Trump Calls for Immediate Resignation of Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan Over Alleged China Ties
President Donald Trump has demanded the immediate resignation of Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan, citing conflicts of interest due to Tan’s alleged ties to Chinese firms. The call follows a letter from Senator Tom Cotton questioning Tan’s investments in Chinese tech companies, some reportedly linked to the Chinese military. Trump’s statement on Truth Social has sparked debate, with Intel’s stock dropping 5% in premarket trading.
The move comes as Trump pressures the semiconductor industry, including the threat of a 100% tariff on imported chips.
President Donald Trump on Thursday demanded that the CEO of
the tech firm Intel resign immediately, saying he is “highly conflicted”
because of alleged ties to China.
“There is no other solution to this problem,” Trump wrote on
Truth Social.
Trump’s attack on the Intel chief is his latest attempt to
pressure the semiconductor industry, which has fueled the boom in artificial
intelligence. On Wednesday, he said he would hit imported computer chips with a
100% tariff unless companies are making them, or plan to make them, in the
United States.
The demand also comes after Sen. Tom Cotton wrote to Intel
Chairman Frank Yeary to “express concerns about the security and integrity of
Intel’s operations and its potential impact on U.S. national security.”
Cotton, a Republican from Arkansas, claims in the letter
that Intel’s recently named CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, “reportedly controls dozens of
Chinese companies and has a stake in hundreds of Chinese advanced-manufacturing
and chip firms. At least eight of these companies reportedly have ties to the
Chinese People’s Liberation Army.”
Cotton asked Intel whether it had asked Tan to “divest from
his positions in semiconductor firms linked to the Chinese Communist Party or
the People’s Liberation Army and any other concerning entities in China that
could pose a conflict of interest?”
Cotton also asked the company if it was aware of any
subpoenas that Tan’s former firm received and if Tan has disclosed any other
ties to China.
Intel has not responded to NBC News’ request for comment on
Cotton’s letter and Trump’s social media post.
The senator’s letter cites a recent Reuters story that said
Tan “has invested in hundreds of Chinese tech firms, including at least eight
with links to the People’s Liberation Army, according to a Reuters review of
Chinese and U.S. corporate filings."
In March, Yeary announced that Tan had been named Intel CEO.
Tan started working at the company on March 18. Tan was previously chief
executive of Cadence Design Systems, an American chip design company based in
California, from 2009 to 2021.
Intel’s rivals such as Taiwan Semiconductor, Samsung,
GlobalFoundries and Nvidia have all announced plans to invest billions of
dollars in their existing U.S. chipmaking infrastructure or deepen partnerships
with U.S. companies like Apple to dodge those long-promised tariffs.
Further management turmoil for Intel likely spells more
trouble and delays as it continues to try to play catch-up with its
competitors. The company's stock market value, just shy of $90 billion, lags
far behind most of its rivals. Its stock dropped more than 2% Thursday, erasing
its gains for the year and underperforming the S&P 500's 9% gain this year.
Intel’s last CEO, Patrick Gelsinger, was forced out at the
end of 2024 after the company fell behind Nvidia, AMD and other chip firms in
the AI race. That came as Gelsinger sought to transform the long-struggling
company by attempting to build major chip factories in the U.S.
But Intel’s debt load and the lead time that other companies
already had on Intel were too much for Gelsinger to overcome.
In November, Intel received a nearly $8 billion grant under
the Biden administration’s “CHIPS Act” for factory build-outs and to make
secure chips for the Defense Department.
But that grant was less than Intel was originally set to
receive. It was reduced because U.S. officials worried about Intel’s ability to
deliver what was promised, The New York Times reported.
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