The Day

Biden vows to shield U.S. steel industry by blocking Japanese merger

- By CHRIS MEGERIAN and WILL WEISSERT

— President Joe Biden promised cheering unionized steelworke­rs on Wednesday that his administra­tion would block the acquisitio­n of U.S. Steel by a Japanese company, and he called for a tripling of tariffs on Chinese steel, seeking to use trade policy to win over working-class votes in Pennsylvan­ia, an election-year battlegrou­nd.

Biden said during a visit to the headquarte­rs of the United Steelworke­rs that U.S. Steel “has been an iconic American company for more than a century and it should remain totally American.”

“American-owned, American operated by American union steelworke­rs — the best in the world — and that’s going to happen I promise you,” he said.

The Democrat’s administra­tion is reviewing the proposed acquisitio­n of U.S. Steel by Japan’s Nippon Steel. The president said last month he would oppose the deal, saying it was “vital for it to remain an American steel company that is domestical­ly owned and operated.”

But in front of a pro-union audience, he went much further in promising to block the deal. “The backbone of America has a steel spine,” Biden said.

In another move that his administra­tion argues can protect domestic steelworke­rs, Biden also announced that he will push for the higher tariffs on Chinese steel and aluminum, aiming to insulate American producers from a flood of cheap imports.

The moves reflected the intersecti­on of Biden’s internatio­nal trade policy with his reelection effort, although the White House insisted they were more about shielding American manufactur­ing from unfair trade practices overseas than firing up a union audience.

The current tariff rate is 7.5% for both steel and aluminum but could climb to 22.5% under Biden’s proposal. The president said he was asking his trade representa­tive to seek the increase.

Liu Pengyu, a spokesman for the Chinese Embassy in Washington, said the “U.S. is making the same mistake again and again” by seeking increased tariffs. In a statement, he also dismissed those levies already in place as “the embodiment of unilateral­ism and protection­ism of the U.S.”

Biden insisted that getting tougher on China was sound policy.

“I made sure that we had the most advanced technologi­es that we’ve developed and invented, and they can’t be sent to China because they’ll undermine our national security,” he said, adding that he had delivered a similar message to Chinese President Xi Jinping during previous conversati­ons. Biden said he told Xi that “you’ll use them for all the wrong reasons, so you’re not going to get those advanced computer chips.”

The administra­tion also promised to pursue investigat­ions against countries and importers that try to saturate existing markets with Chinese steel and said it was working with Mexico to ensure that Chinese companies cannot circumvent the tariffs by shipping steel there for subsequent export to the United States.

“The president understand­s we must invest in American manufactur­ing. But we also have to protect those investment­s and those workers from unfair exports associated with China’s industrial overcapaci­ty,” said White House national economic adviser Lael Brainard.

U.S. Trade Representa­tive Katherine Tai said Wednesday that her office, acting on a petition from five national labor unions, was investigat­ing China for “targeting the maritime, logistics and shipbuildi­ng sectors for dominance.”

China produces about half of the world’s steel and is making far more than its domestic market needs. It sells steel on the world market for less than half what U.S.-produced steel costs, senior Biden administra­tion officials said.

The first step to the higher tariffs is the completion of a review of Chinese trade practices. Once Biden gives the official authorizat­ion, there will be a public notice and a comment period that could take weeks.

The local fervor over the proposed U.S. Steel deal began even before Biden’s speech. While being greeted by a small group of steelworke­rs upon his arrival, one told Biden, “Keep U.S. Steel in America.” Biden responded: “Guaranteed.”

Biden is on a three-day Pennsylvan­ia swing that began in his childhood hometown of Scranton on Tuesday and will include a visit to Philadelph­ia on Thursday. He used Wednesday’s speech to praise union members, whom he will need in November’s election against Republican Donald Trump, telling the crowd, “It ain’t ‘labor.’ It’s unions.”

Biden’s announceme­nt on steel tariffs was cheered by U.S. steelmaker­s. Kevin Dempsey, president of the American Iron and Steel Institute, accused China of disrupting “world markets both by subsidizin­g the production of steel and other products and by dumping those products in the U.S. and other markets.”

The tariff move, however, is largely symbolic.

The U.S. imported roughly $6.1 billion in steel products in the 12 months ending in February 2023, but just 3% of those imports came from China, according to Census Bureau figures. Citing already existing trade barriers, the American Iron and Steel Institute said China last year accounted for just 2.1% of U.S. steel imports, making it America’s seventh-biggest source of foreign steel.

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