The Trump administration is planning to purchase a stake in yet another independent company, continuing its socialist – if not blatantly authoritarian – trend of making the government a stakeholder in supposed “free market” enterprises.
This trend stands in clear contrast with an administration that publicly decries socialism and a conservative movement that has labeled things like free buses and government-owned grocery stores as anathema to private industry and the American way of life.
Nonetheless, the administration added to its list of part-owned businesses when the Commerce Department announced a deal with xLight, a company developing extreme ultraviolet lithography tools that are seen as key to the development of highly coveted semiconductors.
In a news release Monday, the Commerce Department said it would authorize up to $150 million in federal incentives for xLight under the CHIPS and Science Act — legislation that Trump has publicly opposed — saying the agency will receive $150 million in xLight equity in return.
“This partnership would back a technology that can fundamentally rewrite the limits of chipmaking,” Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in a statement, going on to say the deal reflects “the CHIPS program at its best.”








