How about the Tesla engineering center in Rochester Hills, MI... Where did that go? Oh yeah, they moved all of those employees to Palo Alto or they got pink slips after their subsidy lapsed.
Oops! That was supposed to be an R&D center; it never got anywhere near the 300-employees it originally planned, and most importantly,
it never got one penny of government subsidies. It might have never been closed in the first place, except the state of Michigan refused to allow Tesla to sell, repair, or even to service its own vehicles in the state until the year 2020, as a result of Tesla suing Michigan.
As for Foxconn, the pandemic has ended, there are still shortages of components, yet there is zero talk for Foxconn ramping that facility in Wisconsin.
So what's your problem? 1400 employees is better than zero. The only actual cost to the state was the infrastructure it built around the site, and Foxconn agreed to pay $36 million/year to cover those costs, which, so far, it's been doing regularly. Your talk of them "taking money and then running" is a false narrative.
Allow me to explain some simple mathematics. I promise to build a factory in Montana, say, and the state offers me a whopping $10 billion tax break for doing so. Actually-- let's make it $10
trillion. Now-- if I don't build the factory, how much money is Montana out? Zero. Not one penny. When you understand that, you'll understand the fallacy in your reasoning.