Vance’s economic U-turn sparks debate over trade policy consistency
Washington: US Vice President JD Vance has now firmly aligned himself with former President Donald Trump’s protectionist trade agenda, despite having once been a vocal sceptic of such policies. At a Rose Garden event on Wednesday, Vance stood beside Trump as the latter unveiled a sweeping new round of tariffs, aimed, he said, at restoring American manufacturing might.
“It’s our declaration of economic independence,” Trump proclaimed to applause. “Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country, and you see it happening already.” Vance echoed this sentiment, offering his enthusiastic support for the tariffs and praising the administration’s drive to revitalise domestic industry.
This marks a notable shift for Vance, who between 2016 and 2019 frequently argued that America’s loss of manufacturing jobs stemmed more from automation and technological innovation than from trade deals or globalisation. At the time, he warned that protectionism would do little to restore the blue-collar economy.
In a January 2017 interview with Education Week, Vance remarked, “So many of these jobs that have disappeared from these areas just aren’t coming back. They haven’t disappeared so much from globalisation or from shipping them overseas. They’ve largely disappeared because of automation and new technological change.”
Vance’s prior commentary frequently aligned him with Republicans who were wary of Trump’s first-term approach to trade. In February 2017, shortly after Trump hosted a meeting with manufacturing executives and criticised the US trade deficit, Vance tweeted: “Can’t be repeated enough: if you’re worried about America’s economic interest, focus more on automation/education than trade protectionism.”
His scepticism extended to Trump’s much-publicised deal with Carrier in late 2016, in which the company agreed to keep jobs in Indiana rather than moving operations to Mexico. Vance ‘liked’ a tweet from Republican Senator Ben Sasse, stating: “Automation – even more than trade – will continue to shrink the number of manufacturing jobs. This trend is irreversible.” CNN verified the interaction before the social media platform X changed its settings to make ‘likes’ private.
During a panel at the University of Chicago in early 2017, Vance tempered his criticism of global trade, admitting that globalisation had caused harm to some American communities, but cautioned against reactionary policymaking. “Now, does that mean that we should be hyper-protectionists in our approach to trade? I would argue no,” he said at the time.
Yet by 2019, Vance’s tone began to shift. Subtle signs of support for Trump’s trade strategy emerged as Vance prepared to enter the political fray himself. When he launched his Senate campaign, a core part of his platform focused on rebuilding America’s industrial base and protecting working-class interests.
Taylor Van Kirk, a spokesperson for the Vice President, defended Vance’s shift in position: “Vice President Vance has been crystal clear in his unwavering support for revitalising the American economy by bringing back manufacturing jobs and sticking up for middle class workers and families since before he launched his US Senate race, and that is a large part of why he was elected to public office in the first place.”
Analysts remain divided on the implications of Vance’s transformation. Some view it as a pragmatic evolution aligned with the political mood and Trump’s enduring influence within the Republican Party. Others see it as a stark reversal that undermines his earlier credibility as a policy thinker who valued evidence-based approaches.
Whether driven by political expediency or genuine conversion, Vance’s full embrace of Trump’s tariff-heavy trade policy signals a renewed focus on economic nationalism in the heart of American governance — and perhaps, a further redefinition of conservative economic orthodoxy in the post-globalisation era.