I don't think it's too early to state now that tariffs are going to be a net negative with nothing else to offset their economic impact on the final consumer. They objectively will be a disaster, and the real question is how bad will it be, and for long long will we feel it?
We already have manufacturing here in the US, but regulations (which are generally good) make it so that there's a barrier of entry in terms of start-up cost. When Trump and his ilk peddle their rhetoric, they refuse to just outright say that in order for us to have *enough* manufacturing here, said manufacturing will no longer be akin that what we already have. It won't be mostly end-stage/final product building and instead we'll be attempting lower the bar towards low level component manufacture (or temu level crap). Then one must ask, is this still even economically viable with (as I said in one of my last responses) a lot of the regulations that exist to make such work "safe" for the workers.
Going further from there, who are we going to export these products to when the rest of the world tariffed us to hell? It's not like the US suddenly being a manufacturing giant will mean that other current giants are just going to disappear. We are simply not going to be the next China, and honestly why would we want to? Chinese factory work sucks, as does most mass manufacturing overseas. Do we lower our standards for a slim chance of a payout? I'd rather find solutions elsewhere that while including more manufacturing here in the US, does not include lowering our standards of living simply to churn a buck.
Service jobs (especially trade work) are fine, the issue is people don't get paid well (be it wages, benefits, or anything else). Companies like to pretend as if daring to pay higher wages would mean $30 Big Macs, but other first world nations do not have this issue because that have not fetishized Capitalism and billionaire culture at the expense of the common man. The root of the problem has always been rampant unfettered Capitalism. America would really rather throw itself into sweatshop peonage than just tax the rich.