Highlights
- Trump's Jan. 20, 2026 message frames his first year as an America-First industrial policy sprint, emphasizing that the U.S. must process and manufacture critical minerals domestically, not just mine them.
- The administration's strategy uses Section 232 import adjustments, partner negotiations, and price-floor concepts to address the midstream bottleneck in separation, refining, metals, and magnets production.
- While directionally correct on processing choke points, execution faces hard realities including capex, environmental constraints, skilled labor shortages, and China's entrenched scale advantages.
President Trump’s Jan. 20, 2026, message (as reflected in the White House’s “365 wins in 365 Days” post and adjacent critical-minerals actions) frames his first year as an America-First industrial policy sprint: border enforcement as labor-market policy, tariffs and Section232 as supply-chain leverage, and fast permitting as the accelerant forenergy, mining, and manufacturing.
On critical minerals and rare earths, Trump’s core argument is blunt: the U.S. can’t just dig more—it must process and manufacture domestically. In public remarks circulated the same day, he put it this way: “We’re going to have so many rare earths. It’s actually not that rare. Getting it processed is rare, but there’s a lot of rare earth.”
That line captures the administration’s emphasis on the midstream bottleneck (separation/refining/metals/magnets), not just mining, which is a breakthrough in the U.S. mindset.
Policy levers highlighted include Section 232-based import “adjustments” for processed critical minerals, negotiations with partners, and talk of price-floor concepts rather than immediate blanket tariffs—industrial strategy by managed trade.
Rare Earth Exchanges™ suggests POTUS is directionally right—processing is the choke point but in a critical read: slogans won’t build separation trains; “fast permitting” and trade pressure still have to clear hard realities—capex, environmental constraints, skilled labor, and China’s entrenched scale—so execution details matter more than victory lists. More comprehensive policies to subsidize refining, support alliances, develop talent, and support downstream demand need consideration.
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