Trump donor who criticized offshoring to close Ohio plant and move work to China

A picture


John Paulson, a hedge fund billionaire and one of Donald Trump’s earliest Wall Street backers, is planning to offshore an Ohio manufacturing plant to China despite heavy pushback from employees.Workers at the plant call the move “a slap in our face”, after Paulson vocally defended domestic manufacturing, and are fighting to keep the plant open.Conn Selmer, the largest US manufacturer of brass and orchestra instruments, told the union it planned to offshore most work at its Eastlake, Ohio, plant to China by the end of June 2026, eliminating 150 jobs.United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 2359, which represents the 150 employees, said workers were informed of the closing when it first sat down to bargain over their new union contract last month.“We came in with a full proposal, fully prepared to bargain, and they started off with a presentation of telling us how bad we were doing,” said Robert Hines, president of UAW Local 2359 and an employee at the plant.

The company told them there would be no bargaining and the plant would be closing,Workers say offshoring is an attack on the union, citing rhetoric that the plant has not been productive despite previous praise from company management,Union workers say Conn Selmer opened a facility in China last year and gradually shifted their workload to that plant, though workers were told the new facility would not affect workload in Ohio,“Almost immediately they started taking parts from certain product lines,” Hines said,He noted co-workers began complaining about brass metal coming from China that had to be scrapped due to poor quality.

Paulson made a significant portion of his wealth by betting against the housing market that crashed in 2008.A longtime Trump donor, he served on Trump’s economic policy team during his first presidential campaign and raised $50.5m for the president at his Palm Beach home in April 2024.He was in the running to serve as secretary of treasury during Trump’s second term but withdrew because of “complex financial obligations”.Paulson, like Trump, has publicly criticized offshoring.

“We can’t have American producers closing American factories and offshoring.We need to protect American jobs and protect American manufacturing,” he said during an interview with CNBC in September 2024.Hines said offshoring the brass plant would be deeply offensive to workers after Paulson painted himself as an advocate for domestic manufacturing.“To go publicly on CNBC to support the Trump administration’s positive views on tariffs and all that stuff, and then you turn around and [say you] want to go send the work right over to China,” Hines said.“It’s a slap in our face.

”But the union intends to keep fighting.Hines noted he hopes Trump steps in to stop the decision.“This decision can still be reversed,” he said.In early February, the union held a rally in Eastlake, Ohio, as part of efforts to save the plant from closing.It also released a video featuring workers at the plant criticizing the proposal to shut down the plant.

“It really pisses me off,” said one worker in the video.“It leaves a hole in your heart,” said a second.“I feel betrayed,” added another.“They tell us we are the beating heart of this company,” said a worker in the video.The White House did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

A spokesperson for Conn Selmer did not comment on the criticisms from the union, though the company confirmed that if the “tentative decision is finalized”, it will transfer some instrument production offshore.The plant’s closure “will improve our competitiveness and better meet today’s market demands”, the company said.“We remain deeply committed to US manufacturing, as we have been for more than 150 years.”Workers are especially worried about the impact the plant’s closure will have on the community.“It’s going to take a lot of money out of Eastlake,” Hines said.

“We’ve had people come out [and] show love to try to keep the place open, and the company just isn’t open to it.They’re not answering or returning anyone’s calls.”
cultureSee all
A picture

From Wuthering Heights to Mario Tennis Fever: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Emerald Fennell’s film brings the raunch to Brontë’s romance, while Nintendo’s beloved plumber stars in a colourful, family-friendly sports gameWuthering HeightsOut now Out on the wily, windy moors, writer-director Emerald Fennell has constructed a new interpretation of the Emily Brontë classic. Margot Robbie is Cathy while Jacob Elordi takes on Heathcliff, and as you might expect from the film-maker behind Saltburn, the passionate pair are set to leave no height unwuthered.It’s Never Over, Jeff BuckleyOut now Very few musicians have the impact that Jeff Buckley had during such a short space of time. This documentary from Amy Berg explores the success of his only album, Grace, and his death at a young age by accidental drowning, through previously unseen archive materials and the perspectives of the people in his life.WhistleOut now Whistling is easy – as Lauren Bacall advised Humphrey Bogart: just put your lips together and blow … or maybe don’t, if the whistle in question is an ancient Aztec death whistle that has the power to summon dark and deadly forces to your local high school

A picture

The Southbank Centre is striking, polarising and now protected | Letters

Fiona Twycross, the heritage minister, is to be congratulated for finally giving London’s Southbank Centre Grade II listing (Campaigners welcome ‘long overdue’ listing of brutalist Southbank Centre, 10 February).I remember being shocked when I first saw it in the 1960s, but it has become a remarkable symbol of the zeitgeist.Its grey concrete and its childlike composition together express the fatalism and despair of a nation in economic and political decline.Such a prominent display of ugliness on the banks of the Thames needs protection, for more optimistic future generations will surely wish to see it demolished.Francis BownLondon The news about the Southbank Centre reminded me of a mystery coach trip I joined in 1972 as a first-year university student

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on the US justice department’s handling of the Epstein files: ‘A brazen cover-up’

Late-night hosts recapped US attorney general Pam Bondi’s contentious congressional hearing as she faced tough questions over the justice department’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files.Jimmy Kimmel opened Wednesday’s monologue with a begrudging acknowledgement that Donald Trump won the one and only “Undisputed Champion of Coal Award” from an organization called “the Washington Coal Club”. The prize “brings his real award total to zero”, he joked.“All he wants is awards and for everything to be named after him,” he continued. “The Kennedy Center, Dulles airport, Penn Station – I mean, if that’s the way to keep him happy, I have another suggestion for something we could name after him

A picture

Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus: the story of one of Australia’s favourite political memes

OK, Josh, so there’s a leadership challenge incoming, but everyone is talking about this “Fantastic. Great move. Well done Angus” meme, so where did it come from?It’s one of the great memes of Australian political history, Krishani. Let’s go back to May 2019, when Taylor was the minister for energy in the Morrison government. Just weeks before then PM Scott Morrison would win “the unwinnable election” against Bill Shorten, Taylor was in the midst of local politicking, posting on Facebook about transport projects in his electorate of Hume

A picture

Comedians pick on me for my loud laugh – but nothing will make me stop | Jane Howard

I thought Daniel Kitson was just about ready to kick me out of the comedy room. He had already picked on me several times for laughing too loud, too readily (“that wasn’t even a joke”, he chastised me at one point). I was trying hard to suppress my laughter – to hold it in, to hold it back, to not fully express the joy I was feeling. I was being somewhat successful. And then I wasn’t

A picture

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘A code orange de-mental emergency going on here right now’

Late-night hosts unpacked the Trump administration’s continued attempts to distract from and underplay the Epstein files.It took barely a glance at Donald Trump’s social media posts on Tuesday for Jimmy Kimmel to know: “We’ve got a code orange de-mental emergency going on here right now. I mean, he’s gone. He’s totally gone.”The host focused in particular on the US president’s meltdown over the $4