Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
President Trump visits Grand Rapids, promises to turn it into Detroit
President Trump visits Grand Rapids, promises to turn it into Detroit
Feb 11, 2026 8:17 AM

Last Thursday, at a campaign rally in Grand Rapids, MI (home, inter alia, to the Acton Institute), President Trump promised the crowd, “By the way, we’re bringing a lot of those panies back. Remember I told you. ing back. They’re pouring back in.”

Now, it is important to put this in context. Trump had just praised Michigan workers — and no doubt people likely came from all over Michigan, even out of state, to hear the president speak. That said, he returns to the theme of “bringing back” auto manufacturing jobs throughout his speech, which, again, was at a rally here in Grand Rapids, MI.

Each time, the applause is half-hearted at best. Unlike the east side of the state, West Michigan, which includes Grand Rapids, has paratively economically healthy. Why?

We haven’t put all of our eggs in the basket of the auto industry, that’s why. For one thing, while there has been and still is auto manufacturing in the Grand Rapids area, we were once Furniture City, USA and are now proudly Beer City, USA. Grand Rapids can — and does — boast a dynamic, diversified economy.

By contrast, on the east side of Michigan the economy was too dependent on the big American panies. As I wrote in my book,

Many automobile factories in the United States were refitted to produce tanks, bombs, and airplanes during World War II. But when cheaper cars came from Japan forty years later, no one seems to have had enough imagination to ask themselves the most logical question, “What else could we make in these factories?” Instead, they held on to making cars as long as they could … until they couldn’t.

Oversimplifying a bit, that’s basically what happened in Detroit. They held onto their identity as Motor City until long after it made any economic sense. Detroit held on until — even after the auto industry was “bailed out” at taxpayer expense in 2008 — the city of Detroit went bankrupt in 2013.

Writing for Forbes, Pete Saunders gets into more detail regarding plexities of Detroit’s decline and the hope of resurgence there:

Earlier attempts at Detroit revitalization have failed, sometimes spectacularly, because they failed to address root causes or follow all the steps of a reclamation process. New auto plants designed to shore up manufacturing employment still couldn’t withstand petition. The Renaissance Center and People Mover gave the city the “things” that other cities offered, but without substance. By the ’90s, the human, financial and psychological withdrawal from Detroit plete, and something had to happen to revive the city’s soul.

Saunders is optimistic about Detroit’s future — and so am I, for that matter — but I hardly want Grand Rapids’ destiny to look like Detroit’s present. Indeed, the contrast between the two is sharp. As the promotional site Experience Grand Rapids notes,

West Michigan’s global manufacturers supply customers with everything from circuit boards and medical devices, to personal care products, to posites for military and industrial vehicles, to smart rearview mirrors that automatically control a vehicle’s high beam headlights. Grand Rapids’ thriving craft beer industry has even driven manufacturing innovation, with one small startup designing and manufacturing a tool that allows breweries and cideries to can their own beverages for carry out directly from their taproom bars.

Grand Rapids has thrived without any protectionist policies to privilege its industries while Detroit failed despite such policies, having abandoned its enterprising roots. In Detroit, the economy became hampered by outmoded business models, special government privileges and protections for panies and unions, overegulation, and so on. By contrast, as auto manufacturing has declined in Grand Rapids (though many auto factories still thrive here), the city and surrounding area pivoted to medical research and manufacturing, services, craft brewing, and much more. That’s what healthy economies do.

If the president is concerned about out-of-work manufacturing workers in Michigan, the moral imperative should be to find new ways pete on an international scale, rather than trying to protect dying industries with nationalist policies like tariffs. They don’t work, and they won’t work. They are a false promise for prosperity, and they promise a fate that Grand Rapids, to its benefit, rejected long ago.

Rather than promising to turn Grand Rapids into Detroit, the president would do better to encourage Detroit, Flint, and other former auto manufacturing centers in Michigan to reinvent themselves and adapt like we’ve done here.

He’d get a lot more applause in Grand Rapids for that kind of promise.

Image credit: Donald Trump speaking with supporters at a campaign rally at Veterans Memorial Coliseum at the Arizona State Fairgrounds in Phoenix, Arizona by Gage Skidmore

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
A Labor Day Benediction
Labor Day is one of those special American holidays that we all enjoy. We mark the end of summer by it, though fall doesn’t begin for several more weeks. This is the time we get back into our non-summer routines and school is now in session for most students and teachers. It is also a time for one final long weekend. In the liturgy of my own church the benediction from yesterday’s worship said it well: In the name of...
Socialism is the American Way in Krugman’s America
There are a number of problems with Paul Krugman’s NYT piece earlier this week, “A Socialist Plot.” pares the American educational system to its healthcare system, arguing that because Americans aren’t inclined to disparage the former as a socialist threat, we likewise shouldn’t consider universal healthcare as a “socialist plot.” “The truth is that there’s no difference in principle between saying that every American child is entitled to an education and saying that every American child is entitled to adequate...
Economics and the Evangelical Mind
Hunter Baker has a new column at named “Evangelical Minds,” and in it he examines issues of evangelical interest in academics and higher education. Today’s piece quotes me at some length on the question of evangelicals and economics, related to the firing of a professor at Colorado Christian University (scroll down to the final section titled, “Christian Economics?”). This piece is the third installment of the feature, and you can check out the first two here and here. ...
Microfinance Challenged
PowerBlog has in the past endorsed the concept of micro-loans as a market-friendly and thereby effective way of aiding the poor, especially in developing countries. Now Arneel Karnani has attacked microfinance in a prestigious publication, largely on the basis of macroeconomic data. Over at Business as Mission Network, microfinancier Peter Greer supplies a thorough and fascinating response to the charges. Certainly any movement needs it critics and Karnani scores some genuine points, but it seems to me that Greer’s rebuttals...
Is Adolescent Culture Making Us Weak?
While lifeguarding during the summer of my college years, I remember an attractive young woman who worked with me plained she could not meet any guys at her school, The University of Notre Dame. I inquired further, figuring it to be the beginning of a punch line to a joke. She noted the problem as being young male students, and their over-interest in video games. Maybe you have seen the bumper stickers which declare, “It is never too late to...
Rauschenbusch, Christianity and the Social Crisis
Readings in Social Ethics: Walter Rauschenbusch, Christianity and the Social Crisis.References below are to page numbers. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the first publication of Christianity and the Social Crisis, and a new centenary edition has been released this month by HarperSanFrancisco and includes responses to each chapter from figures such as Jim Wallis, Tony Camplo, Cornel West, Richard Rorty, Stanley Hauerwas, and others.R’s introduction to the American situation: “We have now arrived, and all the characteristic conditions...
Islam, Democracy and Turkey
Bilal Sambur, Ph.D., is assistant professor on the faculty of divinity at Suleyman Demirel University in Isparta, Turkey. He is a guest scholar this summer at the Acton Institute. Islam, Democracy and Turkey By Bilal Sambur The inauguration of Abdullah Gul as Turkey’s new president has provoked a great deal of discussion — and anxiety — about the rise to power of a man who is an observant Muslim with a background in Islamic politics. Instead of anxiety, the world...
Global Warming Consensus Alert – There is Broad, Strong Agreement Based on Solid, Incontrovertible Science
Here’s your broad, strong agreement among scientists: In 2004, history professor Naomi Oreskes performed a survey of research papers on climate change. Examining peer-reviewed papers published on the ISI Web of Science database from 1993 to 2003, she found a majority supported the “consensus view,” defined as humans were having at least some effect on global climate change. Oreskes’ work has been repeatedly cited, but as some of its data is now nearly 15 years old, its conclusions are ing...
Global Warming Consensus Alert: Silver Lining Edition
It turns out that the Chinese were really thinking ahead back in 1979 when they implemented their one child policy. After all, imagine what their carbon emissions would be today if they hadn’t: The number of births avoided equals the entire population of the United States. Beijing says that fewer people means less demand for energy and lower emissions of heat-trapping gases from burning fossil fuels. “This is only an illustration of the actions we have taken,” said Su Wei,...
Globalization By Itself is Not Enough
A recent NBER paper, “Distributional Effects of Globalization in Developing Countries,” by Pinelopi Koujianou Goldberg and Nina Pavcnik examines some effects of trade liberalization on low-skill workers. Les Picker summarizes the findings, “Not surprisingly, the entry of many developing countries into the world market in the last three decades coincides with changes in various measures of inequality in these countries. What is more surprising is that the distributional changes went in the opposite direction from what the conventional wisdom suggests:...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved