GOP politicians including President Donald Trump and U.S. Sen. Bernie Moreno mounted pressure Thursday on Intel by calling for CEO Lip-Bu Tan to resign.
Trump demanded Tan resign over his alleged financial ties to the Chinese Communist Party and its military arm, first by Reuters.
鈥淭he CEO of INTEL is highly CONFLICTED and must resign, immediately. There is no other solution to this problem,鈥 Trump wrote in a post to his own Truth Social platform.
It鈥檚 the latest quarrel between the party in power and Intel, which has gotten federal and state grants for its under-construction Ohio project, among others across the country. Earlier this year, Trump suggested Congress roll back the CHIPS and Science Act, of which Intel is one of the biggest benefactors.
When Intel broke ground in Licking County less than three years ago, the semiconductor manufacturer said it could be online by 2025, but that aggressive plan for its eventual central Ohio plants has pushed later and later since. Intel announced the newest timeline adjustment in February, punting the date to finish one fabrication plant to 2030 and the second 鈥渇ab鈥 to 2031. Neither will come online until at least 2031.
Moreno in a post to X on Thursday he believes Intel 鈥渉as failed to meet the commitments it made鈥 to Ohio, and called on the state to initiate an investigation into Intel for fraud. When asked, Lt. Gov. Jim Tressel was on another page on the project and its progress.
鈥淢aybe some people have more information than others, but based on the information I have, and I鈥檝e been out there, I鈥檝e seen the work they鈥檙e doing, I know nothing that tells me that their intentions aren鈥檛 good,鈥 Tressel said.
In an online , Intel wrote later Thursday it is 鈥渃ommitted to advancing U.S. national and economic security interests and are making significant investments aligned with the President鈥檚 America First agenda.鈥
鈥淚ntel has been manufacturing in America for 56 years. We are continuing to invest billions of dollars in domestic semiconductor R&D and manufacturing,鈥 the statement read. It went on to mention its work in Arizona but not Ohio.