Carrier, the company that President Trump pledged to keep on American soil, informed the state of Indiana this week that it will soon begin cutting 632 workers from an Indianapolis factory. The manufacturing jobs will move to Monterrey, Mexico, where the minimum wage is $3.90 an hour.

That was never supposed to happen, according to Trump’s campaign promises. He told Indiana residents at a rally last year there was a “100 percent chance” he would save the jobs at the heating and air conditioning manufacturer.

About 1,400 positions were on the chopping block, by company estimates. Over the last year, Trump has claimed he could maintain at least 1,100 of those jobs in the U.S. But on Monday, the company gave official notice to Indiana officials that it would start laying off workers at the factory on July 20 and keep slashing staff until about 800 employees remain.

“This action follows a thorough evaluation of our manufacturing operations,” Steven Morris, a Carrier manager in Indianapolis, wrote in a memo to Indiana’s department of workforce development. The dismissals, he said, are “expected to be permanent.”

After the election, Trump took credit for rescuing the Carrier jobs, tweeting on Thanksgiving that he had called the company’s leadership to cut a deal.

United Technologies, Carrier’s parent company, agreed to spare some of the positions in exchange for $7 million in state tax credits. A celebratory Trump visited the factory in December and announced that, thanks to his negotiating, more than 1,100 of the jobs would stay in the heartland.. He said those numbers could go even higher, noting that United Technologies had agreed to invest roughly $16 million into updating the plant.

But later that month, Greg Hayes, chief executive of United Technologies, admitted that the $16 million investment would go toward automation. “What that ultimately means is there will be fewer jobs,” he told CNBC’s Jim Cramer.

The number of Carrier jobs that will be eliminated is twice the size of the imminent job loss at Rexnord, the ball bearing factory about a mile away from the Carrier facility. Trump has slammed Rexnord on Twitter, too, for outsourcing work to Mexico – but the firm has stuck to its plan and is dismissing the last hundred of its 300 employees in Indianapolis this summer.

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