Biden in Michigan: US won’t be ‘held hostage’ in chips supply

President Joe Biden visited a semiconductor chip manufacturer near Bay City on Tuesday afternoon, touting federal taxpayer investments in manufacturing to move supply chains to the United States and pursue an energy future with fewer carbon emissions.

Biden toured SK Siltron CSS, a U.S. subsidiary of the Korean SK Group conglomerate, which announced last year that it would invest more than $300 million in a new site in Bay County’s Monitor Township to manufacture materials for semiconductors used in electric vehicles, creating an estimated 150 jobs. The project is also supported by nearly $6 million in state incentives.

The visit comes around four months after Biden approved the CHIPS and Science Act, which funds more than $52 billion in subsidies and $24 billion in tax credits for companies to make chips in the U.S., including $2 billion set aside for legacy chips used in vehicles.

Biden championed that legislation as reversing the country’s past mistakes when U.S. plants closed and opened in other countries.

“We invented the chip in America, then we got lazy,” Biden said. “Federal investment helped reduce the cost of creating the market and hired its entire industry that America led, as a result. … Then something happened. American manufacturing, the backbone of our economy, got hallowed out. Companies began to move jobs overseas, instead of products overseas, because it was cheaper for them.

Hailing SK’s investment in Michigan as a “game changer,” Biden said investments by his administration will restore what was: “We’re going to be the supply chain. The difference is going to be we’re going to make that supply chain available to the rest of the world, but we’re not going to be held hostage anymore.”

The president visited SK Siltron with Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, and U.S. Reps. Dan Kildee of Flint Township and Elissa Slotkin, Bay County Executive Jim Barcia, Saginaw Mayor Brenda Moore and Midland Mayor Maureen Donker.