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Mixed Evidencetechnology

Rep. Claudia Tenney led the House effort to build a large Micron semiconductor facility near Syracuse

Published February 14, 2026Updated February 14, 2026

Summary

Rep. Claudia Tenney supported the Micron semiconductor facility near Syracuse and advocated for federal funding through the CHIPS Act, but she voted against the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022 that provided $20 billion in incentives enabling the project. Multiple members of Congress from both parties played roles in securing the facility, making claims of singular leadership contested.

Primary Sources

Reports on Micron's October 2022 announcement of the semiconductor facility near Syracuse, citing CHIPS Act funding as key enabler

Official congressional record of H.R. 4346, the CHIPS and Science Act, passed August 2022

Official House vote record showing Rep. Tenney voted against H.R. 4346 on July 28, 2022

Congressional press releases regarding Tenney's position on Micron facility

PolitiFact: Did Claudia Tenney lead effort for Micron chip plant?Report

Fact-check examining Tenney's role in Micron facility development

Evidence Supporting the Claim

  • Rep. Tenney represents New York's 24th Congressional District, which is near the Micron facility location in Clay, New York
  • Tenney publicly supported the Micron project after its announcement and advocated for regional economic development
  • Tenney engaged with Micron representatives and state officials regarding the project

Evidence Against / Context

  • Rep. Tenney voted against the CHIPS and Science Act on July 28, 2022, which provided $52 billion in semiconductor industry support including incentives that enabled the Micron facility
  • The CHIPS Act passed with bipartisan support despite Tenney's opposition, with the vote being 243-187
  • Multiple members of the New York congressional delegation from both parties advocated for the facility, including Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer who was a primary sponsor of the CHIPS Act
  • The Biden administration and New York state officials, including Governor Kathy Hochul, played significant roles in attracting Micron to the region
  • Micron's October 2022 announcement specifically cited the CHIPS Act funding as essential to the project's viability

Timeline

  • House of Representatives passes CHIPS and Science Act; Rep. Tenney votes against the bill

  • President Biden signs CHIPS and Science Act into law

  • Micron announces plans to build $100 billion semiconductor manufacturing facility near Syracuse, New York, citing CHIPS Act incentives

  • Rep. Tenney issues statements supporting the completed Micron project and regional economic benefits

What This Means

Structured interpretation — not opinion

  • Key takeaway 1

    The claim of 'leading' the House effort is not supported by legislative voting records, as Tenney opposed the primary federal legislation that enabled the project through financial incentives

  • Key takeaway 2

    Supporting a project after its announcement differs from leading the legislative effort that made the project economically viable

  • Key takeaway 3

    Multiple elected officials at federal and state levels contributed to attracting the Micron facility, making singular leadership claims difficult to substantiate

  • Key takeaway 4

    Representatives can support economic development projects in their districts while opposing the federal funding mechanisms that enable them, creating apparent contradictions in their positions

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