WASHINGTON (AP) — Presidential adviser Ivanka Trump on Tuesday unveiled a White House-backed national ad campaign highlighting alternative ways to start a career, an initiative targeting students, mid-career workers and the millions of people who are now unemployed because of the coronavirus.
Called “Find Something New,” the campaign is backed by Apple Inc. and IBM Corp. It was quickly bashed on social media as being tone deaf and inadequate for the times.
The Trump administration has long emphasized skills-based job and vocational training as an alternative to two- or four-year college degree programs for high school graduates, arguing that college isn't for everyone and that a degree isn't required for many jobs.
The campaign had been in the works for some time, but gained new urgency after efforts to slow the coronavirus outbreak left millions of people unemployed.
Ivanka Trump said President Donald Trump has been talking about alternate career paths since the beginning of the administration, in part because of growing automation.
“Now as a result of COVID, people need to, unfortunately, in some cases, learn a completely new skill,” Ivanka Trump said, referring to COVID-19, the disease the virus causes.
She cast it as an opportunity for people to get on a “new trajectory” and said, "We want to facilitate that connection back to the workforce and make it as smooth as possible.”
Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, said the effort is “all well and good," but added that the White House and Congress must do more.
“For tens of millions of American workers slammed by the pandemic, it is about finding something at all,” Zandi said in an email. He urged both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue to pass another economic aid package to help those who are out of work or are working fewer hours, and to prevent additional job losses and higher unemployment.
Ginni Rometty, IBM's executive chairman, said during the announcement that the campaign will help encourage companies to embrace “skills first” hiring — as her company has done.
“Don't look just at a degree, but look at the skills someone has and let them get started,” she said.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said it was particularly important during a time of racial strife to connect people with resources that can help them find well-paying jobs and build lasting careers.
“That mission has never been more urgent than now,” Cook said.
The effort was panned by American Bridge 21st Century, a political action committee that supports Democratic candidates, and praised by the head of the Republican Party.