No, the Chinese don't want those jobs either, they're moving on to better jobs, just like the US did.
China's real GDP per capita is about the same as the US in 1980. Like the US in 1980, their economy is moving on to services, higher end manufacturing, and outsourcing the low end stuff.
FAILING to do so is called the "middle income trap." Providing the world's cheap industrial labour is a great way for developing countries to get industrialization going, but failing to advance beyond that dooms you to stagnation.
This is how your economy progresses.
A third world nation starts out by providing cheap labor to produce labor intensive goods. Things like clothes and other products which require cheap inputs, but lots of labor. This progresses the economy because it starts generating wealth in the country.
The country then progresses to what is known as capital intensive goods. Things that don't require as much labor, but require a lot more capital to make. Think of products like high-tech products where suddenly a lot of the cost is not in the physical, but in the knowledge contained within. This also includes higher cost manufacturing like heavy industry including vehicles and other high value goods.
You can trace China through this - they started out making things like toys and clothing, then got into high tech stuff and now are making high value goods. And they have enough to spend on speculative stuff like research and development - space programs and other technology.
And services is where you end up - "products" that are cheap to replicate but hard to make. Things like culture exports - movies, books, TV shows, music. Then also exploiting things that cannot be replicated - tourism, for example.
Of course, the problem is, Trump is stuck in the 1950s, as is most of MAGA. No American wants to work at a toy factory - labor intensive goods just aren't appealing because they're low paying jobs that require a lot of work to produce what is going to be a very cost limited product.
Sure, you could make a living doing it in the 1950s, but also remember things were a lot more expensive as well. A 15" TV would cost you a couple of years salary. These days you can't even get that - you have to get a larger screen for way less money (maybe a week or two of salary). Maybe spending $20,000 on a TV set might be appealing in the 1950s, but these days that kind of money gets you like a 200" TV with micro-LED technology.
Of course, no one also mentions the flip side - that CEOs and all that earned a lot less money - with the top CEOs earning maybe a million dollars a year tops. So maybe if all the top CEOs were willing to go down to 0.01% of their earnings,..