Governor of State of Virginia Glenn Allen Youngkin Talks Tariffs - podcast episode cover

Governor of State of Virginia Glenn Allen Youngkin Talks Tariffs

Apr 15, 202515 min
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Episode description

Virginia Governor Glenn Allen Youngkin, discusses the long term impact that tariffs will have on the state and it's industries. He is joined by Bloomberg's Jonathan Ferro and Lisa Abramowicz.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news.

Speaker 2

Let's keep it on trade. President Trump's tariff policy said to impact leadership at the state level. The Commonwealth of Virginia exporting nearly twenty two billion dollars worth of goods abroad last year, placing it in the top half of states and accounting for tens of thousands of jobs according to the US government data. Joining us now the Republican Governor of Virginia, Glenn Youngkin Company. Young Kin.

Speaker 3

Good to see you, so great to be with you. Thanks for having me. It's super to be back in studio with you. So I just appreciate you making time for well.

Speaker 2

Thanks for dropping by. Let's talk about how exposed you might be to this tariff perse. You've got some very large aerospace and defense companies in the state. How are you helping those companies and individuals that might be affected by some of this.

Speaker 3

In the meantime, John, I think we have to step back first and put the current moment in the tariff evolution in context. From while he was running all the way up until today, President Trump has been really consistent on the elements of his economic plan. First, he's going to use tariffs to to reset trade balances and decades of bad deals. He's talked about. You've heard these words out of his mouth over and over again. Second of all, he's going to make sure that manufacturing is reshored and

that we reinflate or reinvigorate the hollowed out middle class. Third, we're going to re establish fiscal responsibility in Washington. Fourth, we're going to re establish energy dominance, and finally, through deregulation, we're going to make it even better to do business in America. And those elements are all in motion at

the same time. The trade moment for US, in the tariff moment for US, is also this ninety day pause, which is giving the opportunity for deals, and every Cabinet member has repeated there's seventy five countries in motion right now, and I would expect that there will be some significant trade deals struck. I do think that there will be a level of ongoing tariffs. And the ten percent number wasn't one picked out of a hats and they call

that the base tariff. But I'm a governor watching. But I do expect that there will be deals cut, and those deals, importantly will be with some of our largest trading partners India and Japan and Korea. And so this is what's going to happen over the next many many months. And most importantly, I think that will bring some confidence to the market that this reset, which has to happen and disruption is part of a reset, will will open

up long term opportunity. Now Virginia, Virginia we're going to We're seeing that long term opportunity every day, and that's through our economic development pipeline. We've had an incredibly robust three years. We've had record investment or commitments from businesses expanding in Virginia one hundred billion dollars in three years, by far the largest amount. In that time period, We've

seen record job growth. Virginia went from bottom third in job growth to top three five ten every year in job growth, and that has allowed us to run surplus after surplus after surplus. The net of that is that we have open jobs in Virginia, two hundred and fifty thousand open jobs for folks to take. But on top of that, our economic development pipeline has been as full as it's ever been, and we're seeing businesses, international companies

want to come to the United States. We're viewed as the top state in America for business and they want to come to Virginia. And so that's a really good foundation for us. As there is a period of disruption, but I think there's a long term opportunity and I think Virginia will really do well.

Speaker 2

We can talk about the long term opportunity in the fuller policy platform. Do you just want to keep it on trade just for a moment on trade? The methodology it does feel like was pulled from a hat in the last few weeks, and the criticism we hear around this table quite a lot. They will acknowledge the problem, and they will acknowledge that the President has articulated that consistently and well over the period of decades, not just

weeks and months. It's the remedy to that problem. At the moment, what we hear from the bank CEOs, from investors is this economy is drifted into a wait and see moment that they aren't going to make those big CAMPEC decisions until they really know the rules of the game, the rules of the road. Do you think we'll know the answer to that within ninety days.

Speaker 3

We'll see a lot of clarity over the course of the next now eighty days, I guess, or eighty two days.

Speaker 2

Amazing camp.

Speaker 3

But the net of it is that President Trump was clear he's continued to be clear that in resetting bad trade deals over the last decades and re establishing reciprocal trade opportunities. By the way, with nations that are our allies. China's a whole different topic. But with nations that are our allies, we just need fair trade and we haven't had it. And so in to reset those trade in those reset those trade imbalances, you see him do what

he does well, which just creates space for negotiating. And I think that's exactly what's happening when the first weekend after April second you read in every publication that seventy five countries had called within a day to start the negotiations, and you've already seen those negotiations at least reported in rumor. I think this will be this oppportunity to take a big step in resetting hold on it. And I think that's what the market needs to see.

Speaker 1

Part of the problem, I think, and you know this very well, having invested heavily as a co CEO of Carlisle and be investing in infrastructure, which takes a long time. There's a maturity mismatch between when some of this negotiation is happening, when these tariffs go on, and how long it takes to bring that investment to the United States. There is a lack of clarity about whether those policies will be continued in perpetuity, and it's leading to paralysis

at so many companies. What do you tell the companies in your jurisdiction who's come to you and say, how can I plan? How can I hire? How can I invest?

Speaker 2

When this could change?

Speaker 1

I don't even understand the parameters we're talking about.

Speaker 3

Yeah, I have to disagree with you on the long term planning because we're seeing a pipeline of economic investment that has been as full as it's ever been. And these are long term investments. Fortune fifty companies wanting to build in America and in Virginia hope if we can recruit them there. And these are long term investments. And you saw in Nvidia yesterday talk about five hundred billion dollars. We've seen most of the big pharmaceutical companies commit to

building in the United States. We're seeing technology investments advanced manufacturing all in the United States. These are long term investments. I think the difference in a lot of people's understanding is that during market ups and downs, well, yes, IPOs get postponed, and yes, corporate deals get postponed. But these long term commitments are actually coming in very large numbers. And that's good for states like Virginia. I mean, listen,

we're in the sec of economic development. I compete every day with Tennessee and North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Texas, and we've got to compete. And I think that much of that investment will come to this region, and that is a long term commitment. And so the uncertainty in the near term, yes, I get it, I understand it.

But the long term expectation that America is going to be the best place in the world to invest is clear and real, and that's what we're seeing in our economic development pipeline.

Speaker 1

There's also an issue of staffing all of this up and how we do this. Not only is there a maturity mismatch, but also potentially a skills mismatch. And I know that your state has been significantly affected by some of the DOGE cuts and you've talked about that and how you plan to provide for some of these workers.

But how do you reskill people to work for different types of jobs given that they've worked in a very specific field and there might not be jobs in that field and what we're trying to build up hasn't been there for a long time.

Speaker 3

Well, first, you go to work and prepare an education and training ecosystem to do exactly that. And we've been doing this for the last three years in Virginia, which is resetting the career pass and the education pass for lots of Virginians with opportunity. And today we have an incredibly high labor participation rate. It's bounced back from lows during the pandemic and the previous administration to near one of the national highs. We have one of the best

workforce training programs in America. We were just named for the third year in a row of having the best customized job training program in America. This is what you do. You go to work. I do think that the expectation that there will be job losses, particularly out of the federal government, is real. We haven't seen them yet that much in Virginia. I mean, our first time claims and unemployment are still at historic lows. But listen, I do

think that the federal government downsizing is necessary. Listen, we're running. We're at thirty seven and a half trillion dollars a debt, two trillion dollars a year of incremental debt. We can't do that, and so resizing the federal government and recognizing fiscal responsibility is critical to the future of the country is real. What does that mean in a state like Virginia. We have a lot of federal workers a lot now.

A disproportionate amount of those are in the defense and in the intelligence and national security area, and we're seeing more money go into those areas. But I still expect that there will be real disruption for some folks in Virginia. My dad lost his job twice when I was growing up, seen this in families my own, and it is really hard. And that's why a pathway to a new career is

so important. Because of our economic growth, we have two hundred and fifty thousand open but unfilled jobs in Virginia, and over one hundred thousand of those require a bachelor's degree.

These are good jobs, but there are also jobs that pay well, and so opening up that pathway to folks who find themselves with job loss is really really important, and so we launched something called Virginia has Jobs and it's for folks to get jobs in Virginia from all over the country, but at a time when we're seeing

this dislocation from the federal government. It's a real opportunity pathway two hundred and fifty thousand jobs, pathways for training, coaching, resume writing, but also for making sure folks on how to file for unemployment and keep their health care. This is a pathway that I'm really hoping that people who do have job disruption can find a way to a great career in Virginia because Virginia has lots and lots of jobs, and people can go to Virginia has Jobs

dot com and actually find one. And that's part of I think this movement of really public sector employment to private sector employment, and we've seen it in Virginia. We've had great job growth over the last three years. It's led to record surplus after surplus after surplus, which has allowed us to reduce taxes. It's allowed us to invest in education and law enforcement, and by the way, in economic development and job training. But it's also I think

changed people's view of long term In Virginia. We used to have for ten years we had more people move away from the Commonwealth of Virginia than move into from the other forty United States. And last year we became

one of the top importers of talent in America. So this works, and at a time when President Trump again is trying to run a very very full policy agenda resetting trade, balancing the federal budget, of making America dominant again and energy, restoring manufacturing, and restoring this middle class what has been what's been eviscerated over the last twenty years, and doing all of that while deregulating to make America

even a better place for a business. I think we can look at Virginia and say, hey, we've seen at least a little microcosm of that, and it works.

Speaker 2

Governor, the stakes are high, and please you mentioned your experience growing gup. You like me, we were professional dishwashers. You went on to have a fantastic career leading Carlisle, and now you're dedicating yourself to public service. There are now people much younger than us who believe that dream is not available to them. The upward mobility is no longer something available in the United States, and at the moment, as you know, filling stadiums around this country, as left

wing people like Congresswoman Ocasio Cortez Senator Bernie Sanders. If this administration gets this wrong, we could see a swing in the pendulum all the way to the far left. It's not unthinkable. You can see that taking place. How high are the stakes. What happens if this administration screws it up, well.

Speaker 3

First and foremost don't believe they will. And therefore I think what people will see over the course of this administry is the realization of this long term opportunity. And that's why all of the elements that in play are critical. You know, there are so many people in government who believe there's one policy solution, this magic wand that will

fix everything. This is an incredibly complex economic transition model, and that's why having all of the elements in play at one time, while complicating, is critical because they're each going to contribute for the long term success. And if you peel out one energy dominance, listen, getting energy prices to a place where they're sustainably affordable at the gas pump and in the supply chains. Critical America should basically

dominate the world of power and energy. Making sure we have a balanced fiscal moment, not running two trillion dollar deficits critical for the long term success of America. Reshoring, manufacturing, and think about what's happened over the last decades where we watched critical, very high paying jobs move around the world away from America and hollow out our middle class.

That's the opportunity that has really been missing because we've seen literally the middle class not participate in the economic growth of America over the past few decades. This is what is this opportunity is all about. And I've said many times, I think the number one job we have as Americans is to help this administration be successful and that success will translate into an even better America than we have today.

Speaker 2

We said it around this Tyito. We hope they are just the final question, what's the future of company? Young kid? What you want to do next?

Speaker 3

Well, I finish up next January, and I just want to begin by saying this has been the most purposeful moment in my entire professional career, and I've loved it, and I want to make sure this last year is incredibly productive for Virginia. Listen, you only get four years in a governor's job in Virginia, and I've got one year left, and I got to get four years of work done in this year because we've had a great first three years, and I want to get a second

term jammed into this last year. But I also wreckonognize that there are a lot of folks who spend all their time planning for their next job. I'm not one of those folks. I'm going to spend one hundred percent, if not one hundred and fifty percent, of my effort making sure that Virginia continues to thrive. We've got a really important election this year. Our lieutenant governor wins some Earl Sears has been a great partner for me through this entire economic revival in Virginia, and I want to

make sure that she gets the baton. I think voters will trust us and trust her and want to elect her the next governor of Virginia. And then we'll decide what I do. After I've watched her be inaugurated.

Speaker 2

Young convents twenty eight, I'll watch.

Speaker 3

I'll decide when I after I'm done in January twenty twenty.

Speaker 2

That's its trank, Goven. It's good to see it.

Speaker 3

I will, I will, I will repeat, though, the most important thing that we need to be doing right now is to be helping this administration be successful, and I think the elements are in place. It is a complicated set of movements in order to reset so many things at one time, but I have great faith that the long term opportunities really are going to be great, and we're seeing that in companies who are investing all across Virginia and America.

Speaker 2

For the good of this country. I think a lot of people agree with you. They hope, we hope you're right. Thank you, Governor. I appreciate your time. Thank you, sir, the Virginia Governor Glenn Younkin there, thank you very much.

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