J.D. Vance Thinks U.S. Steel's Shareholders Weren't Adequately Warned of J.D. Vance's Efforts To Block Sale
Vance's latest gambit is pretty nonsensical, intellectually embarrassing, and obviously self-serving. But that doesn't mean that it's not dangerous too.

Shortly after Nippon Steel announced plans to purchase U.S. Steel, Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio) vowed to "do everything in my power" to prevent the two private companies from finishing the deal.
Even against that backdrop, Vance's latest gambit is a shocking and shameless attempt at using federal power to steer U.S. Steel's shareholders away from the deal.
In a letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Vance argues that U.S. Steel's shareholders have been inadequately informed about what he calls "considerable—perhaps even insurmountable—obstacles to regulatory approval" of the Nippon deal. In light of those potential difficulties, Vance is asking the SEC to review the information that U.S. Steel provided to its shareholders, who are set to meet on April 12 to approve the deal.
On its face, this is pretty rich. As Dominic Pino points out at National Review, Vance has been pushing for many of those "considerable" federal regulatory obstacles that he's now fretting about. And Vance's ultimate goal seems to be getting Ohio-based Cleveland-Cliffs another shot at purchasing U.S. Steel, even though Japan-based Nippon offered a better price. In effect, Vance is now "seeking to ensure U.S. Steel shareholders get a worse deal" while simultaneously acting like he's defending the interests of those same shareholders, Pino writes. It's embarrassing, frankly.
But the implications are also quite chilling. Vance's letter suggests that a private company should face SEC scrutiny because its shareholders were not adequately scared of the government's ability to block that company from doing a deal. To put it another way: If your shareholders aren't scared into inaction by the threat of federal intervention in a private business deal, the very fact that they weren't scared into inaction can be used to bring about more federal intervention into that private business deal.
If all that is true, then where are the limits of federal power? Vance is positing a situation in which the government must grant implicit or explicit approval of every merger and acquisition involving an American company. It is a theory of federal power over the economy that might make Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D–Mass.) or Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan blush.
Less theoretically, the U.S. Steel deal is starting to look like the first practical test of an idea that has been gaining steam in recent years on the nationalist right. Rather than trying to dismantle or at least curtail the regulatory state, some on the New Right believe that conservatives ought to wield those powers in much the same way as progressives and liberals have—but direct the efforts toward slightly different ends.
In this case, it's not clear if the ends are actually all that different. Vance's allies in the fight to stop the U.S. Steel/Nippon deal include Sen. Sherrod Brown (D–Ohio) and the United Steelworkers union. Rather than using the regulatory state for conservative ends, it looks like Vance is simply lending his support to the sort of protectionist racket that Republicans have traditionally, and correctly, opposed.
Vance has been open about his willingness to discard those traditionally conservative views, as Reason's Stephanie Slade has documented. He's suggested that conservatives should believe "there is no meaningful distinction between the public and the private sector" and has argued for using the power of the state to target groups like the Ford Foundation simply because they support causes with which he disagrees.
With the U.S. Steel/Nippon deal, we're seeing that idea being put into action. Vance's latest gambit involving the SEC is pretty nonsensical, intellectually embarrassing, and obviously self-serving. But that doesn't mean that it's not dangerous too.
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I do work for many Cliffs plants. Zanesville, Butler, Coshocton. None of them have their shit together. If Cliffs buys US Steel things won't be any better.
Ah, but the US Steel shareholders will receive less money, and US Steel will continue to be a shit show, so that would be a win for Vance et al.
No one needs different kinds of steel
Used to haul coils in and out of both. US Steel is worse.
Since when did American politicians even TRY to avoid being embarrassed? Just as lawyers rarely show any kind of character, lack of character for lawyers who sell themselves to the highest bidder to get elected to office is to the Nth degree.
Boehm leaves out the fact that Biden is opposed to the merger because his Union masters don't want it.
This is typical for him. He's always criticizing Republicans even when Democrats want the same thing.
Of course he did. Boehm voted ‘strategically’ for Biden after all.
Without reading past the first couple paragraphs, and without any particular knowledge my reaction to:
“On its face, this is pretty rich. As Dominic Pino points out at National Review, Vance has been pushing for many of those "considerable" federal regulatory obstacles that he's now fretting about.”
was is his proposed regulations really the only regulations that will effect the deal? How…sophomoric.
What do the shareholders know? Politicians know best.
Off topic but adjacent, deep dive into "white rural rage" with Matt Taibbi.
https://www.racket.news/p/the-real-book-about-the-white-working
Just because white rural rage is mischaracterized by the left and exploited by the right doesn't mean that abused white workers know why the hell they're angry either! It also doesn't mean that they are not more racist or more violent than other demographics. The "scams" perpetrated on workers in general and white rust belt workers specifically are only possible because of the Wall Street cronyism with the Federal and state governments. But not all of the economic catastrophes that white rust belt workers have experienced are the result of scams. Some of them are unavoidable dislocations due to technical advances and are no different from previous such disasters over the last two millennia everywhere in the world. There is no reason for anyone to think that their mining or steel worker jobs will continue forever, or that somehow they are owed high-paying jobs forever in the small company towns they were born in. Sometimes when the mill closes down you have to be ready to move somewhere to get a new job. Whining about it or rioting or voting for Trump will not change the basic facts of life.
I saw that. The elites are about to lose their shit as more of the underclass rejects their bullshit, including more darkies leaving the plantation.
Basically price fixing.
Just as with nuclear power plants, which for years were opposed as too expensive by the people whose opposition to them made them expensive. Same with the death penalty.
You can take the boy out of the hill-billies, but you can't take the hill-billy out of the boy.
The most disturbing thing about this situation is no one has bothered to make steel a protected strategic industry (not a whole of things more strategic than steel). Then the shareholders would know the deal before they bought the stock, and so would potential foreign buyers.