Trump donned a cowboy hat and climbed into a fire truck for 'Made in America' week at the White House

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President Donald Trump on Monday posed with baseballs bats, donned a cowboy hat, and climbed into a firetruck for photo opportunities promoting American manufacturing.

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As part of his "Made in America" week, the president posed with products made in all 50 states.

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AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence near a fire truck on the White House lawn.

Trump and Pence also admired the other large vehicles parked on the White House lawn, including a front-end loader.

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AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

President Donald Trump and Mike Pence examine a front-end loader on the White House lawn.

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REUTERS/Carlos Barria

President Donald Trump poses with a baseball bat inside the White House.

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AP Photo/Alex Brandon

President Donald Trump tries on a cowboy hat.

In a speech, the president called for a return to America's manufacturing heyday, a reality that many economists think is highly unlikely given the increased reliance on automation in America's factories.

"Remember in the old days? We used to have made in the USA, made in America," Trump said. "We're going to start doing that again, we're going to start putting that brand on our products, because it means it's the best."

Critics have noted that while Trump repeatedly rails against American companies that manufacture goods overseas, many official Trump-branded products are also made abroad.

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The Washington Post reported that Ivanka Trump, who currently serves the administration as a presidential assistant, makes her fashion apparel almost exclusively overseas in Bangladesh, Indonesia and China. Goods sold at the Trump Hotel blocks away from the White House are also largely produced abroad in countries like China, Vietnam, and Peru.