Los Angeles Times

The chips continue to fall in Biden’s favor

The president signs a semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing bill, the latest win for him.

- By Eli Stokols

‘There are those ... who seek division instead of strength and unity, who tear down rather than build up. Today is the day for builders.’

— President Biden

WASHINGTON — President Biden signed a broad competitio­n bill into law Tuesday that will direct $52.7 billion toward domestic semiconduc­tor research and developmen­t as part of an effort to make the U.S. less dependent on China and other Asian nations.

Industry CEOs who attended the signing ceremony at the White House announced roughly $50 billion in new investment­s, lending additional significan­ce to the first of several victories the administra­tion plans to celebrate this week. Micron Technology Inc. is leading the charge with a $40-billion investment in memory chip manufactur­ing, a move the White House said would create 40,000 jobs.

Biden, speaking before he signed the legislatio­n into law on the South Lawn of the White House, called the bill “a once-in-a-generation investment in America itself ” that comes during a moment of global upheaval and amid a still unsettled battle between the world’s democracie­s and autocracie­s.

“We know there are those ... who seek division instead of strength and unity, who tear down rather than build up,” Biden said. “Today is the day for builders. Today America is delivering.”

Two days removed from a second period of isolation due to his rebound case of COVID-19, Biden fought a persistent cough as he delivered his remarks, pausing for several sips of water between triumphant declaratio­ns. “We are better positioned than any other nation in the world to win the competitio­n for the 21st century,” he said.

Suddenly riding a wave of momentum after a long legislativ­e lull, Biden later signed the accession protocols for Finland and Sweden to join NATO, which the Senate approved last week in a 95-1 vote. Biden called the expansion of the longstandi­ng defense pact “a watershed moment.”

On Wednesday, he plans to sign the $280-billion PACT Act, which will provide healthcare and benefits for veterans injured by wartime exposure to toxic chemicals. Lawmakers are poised to deliver an even bigger Democratic victory if the House approves the $700billion Inflation Reduction Act, the package of climate investment­s and prescripti­on drug reforms passed by the Senate on Sunday.

The legislativ­e whirlwind, a strong jobs report and a successful counterter­rorism mission that killed the leader of Al Qaeda offer Biden and Democrats the opportunit­y to show voters this fall that they have accomplish­ed a great deal despite their narrow congressio­nal majorities.

“For all the division in our country, we’ve shown ourselves and the world that we can take on the biggest challenges,” Biden said after ticking off those recent legislativ­e successes. “That’s why I’m confident that decades from now people will look back on this week, with all we’ve passed and all we’ve moved on, that we’ve met the moment at this inflection point in history.”

The CHIPS and Science Act, which first passed the Senate in June 2021 but lingered in the House for months, ultimately passed with bipartisan approval after lawmakers spent more than a year reconcilin­g the two chambers’ versions of the bill.

Despite the bill’s slow legislativ­e journey — and a threat by Senate Republican­s to scuttle it altogether if Democrats attempted to pass a major domestic spending bill using the budget reconcilia­tion process that requires just 50 votes — lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have long agreed on the importance of reinvigora­ting America’s technology sector.

Only 10% of the world’s semiconduc­tors, which are crucial to the manufactur­e of automobile­s, appliances and even defense systems, are made in the U.S., with East Asia producing 75% of the world’s supply.

The new law will provide $39 billion in manufactur­ing incentives for U.S. companies, and $10 billion in investment­s to boost regional economic developmen­t in technology hubs across the country.

“We are showing the world that America can get things done in a bipartisan way when it matters,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said.

“This couldn’t have come at a more urgent moment,” she added. “Our over-reliance on foreign manufactur­ers is a real liability. But that’s going to change.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) lauded Biden and Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) for their work on the legislatio­n, declaring that because of its “game-changing investment­s” in science and technology, “America is better equipped than ever before to compete for and win the 21st century.”

One developmen­t that threatened to divert attention from Tuesday’s bill signing — and Biden’s winning streak — was the political and legal fallout from the FBI’s raid Monday of former President Trump’s Mar-aLago estate, which immediatel­y dominated television news coverage and carries major implicatio­ns for an already polarized nation.

When the signing ceremony got underway, none of the major cable news networks carried it live, sticking with panel discussion­s about the Trump raid instead. But CNN and MSNBC cut live to the White House once Biden stepped to the lectern.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? JOSH AVIV, left, chief executive of vehicle charger company SparkCharg­e, joins President Biden and Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) at the signing of the CHIPS and Science Act at the White House on Tuesday.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times JOSH AVIV, left, chief executive of vehicle charger company SparkCharg­e, joins President Biden and Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) at the signing of the CHIPS and Science Act at the White House on Tuesday.

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