Trump takes second crack at a pivot next
week with apprentice push
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[June 12, 2017]
By Roberta Rampton
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump, who became a reality television star with a show called "The
Apprentice," will spend a lot of time next week promoting a plan to
expand apprenticeships to help companies find more skilled workers to
fill jobs, the White House said.
It would be the second consecutive week in which the White House will
make a push to show Trump is moving ahead on his top domestic priority -
jobs - in spite of investigations into whether he had anything to do
with possible Russian meddling in the 2016 U.S. presidential election.
Trump has refuted those allegations, which have overshadowed his efforts
to boost economic growth.
Last week was branded "infrastructure week" with a series of events
dealing with fixing the nation's decrepit roads and bridges, another
plank in Trump's jobs platform.
But a congressional hearing on the Russia imbroglio featuring James
Comey - the FBI director Trump fired - sucked up all the attention in
Washington.
Next week will be "workforce development week" where the White House
highlights plans to combat the skills gap. U.S. job openings surged to a
record high in April with government data showing employers struggling
to find workers with the right skills.
Trump's plan has been in the works for months, led by his daughter
Ivanka Trump, adviser Reed Cordish, and Trump's secretaries of labor,
education and commerce.
The White House was mum on the precise details of Trump's plan to expand
apprenticeships ahead of his unveiling it in a speech at the Labor
Department on Wednesday.
A real estate developer who is familiar with the use of apprenticeship
programs in the building trades, Trump has praised Germany's
apprenticeship system as a model.
Ivanka Trump discussed the issue with German Chancellor Angela Merkel at
the White House in March, and toured a Siemens training center in Berlin
in April.
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President Donald Trump reacts to a reporter's question during a
joint news conference with Romanian President Klaus Iohannis in the
Rose Garden at the White House in Washington, U.S. June 9, 2017.
Trump will travel to Wisconsin on Tuesday to visit a training
program at Waukesha County Technical College with Republican
Governor Scott Walker, a former rival in the race to become the 2016
Republican presidential candidate.
On Wednesday, Ivanka Trump will hold a roundtable on the issue with
15 CEOs at the White House. The president will then meet with eight
governors on Thursday to discuss the topic at the White House. The
White House declined to say which CEOs and governors would be there.
One thing that likely will not be in Trump's plan: a surge in
spending. The White House expects the private sector to take the
lead.
A senior White House official said the federal government had
allocated $16.7 billion to 43 job training programs in 13 agencies
in fiscal 2017.
"It's not a money question. There's a lot of money out there being
thrown at this," the official said.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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