Republican Socialism: The Trump Administration Buys a Stake in Yet Another Company
The federal government can't even pass a budget. What's it doing buying a mine?

Not even shutting down the government can stop Republicans from forcing their way into corporate boardrooms these days.
The federal government is, at the moment, incapable of completing its most basic and routine task—passing a budget—and yet it is simultaneously expanding its portfolio to include a 10 percent ownership stake in an Alaskan mining company.
That company, Trilogy Metals, will receive a $35.6 million "investment," the Trump administration announced on Monday. In return, the federal government will own 10 percent of the company (and will have the option to buy another 7.5 percent at some later date). The deal seems to follow the same blueprint that the Trump administration has used to seize stakes in U.S. Steel, Intel, and others: Trilogy does something that the White House has decided is essential for national security—in this case, mining for cobalt, copper, and other critical metals—and therefore the government must have a stake in the company's future.
On its face, that idea might seem compelling. Cobalt and copper are indeed really important to modern technology, and America consumes more of both than it produces. (A different administration might see that as a good reason to embrace global trade, but alas.)
What Trilogy does is important, and the Trump administration is capitalizing on the fact that many people believe "is important" and "should be done by the government" are synonymous.
Are they? Again, look at the current state of the federal government. It is deep in debt, lacks a budget, and (probably most importantly) has no experience running a mining company. If this was not the government and was instead a large, powerful institution or corporation, wouldn't an acquisition like this seem poorly thought out? Would you trust that entity to make a smart investment on your behalf at a time when its board of directors can't even agree on a budget?
I'd be skeptical even if I assumed the officials involved were interested in doing only what's best for the country—which, in this case, might not be entirely true. As Forbes reported Tuesday, one of the biggest beneficiaries of this deal is John Paulson, a Trump donor who was once on the short list to lead the Treasury Department. Paulson owns 8.7 percent of Trilogy, and his shares are now worth more than $100 million, up from $30 million yesterday.
Did the administration decide to dump nearly $36 million into Trilogy because its work is important and serves the national interest or because Paulson has friends in the White House? Will those considerations be a factor in the business's future decisions? Once the government has a stake in this company—or any company—it becomes impossible to answer those questions. It also becomes difficult for the company to plan ahead since 10 percent of its shares could be controlled by a radically different owner every four years.
The importance of Trilogy's work is actually an argument against giving the government even a minor stake in what it does. It should be experts in resource extraction and logistics who run mining companies, not bureaucrats or (worse) officials doing favors for friends.
There is, in fairness, a role for the government here. As part of Monday's announcement, the Trump administration said it was approving permits for a 211-mile road that will provide access to the remote part of Alaska where Trilogy is hoping to mine all that cobalt, copper, and more. That is exactly the right thing to do, and it does not require any federal ownership of the businesses that might someday use that road.
You don't need a firm belief in small-government principles or an aversion to socialism to recognize the difference between those two things. All it really takes is a sense of prudence. The government is good at issuing permits and not particularly good at running quasi-private industrial firms. Therefore, it should stick to what it does best.
That would be true of any government at any time, even one that was running efficiently, managed by competent leaders, and flush with a revenue surplus. It should be especially true of the current federal government, which is none of those things.
Thomas Jefferson probably didn't actually say that a government big enough to give you everything is also powerful enough to take it all away, but that doesn't make the sentiment any less true. Allow me to propose a corollary that's become apparent in recent years: A government big enough to promise everything will also be so unwieldy that it cannot fulfill its most basic functions—yet will keep promising to do even more things anyway.
The Trump administration's sense of urgency regarding America's supply of copper, cobalt, and other key metals may be well-founded. But just because something is important doesn't mean the federal government must have a hand in doing it.
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You don't understand. This is a reaction to Chinese state capitalism, where the government controls major corporations and owns a piece of them. As it's been explained many times in these comments, that that's why China is beating us economically. Their government taxes, subsidizes, owns and directs major companies. If we're going to beat them then we need more taxes, more subsidies, more government ownership and more government direction in businesses.
On this Trump is delivering, and his minions are celebrating.
Grasshopper, you have earned MANY-MANY "social credits" for Your Post, which Describes the Deep Meanings of the Benevolence of Government Almighty making economic decisions for The Good of ALL of Us!!! Kudos!!!
The government, especially the military, needs to purchase vast amounts of goods and services. What is the alternative to the government doing business with companies owned by wealthy and influential people? Should the government rely only on employee-owned co-ops to supply cobalt to military contractors?
Should the government rely only on employee-owned co-ops to supply cobalt to military contractors?
Are sketchy public/private regulatory-revolving-door partnerships, shady AF WEF-laundered war profiteering, and relatively open and blatant insider trading on the table?
YES. Just as the private sector supplies the steel for tanks.
Military and ROADZZZ is NOT an excuse for socialism.
Q. What is the difference between doing business with a company by buying their product, and buying stock in that company?
A. One is free enterprise, one is socialism.
The Trumpies will be along any minute, if they haven't already commented and I'll run across them below, to claim this isn't socialism, what about 10% or 17.5% being less than complete do I not understand?
Fuck 'em. They're always screaming about the camel's nose, thin edge of the wedge, Biden and the Dems being communists. Fuck 'em and their stupidity, and I don't mean the stupidity of believing it's not the road to socialism, I mean for the stupidity of thinking that everyone else is too dumb to understand they are just licking Trump's boots to pretend he's not on the road to socialism.
They're always screaming about the camel's nose, thin edge of the wedge
So you freely admit that they've been screaming since the camel's nose/thin edge (even though the 'thin edge' constitutes the largest spending and social reform and the largest part of the debt for the last century) and now even if they're knowingly/earnestly trying to get their bread buttered too, you're here to stop them?
This shit was stupid when it was prefaced with "reluctantly and strategically"
I find it strange that Boehm is more upset at getting non voting equity for government funding but was outraged when DOGE tried getting rid of no strings attached government largesse.
I prefer no funding at all. But at least equity has a chance to get some taxpayer funding back. Unlike the hundreds if billions that are no strings attached.
Meanwhile boehn and others completely ignore it is non voting stock while ignoring the vast regulatory state that controls far more of the economy than this deal ever will.
EB;dr
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In return, the federal government will own 10 percent of the company
I refuse to shed a single fucking tear over the government doing what everyone else can, i.e. buying shares.
You want a company to have public shares, that means everyone.
And here I thought the federal government was supposed to be limited to doing things explicitly authorized by the constitution. There are lots of things that everyone else can do that government can't or shouldn't.
That said:
Trilogy Metals, will receive a $35.6 million "investment," the Trump administration announced on Monday. In return, the federal government will own 10 percent of the company
...
Paulson owns 8.7 percent of Trilogy, and his shares are now worth more than $100 million, up from $30 million yesterday.
My back-of-the-napkin due diligence indicates that something pretty close to fair market value was paid for existing shares in an existing company as opposed to the grant-funded-research-project-turned-small-business-turned-CIA/DOD/DOE-contract-side-project that's been going on in software and climate science for 30+ yrs.
Also, re: The Constitution - would you rather pay a $36M investment in a cobalt mine penaltax or the actual *penaltax*?
Non controlling stock. Much less control of companies than the regulatory state Boehm ignores.
But then again, they raged against DOGE cuts which just gave money away no strings attached.
Yes, road to socialism is OK when Trump does it.
What a pathetic boot licker you have become.
What about Trump's golden veto over everything US Steel wants to do? If that's not control, why don't you explain right now what your definition of control is, and how it differs from socialism?
Hey economic sarc! Socialism requires a form of control. What control was gained buddy?
If you dont know what words mean, open a book lol.
You keep saying golden veto which doesn't fucking exist except on MSNBC. Do you ever try for informed arguments? Or just pure first impressions idiocy?
Why isn't it in the budget then? Show me the line in the prior or current budget for investing in Cobalt. I can't find it.
Silly. The Congress doesn't have purse strings or even purses anymore. Trump IS the economy. Just listen to him. He will tell you what he wants you to hear.
Now sit back and shut it; thought crimes like questioning the govt is a glaring sign of ANTIFA and they are terrorists and make dear leader sad. You don't want to make dear leader sad, do you?
Poor sarc.
It's a net 0. The amount spent in acquiring it equals its market value. An entry on the debit side, an equal entry on the credit side.
$40 million even if it earns a 10x return will never be material to the government. This about performative political bull shit, favor trading and grift.
If there is no budget, where does the money come from tin invest in this company? Is there a slush fund for shit like this? Inquring minds want to know.
Quite frankly, it sounds like Left Wing Magic where Lefties just make shit up and pull a quarter out from behind the toddler's ear. Or am I just seeing Horshoe Theory everywhere?
didn't trump set up a sovereign wealth fund?
Where is that in either the Constitution or Congressional appropriations?
not saying it was right
If this was not authorized by Congress it is illegal.
I feel certain that no attorneys were asked about this move.
Good thing you spoke up!
Write a letter to your congressional delegation. Now!
It's not authorized by the Supreme Law of the Land.
The people's LAW over their own government.
Remember how they howled in rage over the GM buy in ? "Just the principle of it alone is outrageous !" , they said. " Government shouldn't be be involved ! ", they said. "Socialism !" , they said.
I remember Marxists like you cheering it knowing it was nothing but a give away to union cronies in order to fund the next election cycle. I cannot be bothered to care about your hypocritical gotchas.
I remember some people, mostly libertarians, complaining. Everyone else was either screaming “Too Big Too Fail”, “Global Apocalypse”, or some other doom scenario (yes, even Republicans, gasp!).
This is what happens when you idiots continue to push the Overton window left. Congratulations, today’s Republicans are 90’s Democrats (at least politician wise).
FWIW, I’m as against these moves as I was GM, but I can still acknowledge there’s a qualitative difference between the government owning stock in strategic resources and bailing out a failed company while giving the unions preferential treatment as you wind down their debt.
I would not want the government to own a stake in anything I was invested in. I don't believe that our interests would ever be truly aligned.
STOP with the [Na]tional So[zi]alist BS already.
Don't you think it's caused enough damage yet????
F'En RINO-Retards.
I won't go so far as to call these fascism, not yet, as long as he's buying on the open stock market. The immediate illegality is violating the Constitution's enumerated powers, spending unappropriated and unauthorized money, the illegal export tax on NVIDIA and AMD, and possibly the US Steel golden veto. But the companies can still presumably tell Trump to piss off, even though he would retaliate with tariffs and anti-monopoly lawsuits.
So he's still inches away from fascism, but he's well on the road to socialism.
Obama 2.0, Orange is the new Black.
Orange is the new black swastika on red background or the new red swastika on black background, take yer pick, we are tolerant and broad-minded here, ass always...
Actually watched that show until the end. Was ok. First saw Taylor Schilling in one of the Atlas Shrugged movies. Fell in lust. If you haven't seen Take Me check it out. Good flick.
I miss the days when the feds owned a stake in Magickal Solar, Inc when you could reasonably ask, "What even is energy, maan!"
And to be fair, the government sold its stake in NPR, so it's got some cash lying around to invest in something else.
Now it's in the cobalt and copper production business, instead of the bullshit production business!
They still have the stake on GM from Obama.
Overall I see more federal divestiture than acquisitions these days. I like the net direction.