Howard Lutnick says the 'great jobs of the future' will be fixing robots in factories
Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick says those worried about job insecurity due to President Donald Trump's tariffs can rest assured that they — and generations of their children — will find work in factories.
Trump has pushed his tariff policy as a means to reinvigorate manufacturing in the United States, which he says could, among other things, create more jobs.
Nowadays, however, manufacturers often rely on automation to build their products. Many US companies, including automakers, plan to introduce humanoid robots to their factory floors.
In 2020, Hyundai acquired robot maker Boston Dynamics for $1.1 billion. Boston Dynamics and Hyundai announced an additional $21 billion partnership this month, which includes the purchase of tens of thousands of robots. Hyundai uses Boston Dynamics' Spot robot dogs in factories and plans to deploy its Atlas humanoid robots in the future.
Ford has also purchased Digit robots, the humanoid robot made by Agility Robotics. And Amazon has tested Digit in its fulfillment centers.
One automation company, Formic, told Business Insider earlier this month that its customers increased their overall robot usage by 17% between January and February, likely to ramp up production ahead of the tariffs.
So, what would these near-future human workers be doing in factories? Lutnick said in an interview with CNBC on Tuesday that the United States should train people to be technicians for these automated machines.
"It's time to train people not to do the jobs of the past, but to do the great jobs of the future," Lutnick said. "You know, this is the new model, where you work in these kind of plants for the rest of your life, and your kids work here, and your grandkids work here."
In a separate CNBC interview on April 3, Lutnick said US factories are "going to see the greatest surge in training for what we call tradecraft — teaching people how to be robotics, mechanics, engineers, and electricians for high-tech factories."
Lutnick reiterated this idea on Tuesday, saying that most auto parts plants are already "highly automated" and the thousands of people who work in them are "trained to take care of those robotic arms."
When Lutnick was asked if robots would be taking most of the jobs in the scenario he described, he replied that "all these automated arms and stuff" still need human operators to fix them.
"They all need a technician to fix them. All of these things, this is trade craft. This is high school educated, great jobs that start in the 80s and 90,000s," Lutnick said.
"It is not like how they sort of joke online, you know, Americans working the sewing machine," he added.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sea-Tac screenings to scale back as homeland security ends surveillance program
This story was initially published on The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is terminating the Quiet Skies program, DHS announced via a news release. Quiet Skies was a counterterrorism surveillance program through the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), according to The New York Times. However, DHS stated the program 'has failed to stop a single terrorist attack' and cost taxpayers $200 million a year. The department believes the program was put in place to target political opponents. 'It is clear that the Quiet Skies program was used as a political rolodex of the Biden Administration—weaponized against its political foes and exploited to benefit their well-heeled friends,' DHS Secretary Kristi Noem said, via the release. 'I am calling for a Congressional investigation to unearth further corruption at the expense of the American people and the undermining of U.S. national security.' TSA will continue to vet security threats and reinforce REAL ID requirements, DHS noted. 'The Trump Administration will return TSA to its true mission of being laser-focused on the safety and security of the traveling public,' Noem added. 'This includes restoring the integrity, privacy, and equal application of the law for all Americans.' Follow Julia Dallas on X. Read her stories here. Submit news tips here.

Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
‘I just hope it resolves quickly': GOP prays for peace in the Trump-Musk war
Republicans are hoping for a détente between Donald Trump and Elon Musk after Thursday's blowup, warning that the fight between the two men could distract from the president's agenda and derail Congress' 'Big Beautiful Bill.' The battle between the president and the world's richest man escalated from a simmer to a full-on scorched-earth showdown over the course of the day on Thursday — starting with light criticism in the morning that escalated to Trump targeting Musk's pocket book and Musk saying the president was an associate of a notorious convicted sex criminal and suggesting he may need to be impeached. 'I just hope it resolves quickly, for the sake of the country,' Speaker Mike Johnson told CNBC's 'Squawk Box' on Friday morning. POLITICO reported Thursday night that White House aides were looking to broker a peace between the two men and were planning on scheduling a call between the two camps. 'Oh, it's OK,' Trump told POLITICO in a brief telephone call Thursday when asked about the very public breakup. 'It's going very well, never done better.' Trump went on to tout his favorability ratings saying, 'The numbers are through the roof, the highest polls I've ever had and I have to go.' A senior administration official and a person close to the White House — both granted anonymity to discuss the president's thinking around the blowup — said the president had been convinced Thursday night that continuing to engage with Musk would be counterproductive and a distraction from a host of good news the White House should be focused on, from his talks with Xi Jinping to negotiating a deal with Iran and ushering his 'big beautiful' reconciliation bill through Congress, which was the root cause of the blowup. But Trump has displayed some lingering frustration with his one-time benefactor. He told ABC News that Musk has "lost his mind" — and he is "not particularly" interested in talking to Musk. He also told CNN that 'the poor guy's got a problem.' Still, Republican legislators Friday are following Johnson's lead, keeping with the theme of deescalation in the fallout of the public fight. 'Both of them have paid a tremendous price personally for this country, and I think at the end of the day, they're both going to put the country first," said Rep. Michael Cloud (R-Texas). "And them working together is certainly far more better for the country.' Department of Government Efficiency caucus Chair Rep. Aaron Bean (R-Fla.) said Friday he was 'shocked and dismayed' to see his 'two friends fighting,' but remains an 'optimist' that the former allies can work it out. 'I believe there's a Diet Coke in their future, that they can settle it and cooler heads will prevail,' Bean said. 'We need them together. We need to be united, and we're stronger together. So I'm very optimistic that there will be a happy ending very soon.' But even as they seek to not escalate the fight, party faithfuls are still making clear where their allegiances lie. 'I don't tell my friend Elon how to — I don't argue with him about how to build rockets. And I wish he wouldn't argue with me about how to craft legislation and pass it,' Johnson told CNBC. He later told reporters on Capitol Hill that 'I hope they reconcile. I believe in redemption. … I think it's good for the party and the country if all this worked out. But I tell you what: do not doubt, do not second guess and don't ever challenge the president of the United States, Donald Trump.' Rep. Troy Nehls (R-Texas) went a step further, saying he thinks 'Elon is getting too personal' in his attacks. 'It's getting out of control,' Nehls said Thursday. 'They got to stop it. I think it's, you know, it's not healthy. And some of the most recent comments, I think, Elon, you've lost your mind.' But Johnson — who was also targeted by Musk Thursday — largely on Friday kept his cool in responding to Musk, brushing off his claim that he landed Republicans their 2024 victory. 'Elon was a big contributor in the last election,' the speaker acknowledged to CNBC, 'but this was a whole team effort. I mean, President Trump is the most consequential political figure of his generation — of modern American history. He is the one responsible for that. But we all worked hard. We delivered the House majority." The speaker said he was with the president in the Oval Office for part of the showdown on X, a meeting reported earlier by POLITICO. Trump seemed 'disappointed' by Musk's attacks, the speaker said, reiterating that he is a 'huge fan and supporter of President Trump' for good measure. He told POLITICO Friday he hasn't spoken with Musk yet. The White House has sought to project an air of calm despite Musk's relentless attacks — but aides there remain wary of the Tesla CEO popping off two people close to the president said several Trump allies — including at least one White House official — tried to reach Musk by phone when he was on his rampage on X, but Musk was not taking calls for a time. The way Musk reacted to the president's comments made White House officials feel like they were dealing with an 'unhinged' situation, the senior administration official said Thursday — and that they had to just ignore what he was doing. Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment sent via press or personal contact information for his companies. 'Everybody is just like, 'OK, this is manic and crazy,'' the official said, 'and we're just gonna move along and pass the bill. And that's kind of the feeling of everyone right now.' Mia McCarthy contributed to this report.
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump vs. Musk: Majority of Americans Side With Neither, Poll Finds
Whose side are you on? When it comes to the suddenly erupted public feud between President Donald Trump and Elon Musk, most Americans say they do not support either guy. That is according to a new poll released by YouGov on Friday, which found 52% of Americans polled the night before chose 'neither' when asked who they backed in the battle between the world's most powerful man and the world's richest man. Still, Trump lapped Musk by comparison when it came to support, with 28% of respondents saying they sided with him — more than triple the amount of respondents (8%) who said they backed the Tesla boss. The approximately 12% of the rest of respondents said they 'don't know' who they support more between Trump and Musk. YouGov's poll included 3,812 Americans surveyed, ages 18 and older. The poll comes after Musk and the president set social media — as well as the media and political worlds — ablaze on Thursday, trading barbs that included Musk accusing President Trump of being named in the Epstein Files and saying he was in favor of impeaching the president. Trump, on his end, said he was 'very disappointed' in Musk and questioned whether the U.S. government should end its contracts with SpaceX, the rocket company Musk runs. The war of words started earlier in the week when Musk called Trump's 'One Big Beautiful Bill' a 'disgusting abomination.' Meanwhile, Tesla's stock price took a massive hit as a result of the spat on Thursday, plunging more than 14% in what was the company's second worst drop since the COVID-19 pandemic rocked the market in 2020. Shares have rebounded a fair amount on Friday, climbing to $303 per share a few hours into trading, after dropping to $277 per share a day earlier. Politico late on Thursday reported a Musk-Trump phone call had been set up for Friday to help smooth things over between the two. But those plans went sideways, with President Trump telling ABC News he was 'not particularly interested' in speaking to his former head of the Department of Government Efficiency. As for what the future holds, respondents to YouGov were pretty much split on whether the two would reconcile and work together in the future; 28% of respondents said they believed Musk and Trump will be friends again, 31% said they will not, and 41% said they are 'not sure.' It will be worth keeping one eye on X, the platform Musk owns, and the other on Trump's Truth Social on Friday to see what comes next. The post Trump vs. Musk: Majority of Americans Side With Neither, Poll Finds appeared first on TheWrap.