Trump calls the Biden Chips Act 'so bad.' Harris reminds voters it will help swing states.

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Donald Trump on Friday slammed a Biden-era accomplishment that aims to use government powers to revitalize the semiconductor industry, telling podcaster Joe Rogan "that chips deal is so bad."

Vice President Kamala Harris and her campaign then launched an effort to remind voters that billions from that 2022 legislation cited by Trump are headed to swing states — specifically Michigan and Arizona.

On Monday, Harris swung by a Michigan facility run by a company that is set to receive $325 million from the law, formally known as the 2022 CHIPS and Science Act.

Of Trump's remarks and the law, Harris said after a tour of the plant, "That's billions of dollars investing in just the kind of work that is happening here."

She added to the assembled workers, "you are a source of my optimism."

The vice president met with workers and toured Corning Inc.’s (GLW) Hemlock Semiconductor facility, located near Saginaw, alongside Michigan Rep. Dan Kildee and Corning chairman and CEO Wendell Weeks.

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris tours the Hemlock Semiconductor Next-Generation Finishing facility in Hemlock, Mich., Monday, Oct. 28, 2024. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris tours the Hemlock semiconductor next-generation finishing facility in Hemlock, Mich., on Monday. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

A running divide between Harris and Trump

This back-and-forth between Harris and Trump is just the latest example of a divide between the two candidates, who both express a fervent desire to spur manufacturing but offer very different ways to accomplish it.

Harris has pinned her re-industrialization strategy on using government levers to encourage specific sectors. It's an approach that uses Biden-era accomplishments like the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, new green energy credits in the Inflation Reduction Act, and the CHIPS and Science Act as models.

She also reiterated this approach Monday, telling reporters traveling with her that "my plan includes what we will do to continue to invest in American-based industry, American manufacturing, and American workers."

Former President Trump, by contrast, has said that a combination of new protective tariffs alongside other measures like lower corporate taxes and fewer regulations is the better means to spur factory building.

"When I see us paying a lot of money to have people build chips, that's not the way," Trump told Rogan. "You didn't have to put up $0.10, you could have done it with a series of tariffs."

Allies of Harris have long pointed to a boom in US factory construction under Biden, which was absent under Trump, as evidence that their approach is best.

In his remarks, Trump also mischaracterized many aspects of the 2022 law. He suggested that the bill offers loans (the main program offers grants) and implied that companies aren't putting up their own money.