EXCLUSIVE: Former President Donald Trump told Fox News Digital that the strike involving tens of thousands of port workers from Maine to Texas on Tuesday is a result of “the massive inflation that was created by the Harris-Biden regime.”

Trump spoke exclusively with Fox News Digital on Tuesday morning, after the International Longshoreman’s Association (ILA) began its first strike since 1977 after its six-year contract with the U.S. Maritime Alliance (USMX), which represents port employers, expired Monday night.

“The strike was caused by the massive inflation that was created by the Harris-Biden regime,” Trump told Fox News Digital. “Everybody understands the dockworkers because they were decimated by this inflation, just like everybody else in our country and beyond.”

Negotiations between the ILA and USMX have been deadlocked thus far over the union’s demands related to wage hikes and compensation, as well as protection from automation at ports.

USMX reportedly made a new offer to the ILA on Monday afternoon that would have raised wages by nearly 50% over the new contract as well as tripling employer contributions to retirement plans, better health care and kept language about automation in the deal. Sources told FOX Business that the ILA rejected the offer and did not counter.

ILA President Harold Daggett claimed the initial negotiation offers “didn’t work out,” but the group is “always willing to sit down when the right number is hit.”

“Right now, everything is off the table,” Daggett told FOX Business. “Nobody’s talking right now. We got Congress trying to bring them to the table. And that’s where we are right now.”

Though the union’s president declined to disclose what that exact wage number is, President Biden, whose administration has tried to facilitate talks between the two sides, has said that he will not use a federal labor law known as the Taft-Hartley Act to intervene in the strike.

Under that law, Biden could take action that results in an 80-day “cooling off” period for negotiations to resume while workers are back at work.