Times-Call (Longmont)

Biden visits computer chip site, highlights jobs

- By Josh Boak and Aamer Madhani

PHOENIX >> President Joe Biden on Tuesday visited the site for a new computer chip plant in Arizona, using it as a chance to emphasize how his policies are fostering job growth in what could be a challenge to the incoming Republican House majority.

Biden has staked his legacy in large part on major investment­s in technology and infrastruc­ture that were approved by Congress along bipartisan lines.

The Democratic president maintains that the factory jobs fostered by $52 billion in semiconduc­tor investment­s and another $200 billion for scientific research will help to revive the U.S. middle class.

“What I’m most excited about is people are starting to feel a sense of optimism as they see the impact of the achievemen­ts in their own lives,” Biden said Tuesday.

“It’s going to accelerate in the months ahead and it’s part of a broad story about the economy we’re building that works for everyone.”

But there are signs that past moments of bipartisan­ship on economic matters may be harder to replicate after November’s midterm elections, in which Republican­s won a House majority.

Biden still pitches the investment­s as a sign of what happens when lawmakers partner with each other, but Republican House Leader Kevin Mccarthy, who could be the next speaker, attacked the legislatio­n in a July floor speech as a “blank check” and “corporate welfare.”

The president is battling high inflation that has left most Americans feeling as though the country’s economic prospects are bleak. That has provided Republican­s with a target for saying Biden is not meeting the needs of American families.

Biden toured a Phoenix plant being completed by the Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co. that was announced in 2020 during Donald Trump’s presidency. TSMC also announced it’s investing a total of $40 billion in Arizona, with plans to build a second plant. Biden administra­tion officials said the two TSMC plants as well as new factories by Intel, Micron, Wolfspeed and others could give a decisive edge to the American military and economy at time when competitio­n with China is heating up.

But it can be challengin­g to explain how more U.S. chip production will change Americans’ lives, and Biden struggled Tuesday to talk about semiconduc­tors that are just three nanometers in size.

“Three nano chip, chips that are three nano, you know what I’m saying,” Biden said. “Nano, no-no, I don’t know.”

The White House has simultaneo­usly launched a video campaign to highlight the array of non-tech jobs associated with the semiconduc­tor industry. Biden has visited four other computer chip sites since September, with the highly paid factory jobs promising spillover hiring for constructi­on, janitorial services and other businesses.

Featured in the video campaign is Paul Sarzoza, president and CEO of Verde Clean. Sarzoza founded the company in 2019.

It won a contract to clean TSMC’S constructi­on site, accounting for a third of its 150 jobs. Sarzoza’s company will clean the semiconduc­tor plant, with workers wearing what’s known as a “bunny suit” to prevent any contaminat­ion from hair and skin.

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