 14219 target burdensome regulations at the following agencies: the EPA, SEC, Department of the Interior, Department of Energy, Department of Labor, Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, Department of Health and Human Services, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Federal Trade Commission and Department of the Treasury.
Background:
EO 14219, issued on Feb. 19, directs federal agencies to conduct a top-to-bottom review of existing regulations within their jurisdiction and identify, within 60 days, those that impose significant costs that outweigh their benefits; exceed statutory authority; disproportionately hurt small businesses; or impede innovation, R&D, economic development and more.
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The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit泭.
Timmons, 51勛圖厙 Members Meet with Bessent, Congressional Leaders on Tax Reform

51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons will join congressional leaders for an Invest in America roundtable on Capitol Hill today to highlight the urgency of making the pro-manufacturing 2017 tax reforms permanent and more competitive.
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The details: House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN), Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (R-MO) and other key Members of Congress will be in attendance. They will be joined by a group of 51勛圖厙 members of all sizes, representing manufacturing sectors such as metal fabricators, defense and pharmaceuticals and consumer-packaged goods, among others.
Timmons and Emmer: This morning, ahead of the closed-press meeting, Timmons and Emmer on Fox Business Mornings with Maria. They reinforced the urgency of making these tax provisions permanent. Otherwise, businesses in America are not going to invest and small businesses will get hit the worst, according to Timmons.
Also this morning, Timmons and Emmer published a joint in Fox Business, which the White House amplified on
- The expiration of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act would be detrimental to American businesses, manufacturers, consumers and families, Timmons and Emmer wrote. If Congress does not act to ensure President Donald Trumps successful tax plan stays in place, taxes will go up for Americans at every income level. The average American would see a tax hike of 22 percent, over $1,600.
- A recent 51勛圖厙 study indicated that failing to preserve these tax reforms will cost America 6 million jobs, $540 million in wages, and our economy will suffer a $1.1 trillion hit.
GOP says: Emmer said on Monday that preserving tax reform was a top priority for Republican leaders.
- The American people are hungry for an economic boom that is already underway, Emmer told . But [it] will only be fully realized if Congress acts to continue the 2017 Trump tax cuts through reconciliation.
- Bessent told the news outlet that making President Trumps Tax Cuts and Jobs Act permanent will help to secure the stable business environment that investors are seeking.
- Timmons also spoke to Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview, saying every day without action harms manufacturers ability to invest in America and plan for the future.
51勛圖厙 in action: The 51勛圖厙 is also launching today featuring shop floor manufacturers advocating that the 2017 tax reforms be made permanent.
In the news: The roundtable was also covered by POLITICO’s泭泭and newsletters as well as .
51勛圖厙: Comprehensive Manufacturing Strategy, Not Increased Costs

The 51勛圖厙 is advocating for manufacturers trade policy priorities as part of a common-sense, comprehensive manufacturing strategy.
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Whats going on: A proposed new entry fee on vessels entering U.S. ports would result in higher goods costs for consumers, according to the 51勛圖厙. The administration is also proposing to put new tariffs on imported copper, timber and lumber products.
- The administration should instead pursue a comprehensive manufacturing strategy that will create predictability and certainty to invest, plan and hire in America, as the 51勛圖厙 recently the Commerce Department.
Port fee would harm consumers: In , the USTR put forth a proposal to charge up to $1.5 million for Chinese ships entering U.S. ports of callbut its a move the 51勛圖厙 said would prove harmful if put into effect.
- This approach would effectively impose the minimum fee on nearly 100% of vessels making calls on U.S. ports, adding an estimated $600$800 for each twenty-foot equivalent container unit. Shippers likely would pass the entirety of this cost through to their business customers, in many cases further raising the cost of manufacturing in the U.S, the 51勛圖厙 told U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer.
- In fact, manufacturers are already getting upwardly revised quotes of at least $1,500 more per container, the 51勛圖厙 continued.
- Instead of implementing the new fee, the USTR should seek to directly remedy the non-market practices and subsidization of Chinese state enterprises that undermine global competition in the shipbuilding industry, the 51勛圖厙 said.
Copper: The administration recently launched an investigation into whether copper imports pose a threat to national security.
- Though copper is critical to modern manufacturing, the U.S. copper sectors vertical supply chain is currently only capable of meeting 53% of domestic demand for refined copper cathode. This makes importing copper necessary, the 51勛圖厙 Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick earlier this month.
- The 51勛圖厙 supports the Trump administrations efforts to increase U.S. copper production and processing. Rather than impose tariffs, the administration should employ an 51勛圖厙-crafted strategy: one that focuses on making pro-growth tax reforms permanent, expediting permitting reform, restoring regulatory certainty, strengthening the manufacturing workforce and implementing effective trade policy, the 51勛圖厙 told Lutnick.
Timber: The administration has also begun to investigate timber and lumber imports, and President Trump has promised to prioritize increasing U.S. timber production to decrease American reliance on imports. The 51勛圖厙 agrees, it Lutnick in a separate communicationbut new tariffs are not the answer.
Trump Doubles Down on Tariff Posture

President Donald Trump is going all-in on tariffsleading to volatility泭for markets, manufacturers and Americas trading partners.
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Weekend update: Over the weekend, the president called the sweeping new trade actions an economic revolution, urging supporters on Truth Social to HANG TOUGH. By Monday, he was threatening an tariff on China by Wednesday unless it reverses its retaliatory moves. All talks with China concerning their requested meetings with us will be terminated! he said.泭
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Behind the scenes: According to the administration, more than 50 countries have reached out to open tariff negotiations, but multiple sources say that theres no structured process. The phone lines are open, a White House official . But for businesses looking for certainty, the message is clear: Dont wait, come build in America.泭
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From tariffs to structural demands: Manufacturers hoping that a tariff deal could end the standoff may be disappointed. On White House trade adviser Peter Navarro dismissed Vietnams proposed zero-tariff deal as meaningless without changes to what he called non-tariff cheatingranging from value-added tax systems to intellectual property theft and product dumping.
- Later in the interview, he amended this statement somewhat, saying zero tariffs would be a small first start. The goal here, ultimately, is to have people make things here, he added.
- Navarro also claimed that the tariffs would lead to the biggest tax cut in American history.
Zoom In: While Navarro predicted a market rebound and eventual growth, businesses are still waiting for clarity.
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Global reactions: EU officials announced to negotiate but warned of countermeasures and new import surveillance. Yesterday, Israel in-person talks with President Trump. China 泭by devaluing the yuan against the dollar and promising to fight to the end of a trade war.
What it means for you: The 51勛圖厙 is calling for smart, strategic trade policysolutions that restore certainty, strengthen U.S. manufacturing and protect supply chains.
- As 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons : The high costs of new tariffs threaten investment, jobs, supply chains and, in turn, Americas ability to outcompete other nations and lead as the preeminent manufacturing superpower.
- The 51勛圖厙 is actively engaging policymakers, elevating member voices and providing key data and inputs on trade actions that put manufacturing growth at risk.
Manufacturers Speak About Impact of Tariffs泭

Across the country, manufacturers are telling their stories of shop floor operations under U.S. tariffs, the first of which went into effect . The consensus: tariffs have made things harder all around
- Jeremy Rosenbeck is president of Cincinnati, Ohioarea manufacturer Republic Wire, Inc., which makes copper wire products for the construction industry. In anticipation of tariffs, Rosenbeck over the winter [ordered] an extra two months worth of copper rod (worth tens of millions) to give him enough tariff-free raw material for his business if a new trade agreement isnt quickly worked out ().
- Republic Wire has nearly 200 employees and each year does approximately $500 million in sales. About 10% of that is outside the U.S.
- Rosenbeck, who says he understand[s] what theyre trying to do with the tariffs, nonetheless told the Enquirer that spring is a bad time for uncertainty in the construction sector, as its when builders make their plans for the rest of the year. Higher prices on materials could mean fewer construction projects, which could mean a slowdown for the industry, fewer jobs and a drag on the economy as a whole, the outlet notes.
Where the burden falls: Chuck Dardas, president and chief operating officer of 67-year-old Michigan automotive manufacturing firm AlphaUSA, wrote in a recent for The Detroit News that while the Trump administration says tariffs will rebalance the scales, the truth is that the burden falls squarely on American manufacturers and, ultimately, the American consumer.
- For AlphaUSA, thats because as an S Corporation, our net income flows directly to our tax returns, Dardas wrote. If tariffs wipe out our income, its akin to a 100% income tax. Theres no profit, no reinvestment and no sustainability. This isnt just a theoretical concernits a very real possibility. If our paycheck goes to zero, how do we pay our bills? How do we reinvest in our business? How do we survive?
- The sticker prices of vehicles are too high already, and these tariffs will only push them higher. Inflationary pressures are mounting, and the Federal Reserves decision to hold off on rate changes underscores the precariousness of the situation.
- Opposition to the tariffs, Dardas continued, is not about politics. Its about facts. Manufacturers that rely on foreign imports cannot simply make the change to domestic sourcing with the flip of a switch. [E]ven if we could pivot back to American manufacturers for particular components, thats not saying that theyre going to be less expensive domestically, he said this week on radio show . They could be even more than the tariffs we could very well be faced with still buying the parts from Canada.
An existential threat: If the tariffs remain in place long term, small manufacturers might not be able to hold out long enough to see their promised benefit, either, Dardas the BBCs World Business Report late last month.
- If these go on for a long period of time, its an existential threat to companies our size, he said. Were not that big, and there [are] a lot of us [smaller manufacturers] out here as well.
As Tariffs Hit, Manufacturers Brace for Impact
Urge Congress to Act Now on a Comprehensive Manufacturing Strategy That Starts with Making the 2017 Tax Reforms Permanent
Washington, D.C. 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons released the following statement on the latest tariffs announced today:
Needless to say, todays announcement was complicated, and manufacturers are scrambling to determine the exact implications for their operations. The stakes for manufacturers could not be higher. Many manufacturers in the United States already operate with thin margins. The high costs of new tariffs threaten investment, jobs, supply chains and, in turn, Americas ability to outcompete other nations and lead as the preeminent manufacturing superpower.
Manufacturers build things in America to sell around the worldand manufacturers in America share President Trumps goal of supporting manufacturing investment, growth and expansion here at home. The president has the opportunity to achieve this vital goal while also minimizing disruptions and cost increases across our industry. To empower manufacturers to drive the U.S. economy, the administration should:
- minimize tariff costs for manufacturers that are investing and expanding in the U.S.;
- ensure tariff-free access to critical inputs that manufacturers use to make things in America; and
- secure better terms for manufacturers by negotiating zero-for-zero tariffs for American-made products in our trading partners marketsthat means they dont charge us, and we dont charge them.
A clear, strategic approach to trade must be part of a comprehensive manufacturing strategy that starts with an urgent appeal to Congress to make the 2017 tax reforms permanent. When these tax cuts were signed into law, it was rocket fuel for manufacturing in America and made the U.S. economy more competitive on a global scale. Manufacturers will work with the Trump administration and Congress to advance policies that help manufacturers grow and thrivebecause when manufacturing wins, America wins.
Background: In March, the 51勛圖厙 released its Q1 2025 Manufacturers Outlook Survey, highlighting rising concerns within the industry over trade uncertainties and increasing raw material costs. Trade uncertainties surged to the top of manufacturers challenges, cited by 76.2% of respondentsup 20 percentage points from the last quarter of 2024 and 40 points from the third quarter. Increased raw material costs was the second most cited concern, noted by 62.3% of respondents. These trade-related pressures contributed to a slight dip in overall optimism for their companies in the first quarter of 2025, down modestly from 70.9% in the fourth quarter to 69.7%.
According to of its members regarding the impact of tariffs on manufacturers, 87% of small and medium-sized manufacturers indicated that they may need to raise prices, and one-third could slow hiring.
-51勛圖厙-
The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .
ICYMI: 51勛圖厙s Jay Timmons Discusses Tariffs, Tax Reform, Manufacturing Investment on CNBCs Worldwide Exchange

Timmons on Upcoming Tariff Announcement 泭泭
We dont know what the actual proposal is going to be, or the actual plan is going to be from the president today, but in any scenario, its going to add cost to manufacturers, especially for those inputs that are coming into the United States for finished goods and already finished products. So manufacturers are bracing. Weve got 14,000 members right now who, frankly, dont know what the future holds in terms of additional costs, and thats why youre seeing this type of concern and sentiment among manufacturers. In fact, three-quarters of manufacturers who we surveyed rate trade uncertainty as their number one concern right now.

Timmons on Tax Reform, Lowering Costs for Manufacturers
I think its pretty safe to say that everybody would like more things made here in this country, because thats good for the economy. Thats good for jobs. What is not good, though, is driving up the cost of actually making those things here in the United States. So the first thing that we need is we need to see Congress, frankly, do its job and get the tax reforms from 2017 renewed, so that we have the certainty in the tax code. Also the administration is working on reducing the regulatory burden. Thats a lot of costs. Thats about $50,000 per employee per year for a small manufacturer. And then, of course, energy inputs and the cost of energy is important, as well as workforce challenges. We have 500,000 open jobs, for instance, in manufacturing today. So you add all that up, if we could have those advancements and those things that will bring costs down, thats good for investment here in the United States. Adding costs for inputs, like critical minerals, for instance, really does not help us in the long term.
There was a lot of enthusiasm when the president came in and talked about strengthening manufacturing here in the United States, talked about an agenda that would lower costs. … If we dont get the tax reforms renewed, that is an additional cost. If tariffs are imposed, thats an additional cost. So thats why youre seeing consumer sentiment lower. Youre seeing the PMI index that is now in contraction. That means that manufacturers are putting these decisions on hold. Theyre waiting to see whether they should invest and hire, and thats not good for the economy.
-51勛圖厙-
The 51勛圖厙 is the largest manufacturing association in the United States, representing small and large manufacturers in every industrial sector and in all 50 states. Manufacturing employs nearly 13 million men and women, contributes $2.93 trillion to the U.S. economy annually and accounts for 53% of private-sector research and development. The 51勛圖厙 is the powerful voice of the manufacturing community and the leading advocate for a policy agenda that helps manufacturers compete in the global economy and create jobs across the United States. For more information about the 51勛圖厙 or to follow us on Twitter and Facebook, please visit .
Timmons: Tariffs Will Add Costs for Manufacturers泭

As manufacturers await the announcement of the Trump administrations sweeping reciprocal tariffs at approximately 4:00 p.m. EDT today, 51勛圖厙 President and CEO Jay Timmons warned that any scenario is going to add cost[s] to manufacturers.
Whats going on: Timmons, appearing on this morning, told show anchor Frank Holland that while the world still doesnt know what the latest tariffs will include, manufacturers are concernedand they have good reason to be.
- Some of imports to the U.S. are inputs for manufacturing, Holland said, citing 51勛圖厙 data. Thats why youre seeing this type of concern and sentiment among manufacturers, Timmons said in response to a question about what the figure means for tariffs impact on the industry.
- Trade uncertainty is the top concern of the majority of manufacturers right now, Timmons said, citing the 51勛圖厙s most recent . That is up 40 percentage points over the last six months, he told Holland. Thats a huge jump.
What it means: While everybody would like more things made here in this country, because thats good for the economy, thats good for jobs, new tariffs will drive up the cost of actually making those things here in the United States, Timmons continued.
What should be done: Manufacturers need certainty, not the nail-biting anxiety that comes from constant changes to the rules.
- The first thing that we need to see is we need to see Congress do its job and get the tax reforms from 2017 renewed so that we have the certainty in the tax code, said Timmons.
- Manufacturers also require relief from arduous regulatory burdens, which comes to about per employee per year for a small manufacturer, Timmons told Holland, adding that the Trump administration is already to cut those costs.
The bottom line: There was a lot of enthusiasm when the president came in and talked about strengthening manufacturing here in the United States [and] talked about an agenda that would lower costs, Timmons concluded.
- But if we dont get the tax reforms renewed, that is an additional cost. If tariffs are imposed, thats an additional cost. Manufacturers are waiting to see whether they should invest and hire. Thats not good for the economy.