No, Trump’s Intel Stock Purchase Is Not Socialism

Democrats are freaking out over the federal government taking a 10% equity stake in Intel, accusing Donald Trump of “socialism.” But the purchase of these nonvoting shares does not give the government any meaningful control over the company.

U.S. President Donald Trump Visits Scotland For Golfing Getaway

The Trump administration has purchased 10 percent equity stake in chip manufacturer Intel. (Andrew Harnik / Getty Images)


Former Obama undersecretary of state Rick Stengel is freaking out over news that the Trump administration has taken a 10 percent equity stake in chip manufacturer Intel:

Trump’s strong-arming Intel for gov’t equity is something Mao and Stalin would be proud of. . . .  Once, the GOP believed in laissez-faire capitalism and government not interfering in the private sector. Look it up: the state owning the means of production is called Marxism.

Anyone old enough to remember the phrase “Government Motors” should be able to appreciate what a wild line of criticism this is to hear from a former Obama official. As part of his Troubled Asset Relief Program, Barack Obama took for the US government a 61 percent equity stake in General Motors — and the Right’s backlash was entirely predictable. Rush Limbaugh called this “a sterling example of the Left’s crusade for government control of business” that proved “the Left’s enchantment with socialism.” John Stossel complained that this was a “move towards more government control of the economy. . . .  And, in the end, that’s pretty close to socialism.”

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