Trump called it a disaster. Biden blocked it. Now Trump is traveling to Pittsburgh to celebrate Japan’s takeover of US Steel

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A water tower at the US Steel Edgar Thomson Works steel mill in Braddock, Pennsylvania. - Justin Merriman/Bloomberg/Getty Images
A water tower at the US Steel Edgar Thomson Works steel mill in Braddock, Pennsylvania. - Justin Merriman/Bloomberg/Getty Images

President Donald Trump traveled to Pittsburgh Friday to celebrate a deal he once vowed to oppose - Japanese steelmaker Nippon Steel’s long-announced plans to buy iconic American steelmaker US Steel.

“We’re going to be so successful. You have just, you have just started, you watch, we’re here today to celebrate a blockbuster agreement that will ensure this storied American company stays and American company, you’re going to stay in American company,” Trump said at a US Steel plant just outside of Pittsburgh, before an audience of steelworkers in hard hats and safety vests.

And he also announced he is increasing the tariff on imported steel from 25% to 50%.

“The people here understand the word tariff, you understand it better than the people on Wall Street,” he told the steelworkers. “We don’t want America’s future to be built with shoddy steel from Shanghai. We want it built with the strength and the pride of Pittsburgh.”

But Trump said later on Friday that the deal between US Steel and Nippon Steel has not been finalized, despite the earlier celebration in Pennsylvania.

“I have to approve the final deal with Nippon, and we haven’t seen that final deal yet,” Trump told reporters after returning to Washington.

“But they’ve made a very big commitment, and it’s a very big investment,” Trump quickly added. “It’s the largest investment in the history of the state of Pennsylvania in any deal, not just steel.”

The deal to have a Japanese company purchase US Steel has drawn bipartisan opposition. President Joe Biden blocked the deal on national security grounds shortly before he left office. But a week ago, Trump announced he would approve the deal, although he described it as a “partnership” between the two companies, not a purchase. When asked Sunday about the deal, he told reporters, “It’s an investment, and it’ll be a partial ownership (by Nippon.)”

“It will be controlled by the United States, otherwise I wouldn’t make the deal,” he said.

Trump did tell the crowd Friday he had previously been opposed to the deal.

“They kept asking me over and over, and I kept rejecting it, no way, no way, no way,” he said. But he said the more money that Nippon agreed to put up in investments in US Steel, the more he warmed to the deal.

“The deal got better and better and better for the workers,” Trump said. “I’m going to be watching over it. It’s going to be great.”

The appearance, and his latest announcement, appear to clear the way for the controversial deal at a time that long-time allies Japan and the United States find themselves in the middle of a trade war.