I don’t think it matters where the majority say they want manufacturing, the fact is they buy the best price and value no matter where it comes from ever since the end of World War Two.
Corporations know as noble as people may talk they buy quality and the price and no major company will survive thinking otherwise.
Corporations sell what the public demands and clearly the public they is not demanding country of manufacture as a first choice over quality and price.
I'll take issue with the "value" statement. Most consumer are inherently blind to what "value" is, they shop based on price. If you have to buy 3x crappy microwaves for example, over a few years, vs just spending more for better quality one that will last 20 years, which is the better value? But we know which direction consumers go.
The same applies to most everything including tires, tools, wheels, cables, charge cubes, appliances...etc.
One of the more sombre stories of the decline this drives was the appearance of "Professional Products" brand car parts, which blatantly ripped off the IP of brands like Holley, Edelbrock...etc. Pro Products was an offshore broker, operating in the US, and importing these clones from China, and it was the Chinese companies violating the IP rights, so there was no recourse.
It didn't take long for there to be a massive decline in the quality of the Edelbrock castings, ending up the same as the Chinese ones. They had clearly off-shored their manufacturing to try and keep margins up. There was a surge in folks looking for good used products at that point.
I'd also argue that there still is a market for quality, but you have to know your customer base, which isn't your average Walmart shopper. Brands like Miele, Bryston, McIntosh, Viking...etc. come to mind.