Trump Praises American Manufacturing at New Mask Facility in Arizona

Trump Praises American Manufacturing at New Mask Facility in Arizona
U.S. President Donald Trump tours a Honeywell International Inc. factory producing N95 masks during his first trip since widespread COVID-19 related lockdowns went into effect on May 5, 2020, in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Brendan Smialowski/AFP via Getty Images)

In his first trip out of Washington since late March, President Donald Trump on Tuesday visited a new mask production facility in Phoenix, Arizona, and took the opportunity to praise the “manufacturing might” of the facility to support healthcare workers amid the CCP virus pandemic.

The Honeywell International Inc. aerospace facility at Phoenix had in less than five weeks shifted from manufacturing aircraft engines to producing N95 respirator masks to supply the Strategic National Stockpile for health care and emergency services workers. N95 respirators are designed to filter 95 percent of airborne particles.

“Respirators are there to protect our heroic doctors and nurses as they fight the unseen enemy,” Trump said after touring the facility. He praised the facility’s N95 masks, calling them “high-quality” and “made to perfection.”

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President Donald Trump looks at a protective mask being shown to him by Honeywell’s Vice President of Integrated Supply Chain Tony Stallings in Phoenix, Arizona, on May 5, 2020. (Tom Brenner/Reuters)

Trump also pointed out that “more than 150 Honeywell employees are working around the clock, three shifts a day, six days a week” to create the masks.

“It’s the men and women of Honeywell who are supplying the weapons, armor, the sweat, and skill in the war to defeat the new and invisible enemy, a tough enemy, a smart enemy … The people of our country are warriors,” the president said.

“Like generations of patriots before you, the workers of this factory are pouring their heart and their soul and their blood into defending our nation and keeping our people healthy and safe,” he added. “You make America proud. You really do. And I want to thank you very much. That’s why I’m here.”

Honeywell had earlier announced about its efforts to ramp up mask production at the aerospace plant in Phoenix, as well as at its safety eyewear plant in Smithfield, Rhode Island. Such efforts have added at least 1,000 jobs—500 to each site—and will enable the company to produce more than 20 million N95 respirators per month. Trump called the feat “a truly miraculous achievement.”

The president also took the opportunity to praise local manufacturing.

“We know it matters where something is made, and we want essential medicines, supplies, and equipment to be manufactured, produced, and made right here in the good old USA,” Trump said.

“My administration believes in two simple rules: Buy American and hire American,” he added. “In the 20th century, Honeywell workers helped make America the world’s greatest manufacturing superpower. This is a great company, and it played a very big role.”

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The Honeywell mask factory where President Donald Trump visited and held a roundtable on Native American issues in Phoenix, Arizona, on May 5, 2020. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)
NTD Photo
President Donald Trump looks at an assembly line machine manufacturing protective masks being shown to him by Honeywell’s Vice President of Integrated Supply Chain Tony Stallings in Phoenix, Arizona, on May 5, 2020. (Tom Brenner/Reuters)

Prior to addressing the workers at Honeywell, Trump participated in a roundtable discussion at the facility about supporting Native Americans amid the CCP virus pandemic.

“Native Americans have been hit hard by the terrible pandemic,” Trump said, later adding that the administration is bringing the Navajo Nation 1,000 rapid-result Abbott Laboratories tests for the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, a novel coronavirus that emerged in China late last year. Trump also said that the Navajo Nation will receive $600 million to combat the effects of the pandemic.

Vice President of the Navajo Nation Myron Lizer said that 2,400 members of the Navajo Nation have been infected and 73 have died from the CCP virus. He added that health professionals have advised the peak in new cases will be in mid-May.

From The Epoch Times

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