Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang just celebrated a major win for American manufacturing with the production of the company’s first advanced AI chips right here in the U.S. This breakthrough puts Nvidia front and center in what Huang calls the biggest shift since the steam engine.
“We’re now manufacturing the most advanced chips for AI here in the United States,” Huang said during his recent appearance on Fox News’ “The Sunday Briefing.”
He ties this success directly to President Donald Trump’s push for reindustrialization. Trump’s tariffs created the urgency needed to speed up domestic production, turning ideas into reality in under a year.
“This last week was a historic week. We manufactured the most advanced AI chips in the world, in the most advanced fab in the world, here in America for the first time. All of this started with President Trump wanting to reindustrialize the United States. His tariffs were a pressing agent in making this possible at the speed that we’re doing, and now just shortly after less than a year, we’re now manufacturing the most advanced chips for AI here in the United States. This is just the beginning of it.”
Partnering with TSMC, Nvidia rolled out the first Blackwell wafer, the foundation for these cutting-edge chips. Huang sees this as the start of a massive wave, with plans to build out $500 billion in AI supercomputing tech across the country over the next few years. That kind of investment promises to revitalize U.S. factories and create high-paying jobs in skilled trades that have been overlooked for too long.
“Nvidia is at the epicenter, we’re the engine of the largest industrial revolution in human history. The last ones were steam engine, electricity, information technology, and now we’re creating artificial intelligence. Digital intelligence that augments all of the things that we do. It’s going to affect every single industry. There’s not one industry that’s not affected by intelligence, of course, and so this is going to revolutionize every single industry. We’re at the beginning of that industrial revolution.”
From an economic standpoint, AI’s rise means a boom for blue-collar workers. Plumbers, electricians, and technicians will be in high demand to construct and maintain these new facilities. Huang predicts the next crop of American millionaires could come from these fields, with hundreds of thousands—or even millions—of positions opening up.
“We’re going to have to build these magnificent factories. Magnificent factories for chips, for packaging, for these AI supercomputers, but also for these factories that are producing digital intelligence. All of these factories require extraordinary skilled craft. This is something that our country needs to really, really celebrate. The skill craft professions are severely under-resourced. We just don’t have nearly enough of them, plumbers, electricians, technicians, networking technicians building out these incredible factories. We need a lot of them, hundreds of thousands of them, maybe even millions of them.”
Energy plays a crucial role in powering this growth, and Huang credits Trump’s pro-energy stance for keeping the momentum going. “This is one of the most important things that President Trump did for the technology industry here in the United States is to recognize that energy is necessary for this industry to grow. President Trump’s pro-energy initiatives have made it possible for us to sustain our growth.”
With Nvidia hitting a $4 trillion market cap, the company’s trajectory shows how policies favoring American production can drive innovation and prosperity. AI isn’t just tech hype—it’s set to touch every corner of the economy, from farming to finance, creating opportunities that strengthen the nation’s industrial base and fend off reliance on foreign supply chains. For Americans, this means more jobs, more security, and a brighter economic future built on homegrown ingenuity.



