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    Biden opposes Nippon Steel takeover of US Steel

    WASHINGTON (AFP) – United States (US) President Joe Biden said on Thursday he is against the proposed sale of US Steel to Japan’s Nippon Steel, as election year considerations appeared to outweigh the risk of angering key ally Japan.

    Biden’s intervention in the planned USD14.1 billion acquisition comes less than a month before he hosts Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida for a state visit to the White House aimed at boosting ties and countering an increasingly assertive China.

    But Biden’s eye is seemingly on November’s presidential election against Donald Trump, with lawmakers from both parties having joined with unions in opposing the sale of an American manufacturing icon to a foreign owner.

    US Steel is based in Pittsburgh in the key battleground state of Pennsylvania, which Biden won in the 2020 election and will fight Trump for again this year.

    “It is important that we maintain strong American steel companies powered by American steel workers. I told our steel workers I have their backs, and I meant it,” Biden said in a statement.

    “US Steel has been an iconic American steel company for more than a century, and it is vital for it to remain an American steel company that is domestically owned and operated.”

    But Biden did not explicitly say he would block the deal, which has been under a federal review of how it affects national security interests since it was announced in December.

    The US Steel Mon Valley Works Clairton Plant in Clairton, United States. PHOTO: AP

    Japanese government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi said yesterday that Tokyo was “aware of the (Biden) statement but declines to comment on an issue of an individual company’s management”.

    He added that the “Japan-US alliance is stronger than ever” and that the nations would continue to cooperate in many areas including the “maintenance and strengthening of free and open economic order based on rules”.

    In a joint statement, Nippon Steel and US Steel said their partnership reflects the “close alliance between Japan and the US”.

    “We welcome the administration’s scrutiny of the transaction, as an objective and comprehensive review of this transaction will demonstrate that it strengthens US jobs, competition, and economic and national security,” they said.

    Nippon Steel said in a separate communique that the deal “delivers clear benefits to US Steel, union workers (and) the broader American steel industry”.

    US Steel shares slipped 6.4 per cent on Thursday. Those of Nippon Steel dipped slightly on Friday, ending down 0.22 per cent.

    The proposed sale has become a political football in the US.

    Trump said in February that he would halt the “horrible” deal if he wins a second White House term.

    The situation also goes to the heart of Biden’s election manifesto pledge to rebuild American manufacturing.

    “To see a major steel company, emblematic of the kind of manufacturing that the administration wants to bring back here, be sold to a foreign entity would be regarded as counter to policy efforts so far,” said Thibault Denamiel of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    Biden has been wooing unions as he competes with Trump for working-class voters.

    And unions have reacted with fury to the proposed deal, despite vows to honour contract agreements between US Steel and the United Steelworkers (USW) union.

    US Steel had previously received an offer to be bought by domestic competitor Cleveland Cliffs, in a deal endorsed by the USW.

    That buyout was rejected by US Steel in August, though Cleveland-Cliffs boss Lourenco Goncalves told Bloomberg on Thursday that he would consider making a new offer if the Nippon deal falls through – again with the support of USW, but at a lower price than Nippon’s offer.

    USW International President David McCall said on Thursday the union welcomed Biden’s statement, adding that the purchase by a foreign-owned corporation “leaves us vulnerable”.

    The White House said Biden has called McCall to reiterate his position.

    The transaction has also drawn bipartisan howls on Capitol Hill.

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