The proposed deal
kicked up an election year political maelstrom across America's industrial
heartland and blocking it drew a threat of litigation from Nippon Steel. “We
need major US companies representing the major share of US steelmaking capacity
to keep leading the fight on behalf of America's national interests,” Biden
said in a Friday morning statement.
Nippon Steel and US Steel blasted the decision,
saying in a joint statement that Biden's blocking the deal “reflects a clear
violation of due process and the law” in a process it said was “manipulated” to
advance Biden's political agenda.
It also insisted that
Biden cited no credible evidence of the deal presenting a national security
problem and suggested it will sue, saying “we are left with no choice but to
take all appropriate action to protect our legal rights.” Biden's decision
comes after the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, known as
CFIUS, failed to reach consensus on the possible national security risks of the
deal last month, and sent a long-awaited report on the merger to Biden. He had
15 days to reach a final decision.
The committee, chaired by Treasury Secretary Janet
Yellen and made up of other Cabinet members, can recommend that the president block
a transaction, and federal law gives the president that power.
The decision comes just weeks before the Democratic
president is set to leave office and could damage relations between the US and
Japan, which is America's biggest ally in Asia and its largest foreign holder
of US debt.
In their statement, the two steel companies said
it's “shocking — and deeply troubling” that the US would reject a transaction
that advances US interests and “treat an ally like Japan in this way.”
“Unfortunately, it sends a chilling message to any company based in a US allied
country contemplating significant investment in the United States,” the
companies said.
Biden previously came
out against the deal last March during the presidential campaign — and was
backed by the United Steelworkers, concerned over whether the company would
honour existing labour agreements or slash jobs, as well as over the firm's
financial transparency.
“It is important that
we maintain strong American steel companies powered by American steel workers,”
Biden said in a March statement, while he was still seeking reelection to the
presidency before dropping out of the race.
“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.”
President-elect Donald Trump has also opposed the acquisition and vowed in
December on his Truth Social platform to block the deal and to use tax
incentives and tariffs to grow the company.
On Friday,3 Jan ‘24 Steelworkers President David
McCall said the union is grateful for Biden's move to block the sale and called
it the “right move for our members and our national security.”..“Allowing it to purchase US Steel would have
offered it the opportunity to further destabilise our trade system from within
and in the process, compromise our ability to meet our own national security
and critical infrastructure needs,” McCall said.
McCall insisted that US Steel has the financial
wherewithal to make the company strong and resilient. A growing number of conservatives and business
groups like the US Chamber had publicly backed the deal...