Bootleggers and Baptists in the U.S. Steel Deal
Progressives and environmental groups have teamed up with a rival steelmaker to lobby against the U.S. Steel deal.

As President Joe Biden continues to mull whether to allow one private steelmaking company to purchase another, it's worth taking a moment to appreciate the bizarre political alliances that opponents of the U.S. Steel/Nippon Steel deal have forged.
Like the American steelmaking company that's working with a prominent environmentalist group to lobby the White House to block the deal.
The steel company is Cleveland-Cliffs, the Ohio-based company that lost the bidding war to buy U.S. Steel last year. Since then, Cleveland-Cliffs has been using whatever leverage it can find to get the federal government to block Nippon Steel's $14.9 billion purchase of U.S. Steel—because if Nippon's purchase doesn't go through, Cleveland-Cliffs will be well-positioned to swoop in and buy U.S. Steel at a discount.
The full extent of Cleveland-Cliffs' efforts was detailed by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette last week. The rival steelmakers allied with the union representing many U.S. Steel employees, called in favors from Sen J.D. Vance (R–Ohio), and lobbied hard both in public and behind the scenes to call the deal into question. Indeed, it was Cleveland-Cliffs CEO Lourenco Goncalves who pushed the idea that Nippon's purchase of U.S. Steel could somehow threaten U.S. national security, despite the fact that Nippon is a publicly traded company based in Japan, a close U.S. ally. Nonetheless, the Biden administration has taken that claim at least somewhat seriously.
But perhaps the strangest bedfellows in Cleveland-Cliffs' effort to oppose the U.S. Steel deal are the Sierra Club and a handful of other progressive environmental organizations. They have lobbied Congress and the Biden administration to block the deal, arguing that Nippon's promise to invest in the expansion of U.S. Steel's plants will mean more steel production and, as a result, more pollution.
Nippon's promised investments in aging U.S. Steel plants, like the one in Gary, Indiana, would be "tantamount to exacerbating structural racism," explained CeCe Grant, the Sierra Club's industrial transformation campaign director, in a statement in September. That's because the deal would ensure "decades of locked-in carbon emissions" that would harm the predominantly black community around the plant.
Local officials in communities near some of U.S. Steel's Pennsylvania facilities would love to have that problem. Mayors in the Mon Valley are some of the loudest cheerleaders for the U.S. Steel deal because they know foreign investment in those plants will mean more jobs and economic opportunities.
This whole thing is effectively a modern twist on the classic political/economic parable of "bootleggers and Baptists." In the original example, coined by economist Bruce Yandle in 1983, both Baptists and bootleggers support Prohibition, even though they have very different motivations. For the Baptists, the government's attempt to limit consumption of alcohol is a religious and moral issue. For the bootleggers, Prohibition was a way to artificially limit supplies and therefore increase prices for the booze they were making and selling.
The Sierra Club is the Baptist in this dynamic, while Cleveland-Cliffs is the bootlegger eager to profit off a misguided governmental intrusion in the marketplace.
Prohibition didn't accomplish what the Baptists hoped—people still drank booze; they just had to go to the bootleggers to get it. Biden blocking the U.S. Steel sale to Nippon will have the same effect from the Sierra Club's perspective. America will still make steel, but Cleveland-Cliffs will be in a position to corner the domestic market.
What happens to U.S. Steel should be none of the federal government's business. The most important lesson from this whole saga is that when the government has the power to decide how private companies handle their affairs, there will never be a shortage of interested parties willing to influence that decision.
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AFAIK, "bootleggers" didn't even exist before Prohibition. Maybe some smuggling to avoid tariffs. And I doubt they had much sway compared to the many many legit (at the time) brewers.
I think this is more of a case of how everything but socialism is racist (according to socialists).
And some in MAGA land, like Tulsi Gabbard, seriously consider Japan to be an adversary. Assad, Russia, North Korea are great. But Japan? Don't you remember Pearl Harbor?
Bootlegging started in 1791 when the federal government enacted a temporary tax on the production of distilled spirits to pay for Revolutionary War debt. And I'm pretty sure that temporary tax still exists to this day.
They are godless pagans but still good businessmen.
'But perhaps the strangest bedfellows in Cleveland-Cliffs' effort to oppose the U.S. Steel deal are the Sierra Club and a handful of other progressive environmental organizations. They have lobbied Congress and the Biden administration to block the deal, arguing that Nippon's promise to invest in the expansion of U.S. Steel's plants will mean more steel production and, as a result, more pollution.'
I hope these eco-cunts have sworn off anything made from steel, including services that rely on using devices with steel. In fact, I would be happy to see some very non-libertarian laws that require ideological zealots to experience the policies they advocate.
I would just as soon put them down and be done with them. And I can make a libertarian case for that that is better than any ‘libertarian case ‘ Reason has put forward in years.
It won't be so funny when all the U.S. based Jap steel plants get loaded on flat cars and containers bound for Yokohama will it? Remember how they sawed off Pebble Beach and floated it to Honshu.
They can take what they want and the rest will be revamped by
local interests as new competitors. US Steel is currently very inefficient.
It becomes a government affair when people are selling large portions of US Land to Japan.
"full acquisition, meaning Nippon Steel will own everything U.S. Steel owns, including all facilities and land"
"US Steel Real Estate has what those planning almost any project from a church to an industrial parks needs to become a reality -- land, and lots of it."
"How much land do you still own or control? I should know that down to the acre, but I don't. To be safe, we still have over 150,000 acres."
"The Hoover Met is on US Steel land. Red Mountain Park is on US Steel land. The Oxmoor Valley golf course is on US Steel land. The Ross Bridge golf course is on US Steel land. When VisionLand was built and what is now Alabama Adventure, that's on US Steel land. Barber Motorsports Park and the Bass Pro Shops property are on US Steel land. Moss Rock Preserve in Hoover is on US Steel land."
"to regulate commerce with foreign nations"
This is no nation like the CCP and China,
free enterprise is what makes us prosperous.
Selling the USA to the CCP is "free-enterprise"?
That is just laughably retarded.
This is a good deal for US Steel its shareholders and the world in general.Only Government intervention can mess this up.I hope The Don will look upon it with favor.
Biden mulling the deal..
LOL.
Like that is happening.
So, serious question.... who is making this decision? Who are they aligned with or beholding to? Why don't we have even the slightest inkling of the answers to these questions?
Why is even the alternative press uninterested in this question even after the Biden non-president makes it crystal clear that this is how things are done? It seems rather important, doesn't it? We go through the pomp and circumstance of an election, we argue about team A being evil and team B being all goodness and light.... but when it comes to actually governing.... nobody cares who is actually doing it? Not even a little?
I haven't seen any headlines but I will be surprised to see it go through. USS has been on life support from the arc furnaces because the USW has been running the company for some time time now and funneling a revenue stream to the AFL/CIO. Additionally, Allegheny county keeps ratcheting up the air quality standards which allow for a constant milking cow to the coffers. On top of that, Nippon would most certainly shut down the coke and blast furnaces. The real estate would be a remediation nightmare. The best thing to happen would be for Nippon to buy for the arc furnaces and shut down Gary and Pittsburgh. Cut the head off snake.