Trump to lay out his plan for drawing foreign companies to the US

· New York Post

America is open for business.

That’s what former President Donald Trump will tell foreign companies during a campaign speech in Georgia later Tuesday, proposing a “deal” that they can’t refuse so they can set up shop on US shores.

During the appearance in Savannah, the 45th president will offer 15% corporate tax rates for companies that manufacture in the US, reduced regulations, cheap energy, and access to both federal land and port infrastructure — but only if the companies hire American workers and move their manufacturing facilities to the US, a campaign official told The Post.

Trump will deliver his speech in Savannah, Georgia, Tuesday afternoon. AP

Trump, 78, will also hit Vice President Kamala Harris over her economic plans, blasting her support for the Green New Deal, new federal spending that will increase inflation and her plan to repeal Trump’s 2017 tax cuts.

“Everyone will prosper. Every family will thrive. And every day will be filled with opportunity and hope,” Trump is set to say, but only if Harris’ “liberal agenda” is destroyed.

If companies don’t agree to his deal, Trump will levy tariffs similar to those he has imposed on foreign merchandise imported into the US.

The speech will outline his plan for foreign companies and blast Harris’ economic proposals. DAVID MUSE/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

The former president has vowed repeatedly to block top companies like US Steel and John Deere from moving their operations abroad and has said he will fight to boost American production so jobs are not decimated domestically.

“I’m just notifying John Deere right now, if you [move manufacturing to Mexico], we’re putting a 200% tariff on everything that you want to sell into the United States,” Trump said Monday at a farmers roundtable event in Pennsylvania.

In his Georgia speech, Trump is expected to say he would work to “take other countries’ jobs” and “their factories,” instead of having American companies go abroad.

The revenue, Trump will say, will be in the “trillions” of dollars.

Trump threatened John Deere on Monday with a 200% tariff if they move to Mexico. Zach Boyden-Holmes/The Register

“President Trump’s first term brought explosive economic growth and unparalleled success for American workers and companies alike, and his second term will be even more transformative and beneficial,” the Trump adviser said.

“But if we don’t stop the anti-worker, anti-business onslaught from Kamala Harris and the Democrats, our Nation will never recover.”