Ford chairman met with Trump over
'infuriating' Mexico comments
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[October 06, 2016]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co <F.N>
Executive Chairman Bill Ford Jr. said on Wednesday he has met with
Donald Trump to talk about the Republican presidential candidate's
extensive criticism of the automaker's investments in Mexico.
Ford told the Economic Club of Washington that he thought Trump's
criticism of the No. 2 automaker's foreign investments were "infuriating
and "frustrating" because of the company's extensive investments and
employment in the United States. Trump has threatened if elected to
impose hefty tariffs on Ford imports from Mexico.
Ford told reporters after the event that the session with Trump was a
"great meeting" that took place a few months ago.
"He was very thoughtful, asked good questions," Ford said of Trump. "He
certainly knows the facts." Asked if Trump had changed his mind about
his criticism, Ford did not directly answer but said, "The campaign
trail is a different animal than anything I'm ever familiar with."
A person briefed on the matter said the meeting took place in New York
this summer at the real estate mogul's Trump Tower. The automaker had
previously invited Trump to visit its headquarters at Dearborn, Michigan
but he has not taken the company up on the offer.
Ford rejected the criticism from Trump, noting that it employs more U.S.
workers and builds more vehicles in the United States than its rivals.
"We should be celebrated I think in some ways as the great American car
company," Ford said. "We make more cars and trucks here than anyone
else."
Ford announced last month that all of the company's small-car production
would be leaving U.S. plants and heading to lower-cost Mexico, drawing
another rebuke from the White House hopeful.
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Executive Chairman of Ford Motor Co., Bill Ford Jr. addresses the
public outside the Historic Ford Estate - Fairlane in Dearborn,
Michigan July 27, 2013. REUTERS/ Rebecca Cook
Ford has repeatedly said no U.S. jobs will be lost because of the
move -- and it will produce two new vehicles at a Detroit area plant
that built the small cars. Trump called Ford's decision "horrible."
He has criticized Ford's Mexican investments for more than a year
and vowed to pressure the automaker to reverse course if elected.
"We shouldn't allow it to happen," Trump said.
Trump has also repeatedly misstated Ford's plans at times, wrongly
suggesting last month Ford would "fire all of their employees in the
United States."
Many major automakers have announced big expansions in Mexico, where
labor rates are much lower than what U.S. workers make.
A spokeswoman for Trump did not immediately comment.
Last year, Ford said that chief executive Mark Fields had written to
Trump to explain its investments in Mexico.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Alistair Bell)
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