logo
Adams weighs turning Kingsbridge Armory into semiconductor plant amid Trump trade war

Adams weighs turning Kingsbridge Armory into semiconductor plant amid Trump trade war

Yahoo09-05-2025
Mayor Adams is weighing the possibility of turning the Kingsbridge Armory in the Bronx into a semiconductor manufacturing plant, and he has discussed the idea with President Trump amid the administration's ongoing trade war with China over tariffs.
Adams discussed the idea of establishing chip manufacturing with Trump during a January meeting with the president, he told Piers Morgan in an interview posted Thursday. Trump has roiled the nation's economy as he pursues a harder line on imports, arguing a key goal is to protect and restore American manufacturing.
'As I stated, [it] was about bringing jobs to New York,' Adams told the media personality. 'There's a place in the Bronx where we just put $100 million into an armory there, and I want to produce and develop chips there so we don't continue to be dependent on sources outside the country. And that was what our conversation was on.'
Kayla Mamelak, a spokesperson for the mayor, confirmed he is weighing using the site to manufacture computer chips. Mamelak said that the country gets the semiconductors from overseas, and that bringing production locally would bring manufacturing jobs to New York City.
This idea comes as the president has escalated tariffs on Taiwan and China, two major suppliers of the computer chips for the U.S.
The potential change of approach for the armory could run counter to current plans to create recreation and community spaces, an entertainment venue and affordable housing in the long-vacant space. It's unclear how a plant would affect those plans.
Shortly before the January meeting with Trump, the mayor's administration selected 8th Regiment Partners, an LLC made up of Maddd Equities and Joy Construction, to develop the huge space.
Sources with direct knowledge of the situation said Maddd's founder, Jorge Madruga, met with Jared Kushner, the son-in-law of Trump, in Florida around the same time to discuss the possibility of federal funding for the semiconductor project.
A spokesperson for Madruga did not immediately respond to an inquiry.
Bronx Councilwoman Pierina Sanchez, who represents the district that includes the Kingsbridge Armory, noted the development plan includes a 'manufacturing' component. She said she has heard from stakeholders involved in the plan that semiconductor production is a potential avenue being explored for that component.
Since his inauguration, Trump has taken steps to escalate trade wars on countries including China. In discussing the possibility of a semiconductor plant in the Bronx, Adams echoed Trump's economic views.
'We've been held hostage by China,' Adams said during the Piers Morgan interview. 'Just about every product we have is made in China. We know that we can't continue to go down that road.'
Adams, who faces accusations of being beholden to Trump after his Justice Department dismissed his federal corruption indictment last month, floated similar ideas about a chip plant in the Bronx during a recent appearance on comedian Andrew Schulz's podcast, 'Flagrant.'
'I want to revitalize the economy,' Adams said during the April interview. 'I want to put a chip plant up in the Bronx, where we can make the chips and not be held hostage by Taiwan and others.'
Madruga, Maddd's founder, is a longtime fixture of local politics and a big donor to the mayor and other New York City powerbrokers, including Bronx-Manhattan Rep. Adriano Espaillat.
White House officials didn't immediately return requests for comment.
Adams' curveball about potentially turning the armory into a semiconductor facility comes as the development contract his administration already entered into for the site has been mired in allegations of favoritism.
Manny Tavarez, who was one of the competing bidders on the project, filed a lawsuit in March alleging the selection of Maddd for the development was improper and politically motivated.
According to the suit, Tavarez' company, Agallas Equities, was in line to be announced as the winner of the Kingsbridge redevelopment in January — but Adams' administration allegedly then reversed itself at the last minute and instead gave the deal to a consortium of developers led by Maddd after allowing the firm to revise its proposal post-deadline.
Tavarez said he has also has filed complaints with the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office and the city Department of Investigation.
The Adams administration maintains the Kingsbridge contract was properly awarded after Maddd submitted the best bid.
Adams on Friday traveled to the White House to meet with Trump. City Hall spokespeople did not immediately comment on whether the issue of the chip plant had come up in that meeting.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nexstar to buy Tegna for $6.2b, exceed media ownership norms
Nexstar to buy Tegna for $6.2b, exceed media ownership norms

UPI

time20 minutes ago

  • UPI

Nexstar to buy Tegna for $6.2b, exceed media ownership norms

Aug. 19 (UPI) -- Nexstar Media announced it will purchase Tegna, the broadcast arm of Gannett. The announcement said Nexstar will buy all outstanding shares of Tegna for $22 per share in a cash transaction valued at $6.2 billion. It includes all of Tegna's net debt. The price is a 31% premium to Tegna's 30-day average stock price. "Following completion of the transaction, the combined entity will be a leading local media company, well-positioned to compete in today's fragmented and rapidly evolving marketplace," the press release said. "The new company will be better able to serve communities by ensuring the long-term vitality of local news and programming from trusted local sources and preserving the diversity of local voice and opinion. Nexstar will also be able to provide advertisers with an even greater variety of competitive local and national broadcast and digital advertising solutions to serve brands and consumers more effectively." Tegna is headquartered in Tysons, Va., and was formed in 2015 when Gannett split into two publicly traded companies. Nexstar is the largest television station owner in the United States, owning 197 stations. It also owns WGN Radio in Chicago and operates the CW network and NewsNation (formerly WGN). The company will have 265 stations in 44 states and the District of Columbia, representing 80% of U.S. TV households after the merger. Public interest groups and many Democrats have expressed concern about allowing a single owner to control so much media in the United States. Nexstar said the deal is expected to close by the second half of 2026. Nexstar CEO Perry Sook lauded Trump in the press release. "The initiatives being pursued by the Trump administration offer local broadcasters the opportunity to expand reach, level the playing field, and compete more effectively with the Big Tech and legacy Big Media companies that have unchecked reach and vast financial resources. We believe Tegna represents the best option for Nexstar to act on this opportunity," he said.

Democrats need to start using AI to help save democracy
Democrats need to start using AI to help save democracy

The Hill

time21 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Democrats need to start using AI to help save democracy

As American democracy unravels at the hands of President Trump and his enabling congressional and Supreme Court majorities, millions of Americans are desperate to identify whatever possible countermeasures remain to slow the country's descent into fascism. The outcome of the 2026 midterms is unlikely to produce meaningful change, even if the Democrats take control of the House. Without a cooperative Senate, it will be impossible either to pass legislation or secure a conviction on impeachment charges. Oversight hearings can bring public attention to things like rampant corruption, but the threats Trump poses to the rule of law and democracy are already well-known. The courts can only do so much. There's another emerging tool, however: artificial intelligence. Trump seems to understands the transformative power of AI. Last month, the administration announced an ' AI Action Plan ' for 'winning the AI race.' Among other measures, it promises to remove 'onerous Federal regulations that hinder AI development and deployment, and seek private sector input on rules to remove.' As part of this initiative, the General Services Administration and OpenAI announced earlier this month that the company will be 'providing ChatGPT to the entire U.S. federal workforce' under a 'first-of-its-kind partnership.' Participating agencies will pay a nominal cost of $1 each for the first year to enable federal employees to 'explore and leverage AI.' The company is also 'teaming up with experienced partners Slalom and Boston Consulting Group to support secure, responsible deployment and trainings.' Last week, the AI company Anthropic likewise announced it had struck the same deal with GSA to enable federal agencies' access to its Claude model. The Trump administration's effort to streamline the federal government with AI models makes some sense. Research has shown that generative AI — particularly large language models, which consume vast amounts of data to understand and generate natural language content — can enhance government efficiency in data processing, analysis and drafting, among other potential advantages. But AI systems also increase the risk of widespread government surveillance, personalized misinformation and disinformation, systematic discrimination, lack of accountability and inaccuracy. According to a recent academic paper, 'although many studies have explored the ethical implications of AI, fewer have fully examined its democratic implications.' Trump's alliance with OpenAI head Sam Altman goes back to start of his second term, when he announced a $500 billion joint venture with OpenAI, Oracle and Softbank to build up to 20 large AI data centers. Trump called the venture 'Stargate.' The deal's details are murky, including who will have access to Stargate and how it will possibly benefit taxpayers. Although a spokesman for OpenAI told Fox News Digital that 'Sam Altman sort of planted a flag on democratic AI versus autocratic AI,' let's not forget that Altman is not a government official or employee. As a legal matter, it is unclear whether these ' fast-tracked ' deals will fully comply with traditional oversight and procurement laws and procedures. No major AI company is currently approved under the Federal Risk And Authorization Management Program, for example, which is the process for authorizing the use of cloud technologies by federal agencies. According the GSA website, the program aims to ensure 'security and protection of federal information' by imposing strict cybersecurity controls to protect against data breaches, hacking and unauthorized access, and requiring ongoing monitoring and reporting. Given that the GSA is reportedly working on 'developing a separate authorization' for generative AI systems like ChatGPT and Claude, the potential threats to national security and private citizens' personal information are significant. The Trump administration's lack of transparency also risks creating a black-box government run by proprietary algorithms that the public cannot inspect — centralizing control over federal AI in two companies whose interests clearly lie in market dominance, not the public good. This is why these kinds of decisions are best made through established legal procedures — including the Federal Competition in Contracting Act (requiring fair and open competition), the Privacy Act of 1974 (limiting how agencies can collect and disclose personal data), the Federal Records Act (requiring the proper retention and archiving of public records) and the Administrative Procedure Act (requiring public comment and input into major policy decisions). For now, OpenAI has promised that its 'goal is to ensure agencies can use AI securely and responsibly. ChatGPT Enterprise already does not use business data, including inputs or outputs, to train or improve OpenAI models. The same safeguards will apply to federal use.' This promise from Altman's company is no substitute for actual legal standards enforced by the federal government. Whether AI tools embedded in federal government systems could one day be used to sway elections to favor Trump and his cronies is a vital question. For now, what's clear is that Democrats need to get into the AI game, and fast. A Democratic political action committee called the National Democratic Training Committee recently unveiled on online course entitled 'AI For Progressive Campaigns,' which is designed to teach candidates how to use AI to help create social media content, draft speeches, craft voter outreach messaging and phone-banking scripts, conduct research into their constituencies and opponents, and develop internal training materials. The founder and CEO of the group, Kelly Dietrich, stated that 'thousands of Democratic campaigns can now leverage AI to compete at any scale.' This effort, although laudable, does not go far enough to capitalize on AI's potential to help outmaneuver authoritarianism in the U.S. There's much more that might be done, including using AI to educate citizens on the benefits of democracy, how institutions work and the facts underlying important issues; to create large-scale, moderated public deliberation and consensus around divisive issues; to detect and alert the public to manipulated media, thus combatting misinformation and disinformation and fostering public trust in an alternative to Trump; and to create and implement effective messaging strategies for alternative visions for the future of the country. AI could be American voters' best friend, not their enemy. It just needs to be asked.

Air Force chief of staff to retire after only two years in role
Air Force chief of staff to retire after only two years in role

The Hill

time21 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Air Force chief of staff to retire after only two years in role

The Air Force's chief of staff, Gen. David Allvin, will retire this November after serving only two years of his four-year term, the service has announced, making him the latest senior military officer pushed out under the Trump administration. The Air Force revealed the surprise move in a Monday statement, noting that Allvin had 'announced plans today to retire effective on or about Nov. 1.' The release did not name a successor to be the Air Force's highest-ranking uniformed officer, adding that Allvin will continue to serve until one is confirmed by the Senate. 'I'm grateful for the opportunity to serve as the 23rd Air Force Chief of Staff and I'm thankful for [Air Force Secretary Troy Meink], [Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth] and President Trump's faith in me to lead our service,' Allvin said in a statement. 'More than anything, I'm proud to have been part of the team of Airmen who live out our core values of integrity, service and excellence every day as we prepare to defend this great nation.' The statement did not give a reason for Allvin's abrupt retirement plans, but The Washington Post reported that he was informed last week that he would be asked to retire as Hegseth wanted to go in another direction with the Air Force. The Pentagon did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Hill. Allvin's looming departure follows a string of firings of other senior military officers in Trump's second term, including Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. CQ Brown — who also did not serve his full four years — Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Lisa Franchetti, Coast Guard Commandant Adm Linda Fagan, and a slew of others serving in less prominent roles. Allvin, who became Air Force chief of staff in 2023 after service as the vice chief of staff since November 2020, is a career mobility pilot with thousands of hours flying aircraft throughout his 39-year career. In February 2024, Allvin and other Air Force officials revealed a sweeping reorganization plan in a bid to prepare the U.S. for a fight against China. But Hegseth a year later ordered the Air Force to hold off on its changes to the service and its structure. In addition, the Pentagon chief has differed with Allvin on the future of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store