By NIKKI SCHWAB, CHIEF CAMPAIGN CORRESPONDENT FOR DAILYMAIL.COM IN WEST MIFFLIN, PENNSYLVANIA
President Donald Trump announced he was doubling tariffs on steel imports during an appearance Friday afternoon in Pittsburgh to tout a steel deal between U.S. Steel and Japan‘s Nippon.
‘We are going to be imposing a 25 percent increase, we’re going to bring it from 25 percent to 50 percent, the tariffs on steel into the United States of America,’ the president said.
Trump was appearing at the Irvin Works, a U.S. Steel plant outside the Pittsburgh city limits in West Mifflin, and was surrounded by orange-clad U.S. Steel workers when he shared the news.
Last Friday the president announced he was backing a ‘planned partnership’ between the Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel and Nippon, earning him support from many of the Mon Valley plants’ workers.
The International Steelworkers Union, also headquartered in Pittsburgh, remained skeptical of the deal and prominent Pennsylvania Democrats stayed away from the Republican president’s appearance.
During Trump’s remarks he vowed to turn America’s Rust Belt into a ‘Golden Belt’ – covered by his proposed ‘Golden Dome’ missile defense system.
And to further endear himself to the crowd, a trio of former and current members of the Pittsburgh Steelers christened Trump a ‘Steeler’ for the day, giving him a Trump 47 jersey onstage.

President Donald Trump announced he was doubling tariffs on steel imports during an appearance Friday afternoon in Pittsburgh to tout a steel deal between U.S. Steel and Japan’s Nippon

President Donald Trump is cheered by U.S. Steel workers as he arrived at the Irvin Works Friday evening in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania
Ahead of the president’s arrival, U.S. Steel President David Burritt and Nippon’s Takahiro Mori, executive vice president, appeared together onstage to tout the partnership.
Both thanked Trump profusely.
‘Because of him, U.S. Steel stays mined, melted and Made in America,’ Burritt said. ‘It’s another golden age.’
‘This moment is a new beginning and with the right leadership and the right partner we’re ready to build something better and bigger,’ Burritt added.
Mori used a similar phrasing when it was his turn to speak.
‘Because of President Trump, U.S. Steel will remain mined, melted and in America by Americans,’ Mori said.
John Bielich, 68, of Bethel Park is about to hit his 47th anniversary working for U.S. Steel or as a contractor.
He said he was ‘relieved’ last week when he heard news of Trump backing the deal.

Ahead of President Donald Trump’s appearance in the Pittsburgh area Friday, U.S. Steel CEO David Burritt (right) spoke alongside Nippon’s Takahiro Mori (left), the Japanese company’s executive vice president, about the steel deal

An attendee at President Donald Trump’s steel deal event Friday in West Mifflin shows off a special ‘Terrible Towel’ being sold for $20 outside the venue to mark the occasion. Terrible Towels are a fixture at Pittsburgh Steelers games

Red solo cups were set out ahead of President Donald Trump’s event on Friday in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania at the Irvin Works, a U.S. Steel plant located outside Pittsburgh city limits

A group of steelworkers arrives at President Donald Trump’s event in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania on Friday after the president backed a ‘partnership’ between the Pittsburgh-based U.S. Steel and Japan’s Nippon
‘Because this deal, when it was first proposed, was a great deal for United States Steel, its workers, the communities that these plants sit in,’ Bielich told the Daily Mail. ‘It will sustain United States Steel operations, specifically in Pittsburgh and the Mon Valley, for many, many years to come.’
When Bielich first heard that it was a Japanese firm looking to acquire U.S. Steel he said he was skeptical.
‘The heart sank a little bit, but then as I started to understand the value of the deal of what Nippon was going to bring to U.S. Steel, given the state of steel-making in this country, I accepted it as a great opportunity,’ Bielich said.
Chris J., a 22-year-old college grad who’s moving back to the area, said he was attending Trump’s speech Friday because his father worked in the industry.
‘We’ll see what President Trump has to say but at the end of the day it sounds like a lot of people are getting a lot of security they’ve been looking for,’ he told the Daily Mail. ‘But then also, for our city, from that standpoint, we’re getting an influx of investment that we really haven’t seen this magnitude of.’
‘At the end of the day, people – from my understanding – are keeping their jobs and it’s cool because this is my city, I’m coming back into it, and hopefully see one or more things that will be reaping the benefits of this,’ he added.
The site for Trump’s speech was at an active facility, the Irvin Works, a U.S. Steel plant located outside the city limits, hugging the Monongahela River in West Mifflin, Pennsylvania.
Even with hundreds of attendees – some in hard hats, other in MAGA hats and many in their bright orange U.S. Steel jackets – the set-up for the speech, took up less than a quarter of the aging warehouse.
A vendor outside was selling specialized ‘Terrible Towels’ – a fixture at Pittsburgh Steelers games – for the occassion, which read ‘President Trump …Make USS Great Again, The Birthplace of Steel.’