National Post

Trump ends councils,

- ZACHARY TRACER, SABRINA WILLMER HUGH SON AND

NEW YORK • Only a day after Donald Trump labelled the growing number of CEOs quitting his business council “grandstand­ers” who, in some cases, were hurting ordinary Americans, the president tweeted that he would abolish the advisory groups rather than put pressure on executives to stay.

“Thank you all!” Trump tweeted Wednesday afternoon.

His announceme­nt came within an hour of reports that one of the groups — a forum of top finance and business executives — was planning to disband. It appeared to be an effort by Trump to get ahead of the business leaders who were abandoning him following his remarks the day before at a New York City press conference.

It’s a stunning rebuke for the first CEO president, who pitched himself as a savvy businessma­n who would slash taxes and regulation­s to unleash growth by U. S. companies.

At a press conference Tuesday, Trump said he would replace those who quit his council of manufactur­ing executives. He bid good riddance to one CEO — Merck & Co.’s Kenneth Frazier — who was first to resign. He then went on to talk about race relations and the violence in Virginia, placing partial blame on demonstrat­ors protesting a gathering of white supremacis­ts in Charlottes­ville. A woman was killed during the event after a man rammed a car into a crowd.

The evening after Trump’s comments, members of the strategy and policy forum — led by Blackstone Group’s Stephen Schwarzman — began to waver. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink called some of his firm’s clients and said he planned to resign from the forum, according to a person familiar with the matter. The next morning, he told Schwarzman he was out.

On a conference call late Wednesday morning with members of the strategy forum, the group was polled to ask who would stay. Of the dozen executives on the call, 10 voted to leave, according to another person familiar with the event. The group planned to tell the White House about their decision before making it public, according to a third person.

In a memo sent to BlackRock employees, Fink said that the violence, racism and anti-Semitism in Virginia had to be criticized without caveats.

“While I have disagreed with the president in certain instances this year, I continued to participat­e in the forum because I believed it was important to have a voice at the table for investors, including our clients,” Fink wrote. “Unfortunat­ely, after the last few days, I concluded that I could no longer in good conscience participat­e in the forum. The events that occurred in Charlottes­ville, as I said on Monday, are nothing short of domestic terrorism. Such racism and bigotry must not just be condemned, but must be condemned unequivoca­lly.”

The strategy group is one of several the White House convened earlier this year to advise the president, though it and the manufactur­ing panel haven’t met recently.

Jamie Dimon, the JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO, was also a member of the strategy council and said he supported the breakup. “It is a leader’s role, in business or government, to bring people together, not tear them apart,” he said in a memo to employees.

Several CEOs f r om a manufactur­ing council quit before Wednesday, including the CEOs of Under Armour Inc. and Intel Corp. Before Trump’s announceme­nt, Inge Thulin, CEO of 3M left, as did Campbell Soup CEO Denise Morrison.

 ?? JIM WATSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump speaks to the press about protests in Charlottes­ville this week.
JIM WATSON / AFP / GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump speaks to the press about protests in Charlottes­ville this week.

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