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2,000 GM Workers To Lose Jobs On Inauguration Day

Robert Sheridan is a 40-year-old GM worker who voted for Donald Trump. He can barely contain his excitement about Inauguration Day, even though it will be a rou...
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Robert Sheridan is a 40-year-old GM worker who voted for Donald Trump. He can barely contain his excitement about Inauguration Day, even though it will be a rough day for him on a personal level.

He’s one of 2,000 GM factory workers losing their jobs on Friday, the same day that Trump will be sworn in as the 45th president.

Sheridan — and thousands like him — are desperately hoping Trump will save their jobs.

2,000 GM Workers To Lose Jobs On Inauguration Day

“Please help us in Lordstown,” says Sheridan, a soft-spoken Midwesterner with three kids. “This is a great middle class job. You can’t find one better around here.”

These are GM’s first layoffs in six years. About 1,200 workers in Lordstown, Ohio (where Sheridan works) are getting the ax and another 800 in Lansing, Michigan — both key states that led to Trump’s victory. Given the vote totals, many of these workers likely voted for Trump, breaking ranks with the United Automobile Workers union that backed Hillary Clinton.

Trump appeared to hear their outcry. In early January, he slammed GM in a tweet.

“General Motors is sending Mexican made model of Chevy Cruze to U.S. car dealers-tax free across border,” Trump tweeted.

“Trump’s tweet really gave us hope,” Sheridan says. He’s worked at GM (GM) for seven years and makes $25 an hour installing brake lines. It’s the kind of pay that finally allowed him to buy a house and decent sports equipment for his kids. Other factories in the area pay only $9 to $12 an hour.

GM still doing layoffs in Ohio and Michigan

This week, Trump did a U-turn and thanked GM. The car giant announced Tuesday it would invest heavily in the U.S., generating about 2,000 “new and retained” factory jobs in the coming years. Trump cited it as another example of how he’s delivering “big stuff” for America, although GM said the plans had been in the works for awhile.

But that doesn’t help workers in Lordstown and Lansing. Those 2,000 workers are still losing their jobs now, GM confirmed. On top of that, another 1,300 factory workers in Detroit are scheduled to get the ax in March.

It’s another blow to America’s Rust Belt.

“This county has been going downhill, slowly,” John Fowler, a retired GM worker, lamented as he gazed out of the McDonald’s window in Warren, the town next to Lordstown. The region is about an hour’s drive from Pittsburgh or Cleveland.

Counting on Trump to bring back jobs

Just about everyone in the Lordstown area knows someone who has worked at GM. Cars are in everyone’s blood. Local diners and Dairy Queens are decorated with clocks and posters depicting American-made cars. Anyone driving a foreign car is likely to get a look … not a friendly one.

“GM is the pride of this town. We build these cars. And we buy these cars,” says Heather Lexso, a 41-year-old mom of three, who has worked at the GM plant in Lordstown since 2012.

2,000 GM Workers To Lose Jobs On Inauguration Day

GM is the top employer in the Trumbull County, where the plant is located. The county voted solidly for President Obama in 2008 and 2012. But in 2016, it went 51% for Trump.

Like many in the region, Fowler voted Trump for one reason: “Trump wants to bring the jobs back to this country. We need jobs here.”

In its heyday in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the GM plant in Lordstown employed about 15,000 in the factory. Now it’s down to 4,500. After Friday, the factory will employ barely over 3,000 workers, meaning GM will no longer be the top employer in the area, according to the county.

Still, it’s a coveted job because of the pay. Many GM workers in Lordstown make about $60,000 a year, the UAW says.

“If you could get a job at GM, it was like winning the lottery,” says Lexso, who will also lose her job on Friday, which also happens to be her husband’s birthday. “I don’t think I’ll ever earn $25 an hour again.”

Many ask why workers like Lexso and Sheridan don’t pack up and move somewhere else for a job. GM says it’s trying to find other openings for workers. Some are heading to Tennessee.

But it’s not that easy, especially for people with deep roots and family ties. Lexso has three children. Her husband nurses an injury from his factory job at another plant and she’s also caring for two sick uncles.

Her best hope is for a job to open up again in Lordstown or at the GM plant in Parma, Ohio, about an hour away.

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