Nippon Steel Finds Unlikely Ally in Pittsburgh Workers

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WEST MIFFLIN, Pa.—Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris have found agreement on one issue: opposing the $14.1 billion sale of U.S. Steel, one of America’s most storied corporations, to Nippon Steel of Japan.

But outside Pittsburgh, in Monongahela River valley towns where steel is still made, some workers and officials say the rhetoric is disconnected from what is happening on the ground.

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“I would bet that none of the national politicians have seen what I’ve seen and have not talked to these local workers,” said West Mifflin Mayor Chris Kelly, who works at a desk in his garage beside a plaque reading, “Hours: Anytime.” His town’s U.S. Steel mill employs 800 workers who flatten glowing slabs of steel into sheet steel that is wound into giant coils. “This is nothing but politics,” he added.

West Mifflin Mayor Chris Kelly in his home office.
West Mifflin Mayor Chris Kelly in his home office. -

The 123-year-old company’s potential sale looks different to many who battle blight and population loss after decades of plant closings, including by U.S. Steel. Some say fears of foreign ownership are overblown and that the deal with deep-pocketed Nippon Steel offers the best chance to keep steel industry jobs in the region, and communities from being erased.

As Trump and Harris crisscross the nation’s biggest swing state, opposing the deal has come to signal their support for domestic manufacturing and concern for working-class voters.

President Biden, who has been expected to block the deal, now appears to be delaying that decision, according to a person familiar with the matter. Biden believes it is “vital that U.S. Steel is to remain an American steel company” and awaits a national-security review, a White House spokeswoman said Friday.

Harris and Trump have said U.S. Steel should remain in domestic hands. All four senators from Pennsylvania and Ohio, including Sen. John Fetterman, who lives across the street from a U.S. Steel plant, have also opposed the merger.

United Steelworkers’ leaders have fought the deal since its December announcement. The union, backing a rival offer from Ohio-based Cleveland-Cliffs, contends Nippon Steel could reduce production at U.S. Steel plants and substitute cheaper steel imported from its mills elsewhere, particularly India. It also worries about Nippon Steel honoring its existing labor contract.