Star-Telegram

2 steel-state Democrats press Biden to stop Nippon deal

- BY TYLER KENDALL

Two steel-state Democrats in tough reelection fights are urging President Joe Biden to do more to stop the proposed acquisitio­n of United States Steel Corp. by Japan-based Nippon Steel Corp.

“We’re pushing the White House on national security grounds and on trade enforcemen­t,” Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio told Bloomberg Television. “And fundamenta­lly what this means for American workers and American jobs.”

Biden has publicly opposed the takeover and said the company should be American-owned.

The Biden administra­tion is putting the deal through a secretive national security review process, one that is typically reserved for businesses involving adversaria­l nations rather than allies like Japan. The decision by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States could be contested in court.

The U.S. Justice Department also opened an extended antitrust investigat­ion into the takeover, creating additional hurdles to closing the deal. As a result, the companies are now considerin­g delaying the expected deal timeline.

Brown’s Senate race is considered one of the most competitiv­e contests this November, and appealing to industrial workers is key to his reelection hopes. U.S. Steel went against the request of the steelworke­rs union, which would have preferred the Ohio-based ClevelandC­liffs Inc. mining company to make the acquisitio­n.

Democratic Sen. Bob Casey, facing a competitiv­e reelection in nextdoor Pennsylvan­ia, where U.S. Steel is headquarte­red in Pittsburgh, also is championin­g the cause.

“My principal concern are those steelworke­r jobs and this deal gives me great concern about the threat to those jobs,” Casey told Bloomberg Television. Casey says he’s inquiring with the White House about how conflict over the acquisitio­n was handled in Biden’s discussion­s with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida during his state visit this week.

“I’m going to be asking the administra­tion a lot of questions about what was raised in those bilateral meetings,” he said. “I want to know at what level and to what extent these issues were raised.”

Nippon Steel says the deal will make the American steel industry more competitiv­e. Direct employment in steel manufactur­ing is dropping in the U.S., down 49% in the last three decades according to the Congressio­nal Research Service.

The Japanese company’s promise of new investment is a selling point for Republican Sen. Todd Young, whose home state of Indiana produces more steel than any other.

“Based on my reading of it, the Nippon Corporatio­n desires to invest heavily in the workforce, in the plant, in research and developmen­t, all things that have not been occurring to a sufficient degree,” Young told Bloomberg Television. “So I think it could be beneficial to the community.”

 ?? DREW ANGERER TNS ?? Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, is in a race that is considered one of the most competitiv­e contests this November, and appealing to industrial workers is key to his reelection hopes.
DREW ANGERER TNS Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, is in a race that is considered one of the most competitiv­e contests this November, and appealing to industrial workers is key to his reelection hopes.

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