You might have missed “energy week” at the White House. It followed “transportation week.” And who can forget the unbridled excitement surrounding “workforce development week,” which somehow escaped the nation’s attention.
Donald Trump’s communications apparatus — still lacking a communications director — apparently hopes to convey a sense of purpose and accomplishment with message-specific weeks, which no one actually seems to care anything about. It’s not an inherently bad idea — these little p.r. gimmicks are, in theory, a chance for an administration to highlight its priorities — but in practice, the undisciplined president tends to shift attention elsewhere.
Nevertheless, Trump World keeps trying. According to the Washington Post, this week is “Made in America” week, which is certainly an issue the president pretends to care about, despite being the wrong messenger for this particular message.
President Trump, whose company outsources the manufacturing of many of its products to overseas factories, is unveiling “Made in America” week at the White House to promote products made in the United States.
In keeping with the “America First” theme of Trump’s inauguration, the administration will highlight U.S. manufacturing in the coming week, the latest of its theme weeks orchestrated by aides to bring discipline to the White House and focus Trump’s schedule and message on a set of policies.
What this week’s events will likely exclude is an exploration of Trump’s business practices, which have relied on product manufacturing in “a global network of factories in a dozen countries — including Bangladesh, China and Mexico.”









