Trump's Controlling Stake in U.S. Steel Is Indefensible Socialist Nonsense
Any decisions made by U.S. Steel's executives and shareholders will require approval from Trump, his appointees, or his successors.

U.S. Steel isn't just getting nationalized. It's getting…personalized?
President Donald Trump will personally control the so-called "golden share" that his administration has forced U.S. Steel to accept as part of the terms of a deal that will see the previously private company get acquired by Japan-based Nippon Steel. It's an utterly absurd arrangement—one that will leave the federal government with a controlling share of U.S. Steel even after Trump leaves office—that gives Trump the power to block future attempts by U.S. Steel to relocate its headquarters or make changes to its production facilities.
Documents filed this week with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) spell out the specifics of the deal. Trump must provide "written consent" before U.S. Steel will be allowed to change its name, relocate its headquarters, reduce or alter any planned capital investments, "close, idle, or sell" its existing plants, or attempt to acquire any part of a competing business.
In short: Whatever decisions are made by U.S. Steel's executives and shareholders (or by Nippon, which will own U.S. Steel) will require approval from Trump, his appointees, or his successors.
The terms spelled out in the SEC documents extend well beyond government meddling in the future of a private business. The deal also means that the same federal government charged with regulating other steel companies operating in the United States now owns a controlling share in a direct competitor. That's a massive conflict of interest, on top of the other gross implications here.
This is socialism of the particularly stupid variety, like something ripped from the pages of Atlas Shrugged.
No surprise, then, that The New Republic is a fan: "This leftish maneuver—one might even call it socialist—represents a promising new experiment in regulatory policy," writes Timothy Noah. As he points out, the idea of using these "golden shares" to effectively take over private business has gained some traction on the political left in recent years. The Roosevelt Institute, for example, has advocated for using them to force car companies to build more electric vehicles and to artificially hike wages.
The Trump administration's handling of the U.S. Steel/Nippon deal will only open the door to more arrangements like this—giving future presidents a precedent for forcing their way into the board rooms of private companies.
For anyone to the right of hardened socialists, this arrangement should be completely indefensible. That being said, I do look forward with a sort of grim amusement to the rhetorical gymnastics that many Republicans will no doubt deploy to not only defend this deal but to insist that Trump's takeover of U.S. Steel is actually a brilliant exercise of executive power.
When that happens—and it will—keep in mind how conservatives and Republicans reacted to the Obama administration's partial takeover of General Motors a decade ago. "If congressional Republicans do not object to this arrangement, the GOP position is simple," writes Jim Geraghty at National Review. "The U.S. government owning shares in private companies and directing a company's decisions is socialism, communism, economic foolishness, and arguably a form of economic fascism. But that's only when a Democratic president does it. When a Republican president does it, it's perfectly fine."
Trump's takeover of U.S. Steel is socialist nonsense that violates every principle of limited government and represents an unrestrained view of executive power. It should be universally opposed by Congress and the public, and it ought to be reversed as soon as possible.
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Commie scumbag
Who? Trump for nationalizing a business?
Yeah, a shock I know, from such a free marketer up until this point.
Republicans are only useful as an opposition party.
Yes, a democrat like you believes that.
That doesn't even make sense as an insult.
I've been told that China is kicking our asses economically in part due to their government having a controlling stake in the companies that are beating us. That means that if we're going to compete then our government needs to start controlling companies too. If you disagree then you're a dirty leftist.
You’re too drunk and stupid to understand any of this.
Now run away you little bitch.
You've gone full retard. Put down the cell phone, go back into your mother's basement, and resume picking your nose and eating it. Holy fuck.
This one isn’t defensible. I don’t know how you claim this is anything but fascist. Unless you want to call it socialist.
The only way I could see this being spun in any positive light would be pointing out how China has bought plants in the UK and immediately shut them down (effectively crippling the governments ability to source that material in the future), so the government is taking a proactive stance here.
I don’t particularly agree with that, since the plant and its materials are here and it would be pretty hard for the Japanese government to defend it from being taken by force.
Fuck Trump on this one.
Except the asshole who wrote the article was more interested in a blaring headline for clicks than the actual truth. The documents linked clearly say that all actions are to be taken by Trump as President of The United States or his successors not him personally. This is more garbage by people suffering severe TDS and without the ability to read anything
Author poor choice of words < Communism.
Try again.
The documents linked clearly say that all actions are to be taken by Trump as President of The United States or his successors not him personally.
If Trump were acquiring a personal stake rather than a government stake, that would be less bad.
This was done for national security interests.
They always are.
I do look forward with a sort of grim amusement to the rhetorical gymnastics that many Republicans will no doubt deploy to not only defend this deal but to insist that Trump's takeover of U.S. Steel is actually a brilliant exercise of executive power.
You and me both.
Are we against “government investments” now?
Always have been. You can't call yourself libertarian if you're in favor of them.
SRG is no libertarian.
I'm a pragmatic or "Brin" libertarian. I am not an axiomatic libertarian because they're idiots.
But in your world of slavish cultism, any disagreement with Dear Leader supposedly makes you a leftist Marxist Communist. FWIW as I posted on the VC pages recently, I'm centrist in economics and very libertarian socially.
Are you in favour of the US government having a golden share in US steel?
How can it be Socialist? US Steel won’t belong to the people.
They can still buy shares and control the means of production in their own small way.
It's real socialism, as opposed to fairy tale socialism.
Social ownership can take various forms, including public ownership (controlled by the state or government), community ownership, collective ownership (owned by a group of people), cooperative ownership, or employee ownership.
I'm generally a Trump supporter but not on this topic. Unless there are details that the author didn't want to share.
President Trump has secured a perpetual Golden Share as part of Nippon Steel’s acquisition of U.S. Steel. This partnership between the United States and Nippon Steel includes historic $14 billion investment in U.S. Steel by Nippon Steel that will revitalize this strategic and iconic U.S. company and expand steel production in the United States.
The Golden Share held by the United States in U.S. Steel has powerful terms that directly benefit and protect America, Pennsylvania, the great steelworkers of U.S. Steel, and U.S. manufacturers that will have massively expanded access to domestically produced steel.
This perpetual Golden Share prevents any of the following from occurring without the consent of the President of the United States or his designee:
• Relocate U.S. Steel’s headquarters from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
• Redomicile outside the United States
• Change the name of the company from U.S. Steel
• Reduce, waive, or delay the $14 billion of Near-Term investments into U.S. Steel
• Transfer production or jobs outside the United States
• Close or idle plants before certain timeframes other than normal course temporary idling for safety, upgrades, etc.
• Other protections regarding employee salaries, anti-dumping pricing, raw materials and sourcing outside the U.S., acquisitions, and more.
Congratulations to the President, U.S. Steel, and Nippon Steel on this historic partnership.
The Art of the Deal.
-Lutnick's Synopsis (aka communist manifesto) from Twitter last week.
I don't get it. Is it actually comparable to nationalization? I don't see where the US government gets anything other than a limited set of voting rights. That is certainly not free market, but it certainly isn't the outright theft of plant and property that was portrayed in Atlas Shrugged as Boehm histrionically suggests.
It seems a lot more secure than FoxConn type deals where states dole out massive subsidies for nothing but promises. What is the cost to the American taxpayer for Nippon's $14 billion investment?
Does this affect Koch Industries? Does Reason have any conflict in their relating the impact of this?
Trump used government force to steal those voting rights and you don't see the issue? If the communist nature of that doesn't bother you, I don't know but maybe the fact that US Steel was a failing company (they had to sell) that needs to be reorganized and now won't be able to do what is necessary without a politician who needs to buy votes, approving layoffs. Nippon can't decert the union and move South to a more friendly business state.
Would you think it was no big deal if Trump took by force an ownership position of your home and told you, you needed his permission to paint your house?
I have purchased a home in an HOA before which required permission to change the color of the house. I agreed to the contract before hand, just like Nippon has. That is not even remotely a form of theft. This is not being forced on Nippon, how can it be called nationalization? They are making the deal knowing full well what the conditions are.
I appreciate the response, but it didn't answer any of my actual questions, like, does this have a cost to the American taxpayer?
It was widely believed that Nippon wanted to move production from pennsylvania to Arkansas. The facilities in Arkansas are newer, cleaner, more efficient and do not use union labor. Koch may or may not be a minority owner in the Arkansas facility(Big River Steel?), but is one of its suppliers.
This deal was made for national security reasons.
That justifies communism*?
*marxism, socialism, facism... whatever you want to call it. They are all the enemy of free people.
The limited influence or controls in this circumstance are nothing like Socialist or fascist control.
It's quite the leap you have taken to suggest this agreement is an enemy of free people.
limited?
can you fire underperforming personnel?
can you idle or close any of the plants?
are there production quotas involved?
are there wage requirements involved?
can you move the hq to another state?
Please tell me how taking controlling shares by government force isn't marxism, socialism, fascism, or communism?
This sets an awful precedent.
Poor Eric, unable to understand the difference between Trump and the government of the United States.
Biggest players in steel I work with and their primary owners.
Cliffs - American
TaTa - Indian
Metallus - American
ATI - American
U.S. Steel can be Japanese.
Turning Japanese? Do you really think so?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rIHWuz7_cJ0
>Any decisions made by U.S. Steel's executives and shareholders will require approval from Trump, his appointees, or his successors.
1. It's *fascist*, not socialist. The one time you guys could use the term correctly and you still fucked it up.
2. Yes, that is how controlling stakes work. Zuckerberg owns a controlling stake in Meta - then Meta's executives have to check in for his approval of their plans.
wait: I thought fascists *were* socialists?? Pretty sure that's the argument folks here have been using for years in an attempt to tar the Left with Nazis.
All fascists are socialist but not all socialist are fascists.
This specific act would be more accurately described as fascistic because it maintains nominal private ownership with the heavy hand of the government in the background.
Talk about over exaggerating reality.
Fascism's relationship with business is 'you do what we want or we'll find different private owners to run it'.
Direct government control/ownership is the very definition of socialism.
(That said, Fascism is closely related to socialism).
I, for one, look forward to Trump bankrupting U.S. Steel the way he bankrupted six other companies.
Out of how many?
Except you have been gaslit into thinking Trump will have anything to do with this company. Read the agreement. What is involved and think about why they became involved.
Oh so some flunky government bureaucrat will be so much better?
https://news.sky.com/story/last-uk-blast-furnaces-days-from-closure-as-chinese-owners-cut-off-crucial-supplies-13341457
Supply risk is a cost.
Trump merely stopped Japan from closing the plants for I believe 5 years.
Note that this a deal a private business agreed to so they may purchase a US asset. No other steel business is subjected to this. In contrast, the fast food council in CA affects every business defined eligible by the government, and activist figures who only support one side gets a seat.
Also, article 7 appears to grant the corporation the right to repeal Trump's powers laid out in article 6. I doubt the Japanese would surrender total control to the US government. Even if the board member appointed by Trump is a certifiable lackey, he's still accountable to congress.
We already have (unelected) officials dictate terms of business to private enterprises. LA conditions film tax credits to production companies hiring a diverse workforce and making "land acknowledgement" statements before shooting.
Presumably the distinction here is that president gets direct input. Is this wise policy? Probably not. Is it a descent into socialist madness? That's a stretch. Reason offered only the mildest objection to local governments reserving handouts ONLY to BIPOCs and immigrants.
To be clear - this is bad policy only on companies from trusted allied nations. If the Chinese or Qatari interest wanted to acquire a major American company, you better believe we should have president or the government have a hand in their business.
Funny ... because if it was SOLD to a US PRIVATE company none of this would even be a government issue.
SoCiAliSm is restricting foreigners from buying the USA!!! /s
Do you know what a 'controlling stake' is, Eric?
Lots to complain about with this deal without lying.
No worries. This is fascism and we know the progs are against fascism, so they will repeal this first chance they can!
Nice little business ya got going there... Be a shame if ya failed to give Government Almighty some "golden shares", and someone came by in the middle of the night, and killed your greedy-capitalist geese that are laying the golden eggs for ye... Now SHARE with yer community!!! (If ya didn't know, yer community is YOU, Spermy Daniels, lawyers, and Government Almighty.)
I've heard somewhere that T likes Golden Sharers, so this tracks.