American workers at Banner Metals in Columbus, Ohio are applauding President Trump’s fair trade agenda, saying that when it comes to trade, the “U.S. has been taken advantage of for too long.”

In interviews with the New York Times, American steel workers at Banner Metals — which distributes metals — said they support Trump’s fair trade agenda wherein the populist president has placed a 25 percent tariff on imported steel and a ten percent tariff on imported aluminum.

Bronson Jones, who co-owns Banner Metals, told the Times‘ Nelson Schwartz that he sees the tariffs and Trump’s moves to hold China accountable on trade as a benefit to the American economy in the long term.

“I’m not looking at what’s best for Banner right now. I’m looking at what’s best for the national economy,” Jones said. “The U.S. has been taken advantage of for too long.”

U.S. free trade with Mexico, alone, has cost Ohio tens of thousands of American jobs. About 34,900 American workers have been displaced in the state because of free trade with Mexico.

Another worker at Banner Metals, Casey Jackson, said that even if the tariffs on imported metals slightly reduced his paycheck, he would still support the tariffs because they will protect American jobs.

“If it comes out of my paycheck, so be it. You got to look at the big picture,” Jackson said. “That tiny bit of sacrifice we make will create jobs.”

Two other steel workers at Banner Metals, James Ford and Todd Grizzle, who spoke to the Times said Trump’s fair trade agenda was a welcome shift from the past decades of endless free trade that has come at the expense of American jobs and industry.