steel_workers.jpg

U.S. Steel mill train operators (from left) Steve Thoel, Justin Chism and Duane Justice are grateful for Trump’s efforts to revive their industry. | Neil Steinberg/Sun-Times

Trump fires up the charm with Downstate steel workers: ‘I could be one of you’

GRANITE CITY — Donald Trump is a charming man, and people like him.

Up in Chicago we forget that. Between the attacks on immigrants, on Democrats, on the press, and the FBI, and the Justice department … well, the list goes on and on, doesn’t it? We see the damage, to our institutions, to our social fabric, our nation’s reputation, to groups and individuals, and assume he’s a reviled figure, ripe to be driven from office.

Not true. Not down here, at U.S. Steel’s sprawling works, Trump embraces and is in turn embraced.

“The moment of a lifetime,” said millwright Earl Evans, one of about 400 workers who came in on their own time to hear the president speak. “Finally someone doing something for America.”

OPINION

I drove Downstate Wednesday to listen to Illinois farmers talk about how retaliation against Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum are hurting them. More about that on Monday. But while I was at it, it seemed worthwhile to take in Trump’s speech.

I’m glad I did.

Many in the Granite City crowd on Thursday tried to capture the president on their cell phones. | Neil Steinberg/Sun-Times

Many in the Granite City crowd on Thursday tried to capture the president on their cell phones. | Neil Steinberg/Sun-Times

Waiting several hours for Trump’s arrival, I spoke with steel workers, in their hard hats and bright orange high-res gear. They were deeply grateful to have their jobs back and the president visit.

“It’s great that he’s coming here,” said Steve Thoel, a mill train operator. “I think Donald Trump has got our best interests at heart.”

It’s impossible not hear the tales of hardship, of layoff and a fading mill, and not to share their happiness. Anyone who ever mourned the death of American manufacturing has to. These shuttered factories never come back, but this one has. The cost of these jobs is being borne elsewhere, on mortgaged farms and burdened consumers. But here the news is good.

Trump isn’t the speechmaker Barack Obama is, no memorable phrases or poetic lines. But he knows how to relate to an audience, to feed their sense of being menaced by outsiders, of being betrayed by a government too stupid to live in the real world, like they do. Fifty-three minutes of praise, exaggeration and braggadocio, sprinkled with half-truths, non-truths and the occasional fact tucked in for variety’s sake.

Except of course the re-opening of Blast Furnace B — in September, once they make updates and repairs. That’s the only truth that matters here. A 3,000-degree behemoth that’ll take months to bring on line.

“No one’s ever started a plant that’s been down that long,” said Bert Elliott, a BOF operator for 28 years (the mill has blast furnaces, that make iron, and BOF, or Basic Oxygen furnace vessels, that turn the iron into steel). “It’s a huge effort, very complicated to get going.”

Trump is the first president Elliott has seen and he was in awe.

“He’s the most powerful man in the world,” he said. “I think he runs the United States like a business.”

Furnace operator Bert Elliott said Donald Trump “operates the United<br>States like a business.” Photo by Neil Steinberg.

Furnace operator Bert Elliott said Donald Trump “operates the United
States like a business.” Photo by Neil Steinberg.

Like most businesses, Trump prefers his own PR to any impartial critique. Several times he gestured to the press at the back of the enormous warehouse.

“They analyze my every word,” he said, as if it were a bad thing, and I suppose to a man who accepts only praise, it is.

In the past, in Trump’s view, the United States was a naif being swindled by “the worst trade deals every made in history.” Until he came along. Now “we have the best economy we ever had in the history of our country.”

That isn’t true. But it sounds good.

He touched on a variety of topics — Russia, briefly, North Korea more in depth, claiming Obama didn’t know how to handle the dictatorship.

“He was ready to go to war,” Trump said. “Now I have a great relationship with Chairman Kim.”

You could feel Trump’s neediness.

“How am I doing?” he asked, and the crowd roared.

“Look at the cameras! It’s like the Academy Awards.”

He’d say something I agree with — Yes, we do have “horrible, horrible immigration laws” — then follow up as if every immigrant was a gang member.

Before going, I felt squeamish at being in the crowd scene at a party for the man who kicked open the Pandora’s box of American fears. Almost afraid. But hearing him, I better understood his appeal. He has a vulnerable charm, at times a humanity.  He pandered shamelessly to his audience.

“We need steel,” he said. “We need steel plants. And to see an old, big monster plant like this re-opening — that is an honor. I look at the faces of you people; I could be one of you. I like you guys. I could be one of you.”

That struck me as either sincere or an amazing facsimile. The workers, for their part, couldn’t give him a standing ovation because they never sat down.

I left the hall thinking: Donald Trump is going to be re-elected in 2020. The Democrats don’t have anyone who can touch him. Bank on it. Don’t hate me for being the one to tell you.

Sara Cox and her children, Gavin and Annabelle, wait at the gates of U.S. Steel in Granite City to welcome President Trump. “He’s reviving the steel industry,” Cox said. | Neil Steinberg/Sun-Times

Sara Cox and her children, Gavin and Annabelle, wait at the gates of U.S. Steel in Granite City to welcome President Trump. “He’s reviving the steel industry,” Cox said. | Neil Steinberg/Sun-Times

The Latest
He launched a campaign against a proposed neo-Nazis march at a time the suburb was home to many Holocaust survivors. His rabbi at Skokie Central Congregation urged Jews to ignore the Nazis. “I jumped up and said, ‘No, Rabbi. We will not stay home and close the windows.’ ”
That the Bears can just diesel their way in, Bronko Nagurski-style, and attempt to set a sweeping agenda for the future of one of the world’s most iconic water frontages is more than a bit troubling.
Only two days after an embarrassing loss to lowly Washington, the Bulls put on a defensive clinic against Indiana.
One woman suffered a gunshot wound to the neck. In each incident, the four to five men armed with rifles, handguns and knives, approached victims on the street in Logan Square, Portage Park, Avondale, Hermosa threatened or struck them before taking their belongings, police said.