Advertisement

Donald Trump seeks crackdown on ‘Made in America’ knock-offs

Click to play video: 'Trump: ‘I’m not gonna own it’ after plan to replace Obamacare fails'
Trump: ‘I’m not gonna own it’ after plan to replace Obamacare fails
WATCH: Trump says 'I'm not gonna own it' after plan to replace Obamacare fails – Jul 18, 2017

WASHINGTON – U.S. President Donald Trump is looking for ways to defend American-made products by certifying legitimate U.S. goods and aggressively going after imported products unfairly sporting the “Made in America” label, the White House said on Tuesday.

Trump, who campaigned on reviving the U.S. manufacturing sector, vowed on Monday that his administration would crack down on “predatory online sales of foreign goods” hurting U.S. retailers.

READ MORE: Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin had undisclosed meeting at G20

On Wednesday, Trump will discuss with small- and medium-sized manufacturers how to certify their products and keep out foreign counterfeits, a senior administration official told reporters. Their products include gutter filters, flags and pillows.

“There’s just too many examples of foreigners slapping on ‘Made in America’ labels to products and the worst insult is when they do it after they have actually stolen the product design,” the official said.

Story continues below advertisement

The United States loses about $300 billion a year to theft of intellectual property ranging from semiconductors to jeans, the official said.

READ MORE: Trump writes off failing health care overhaul, tweets ‘let Obamacare fail’

In March, Trump signed an executive order that gave customs officials more authority to stop pirated and counterfeit items, the official told reporters.

WATCH: Trump’s ‘Buy American’ executive order casts light on his own business practices

Click to play video: 'Trump’s ‘Buy American’ executive order casts light on his own business practices'
Trump’s ‘Buy American’ executive order casts light on his own business practices

The White House plans to work with the private sector on the new certification and verification system rather than create new regulations or spend taxpayer money, the official said, citing as a model the LEED system used to rate the environmental sustainability of building projects.

Sponsored content

AdChoices